Guest guest Posted October 30, 2005 Report Share Posted October 30, 2005 From drbenkim.com free newsletter: Recommended Health Tools Can Water Fasting Be Dangerous? By Ben Kim, D.C. There's no doubt that water fasting is a powerful tool that can be used to give the body a chance to experience accelerated healing. With lots of physical rest and no food coming in, a water fast can allow the body to use the bulk of its resources on its self healing mechanisms. While it might take a year or more for one's self healing mechanisms to cure high blood pressure with healthy food and lifestyle choices, a properly conducted water fast can sometimes accomplish the same task within a week or two. Similarly, any health condition that can benefit from a period of concentrated rest and more energy for one's self healing mechanisms can benefit from a well conducted water fast. Not only can a water fast allow for accelerated self healing, it can also decrease one's stores of toxins. Over time, all of us are exposed to toxins, some environmental pollutants, and some made within our digestive tracts from poor digestion. Over years, these toxins can build up in our tissues, particularly our fat tissues. And this accumulation of toxicity in our tissues can negatively alter the normal rhythm and function of our cells. As one's toxic load is decreased during a properly conducted water fast, dysfunctional cells can recover, leading to a significant improvement in one's health. While water fasting is generally a safe and powerful tool for health recovery, it doesn't come without risks. Few books on water fasting will tell you that in certain situations, water fasting can be detrimental to health and can even lead to death. That's right, people have died while water fasting, even while water fasting under the supervision of people who believe they are competent with the process. I hope to find the time to write more extensively on this subject in the future. For now, here are three circumstances in which I believe a water fast should not be conducted. 1. When a person has clinical signs and/or subjective symptoms that suggest the presence of any degree of arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) and he or she is significantly underweight before wanting to fast. In my opinion, such people have a higher than average risk of suffering a hemorrhagic (bleeding) stroke if they fast for more than about a week. As a water fast goes on, the body is capable of breaking down cholesterol plaques that line one's blood vessels, as evidenced by higher blood cholesterol levels for almost everyone who completes a water fast of more than about a week. In people who are extremely thin and have a history of arteriosclerosis, some of these plaques that get broken down may be essential to maintaining the integrity of one's blood vessels. This is why plaques form in the first place: to repair and provide reinforcement for damaged blood vessel walls. If such plaques are broken down, it's possible to experience bleeding from a blood vessel, which can have disastrous consequences. 2. When a person is a type I diabetic or has had a long history of using glucose-regulating drugs. Such people can experience dangerously low blood sugar levels during a water fast. Low enough to go into shock and die within minutes. In my opinion, people who fall into this category should not undergo water fasting. A great deal can be accomplished with sensible food and lifestyle choices that don't involve the risk that water fasting does. 3. When a person has a significant history of use of prescription drugs, particularly fat-soluble drugs that are easily stored in one's tissues and can alter one's natural output of hormones. The most obvious example of this circumstance are people who have had a long history of taking steroidal drugs. The compensatory changes that occur in one's glands with such drugs, particularly those that occur in the pituitary-hypothalamus-adrenal axis, can cause a variety of serious endocrine challenges during a long water fast, some of which can be life-threatening. With all of that being said, for people who are determined to make significant long term changes to their food and lifestyle choices, I believe that a water fast of a reasonable duration can serve as a good foundation for health recovery. What is a reasonable duration? It really depends on each person's health history and goals, but in general, I have come to believe that a fast of 7-14 days is appropriate for the vast majority of folks looking for a jumpstart to better health. For more information about water fasting, you can read our section on fasting. E-mail this page to a friend E-mail this page to a friend Dr. Ben Kim's Natural Health Newsletter Thousands of people in more than 110 countries are reading Dr. Ben Kim's Natural Health Newsletter to learn how to increase their energy, reach and maintain their ideal weight,prevent and reverse disease, and to improve the overall quality of their lives. To receive our FREE newsletter and begin the journey to your very best health, sign up here: Your privacy is guaranteed. First Name: E-mail address: Read What People are Saying About our Newsletter and Health Program Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.