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Anti-Aging & Digestion - Maintaining Optimal Health
Through Enzymes
Anyone
who is interested in maintaining optimal health must be taking enzyme
supplements with every single meal. Most people think this is necessary
only if they have some kind of digestive problem. While people suffering
from digestive problems have benefited greatly from using enzyme
supplements, there's much more to the story.
We are not what we eat, but what we digest and absorb.
Optimal well being is dependent upon eating high quality foods,
proper digestion, absorption, distribution of nutrients, and elimination
of waste.
The process of digestion begins in the mouth and continues down
through the stomach, pancreas, small intestine, liver, and gall
bladder. Specialized processes occur at each step along this digestive
pathway.
With an optimal diet in place the process of breaking down these
food materials into smaller particles and absorbing them becomes
the responsibility of a class of proteins secreted in the digestive
tract called enzymes.
Without enzymes, nothing happens. No energy can be produced, no
food can be digested, and no nutrients can be absorbed. Vitamins,
minerals, and hormones can do nothing in the absence of enzymes.
Each enzyme has a specific function and is specific to a particular
food category. For instance, proteins are broken down by enzymes
called proteases, carbohydrates by amylases, and fats by lipases.
Deficiencies in each of these specialized enzymes produce specific
imbalances leading to predictable disease processes. By example,
a protease deficiency will compromise the immune system leaving
the individual susceptible to frequent and recurrent infections.
Fluid retention and toxic bowel syndrome are two other results of
an inability to digest protein.

Any enzyme deficiency is capable of producing a wide assortment
of common symptoms from muscle soreness and asthma to altered insulin
metabolism, elevated cholesterol and high blood pressure.
When an enzyme deficiency exists, the food category dependent upon
that enzyme does not get digested or absorbed properly. The result
is intolerance to that food group.
Intolerance to a particular food simply means that a particular
food is not being digested properly and an enzyme compromise is
usually associated with it. Eventually, this enzyme imbalance will
produce symptoms leading to inevitable health problems.
In light of these simple facts, it is easy to understand why 8
out of the top 10 causes of death are directly related to diet,
and why over 70 million Americans suffer from some digestive problems
leading to nearly 200,000 deaths each year.
Enzymes also have many related benefits and functions commonly
unknown. Enzymes can act to prevent too much fibrin from being deposited
in wounds, fractures and joints. These enzymes also remove debris
and excess fibrin from the blood stream. Immune system regulation
can also be accomplished with enzymes as they break up circulating
immune complexes in the blood.
From the time we begin to think about what food to eat the process
of digestion has begun. Digestive enzymes and hydrochloric acid
are already being secreted in the stomach in anticipation of the
job at hand.
This pre-digestive phase of the process may set the tone for what
is to follow. A calm and optimistic attitude will provide abundant
enzymes and acid to promote the digestion and absorption of the
nutrients. Anger, anxiety, or stress may inhibit this process sufficiently
to establish an environment for indigestion and intestinal imbalances.
It is also important to remember the role of the co-factors involved
in this process. As food travels from the mouth to the stomach and
on through the digestive environment a number of related phenomenon
occur which are as much dependent upon the components of the diet
as they are the body's ability to degrade and extract the nutrients
from the food source.
It is equally important that we recognize the role of the environment
in which digestion occurs. In the presence of appropriate enzyme
pools there are numerous other biochemical reactions which take
place and are dependent upon adequate levels of associated nutrients.
Consider
the initial phase of stomach digestion. From the mouth to the stomach
hormones begin to come into play. The most important is called gastrin,
whose release from stomach cells is initiated by dietary protein.
Inadequate protein may inhibit its release.
Gastrin stimulates parietal cells to release HCL causing partially
digested stomach food to become acidic. The protease enzyme PEPSIN
is also secreted to initiate protein breakdown. Its release is prompted
by amino acids contained in protein such as phenylalanine and tryptophan.
Initial forms of digestive enzymes are released in inactive forms
to prevent the body from digesting itself. Ending in OGEN this form
of enzyme is called a zymogen or proenzyme. They may appear as pepsinogen,
trypsinogen, or chymotrypsin and their conversion to active form
requires other enzymes called coenzymes. These coenzymes are dependent
upon available zinc and manganese. Deficiencies can result in digestive
disturbances.
Following a brief period of time in the stomach, the partially
digested food is pushed by muscle contraction into the initial portion
of the small intestine called the duodenum, when the intestinal
phase of digestion continues.
The Purpose of Enzymes
The enzymes transform the nutrients we ingest into vital functions
allowing for the regeneration of blood, nerves, organs, and tissues.
Of the three major groups of enzymes, two are digestive and one
is considered metabolic. Metabolic enzymes structure the basic elements
of nutrition to be used by the body for its most vital functions.
While metabolic enzymes are responsible for hormone production
and development, they are also the single greatest entity in assisting
the body to maintain a state of health and well being. They also
provide the basis for a functional cure of disease and govern the
process of aging while determining the vitality expressed at any
age.
The other two groups of enzymes are digestive in nature. Food enzymes
initiate the process of digestion while pure digestive enzymes continue
the process of breaking nutrients down into particles small enough
to be used by all of the tissues and organs of the body. At this
point the metabolic enzymes become active in the process of structuring
these nutrients into nerves, organs, tissues, and blood.
Ideally our enzyme stores will be replenished from our food sources
but in our modern society; this is, unfortunately, no longer true.
Food For Thought
Any food heat above 118 degrees destroys all enzyme activity. The
common practice of cooking, processing, pasteurizing, blanching,
irradiating and preservation leaves us little more live enzyme activity
than exists on our raw salads. More unfortunately, the general rule
is that anything low in protein is usually low in enzymes and salads
are low in protein.
The bottom line is that actual usable enzymes exist in only about
ten per cent of the foods we now eat. But we need enzymes in every
bite of food we ingest. Add to this dilemma the common practice
of drinking carbonated beverages and taking antacids (which also
destroy enzyme activity) and it's a wonder we live as long as we
do.
Eating
cooked foods triggers mechanisms in the body which attempt to produce
enzymes from within the body's own resources. The pancreas is a
major source of this activity. The raw materials for this process
must now come from another source, as they are unavailable in the
food itself.
Therefore, the body must rob from the building blocks designated
for the production of metabolic enzymes. The supply of enzyme materials
is limited and the body must now decide how to distribute what is
available to accomplish the tasks of highest priority. At this moment,
it is the digestion of the last meal we ingested.
So, you can easily see what happens next. As this process continues
throughout your life, the body continues to rob from these finite
stores of materials to assist in a process, which has become increasingly
compromised.
We need enzymes. The body reallocates resources assigned to life
sustaining functions to permit the immediate process of digestion
to continue. So, with the enzymes vacant from our food sources the
body begins to compensate and adapt.
The pancreas swells, the brains shrinks and the life sustaining
processes are compromised until the body can no longer compensate
in an attempt to maintain balance. We begin to exhibit the early
warning signs of disease in the process of developing.
As in all things, enzymes are not a panacea, but rather, an essential
element which must be present in order for the miracle of proper
digestion to take place. Enzymes are not "magic pills".
Rather, they supplement the work of your body's organs and glands
to completely digest the food you eat.
Some people will notice a dramatic improvement in their energy
levels and feeling of vitality. Others might notice significant
improvement in the functioning of their digestive tract and relief
of long term chronic conditions. Some people's recognition of improvement
will be more subtle and gradual. It all depends on the underlying
condition of deficiency and how quickly the imbalance can be corrected.
The process of adaptation may not be evident in our earlier years
but the faster we deplete the resources earmarked for the production
of metabolic enzymes, the faster we age, and the more compensated
other vital functions become.
The bottom line is that enzymes are a critical necessity in the
diet of anyone seeking quality of life and longevity!
By Dr.
Richard A. DiCenso
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