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Are minerals important?

JoAnn Guest

Dec 12, 2004 12:29 PST

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Are minerals important?

 

Two-time Nobel prize winner Linus Pauling thought so: " You can trace

every sickness, every disease, every ailment to mineral deficiency. "

 

Four elements compose 96% of the body's makeup: carbon, hydrogen,

oxygen, and nitrogen. The remaining 4% of the body's composition is

mineral.

 

There are several opinions about how many minerals are essential.

 

Macro (minerals) usually means more than 100 mg per day.

Trace usually means we don't know how much we need.

 

 

 

Essential Minerals

 

A) MACROMINERALS

 

Calcium

 

Chlorine

 

Sodium

 

Potassium

 

Phosphorus

 

Magnesium

 

Sulfur

 

 

 

 

B) TRACE MINERALS

 

Selenium

 

Cobalt

 

Chromium

 

Tin

 

Zinc

 

Vanadium

 

Copper

 

Silicon

 

Manganese

 

Nickel

 

Iron

 

Molybdenum

 

Fluorine

 

Iodine

 

U.S. Dept. of Agriculture

National Research Council

 

The controversy primarily involves the second column - trace minerals.

 

 

Of the 14 trace minerals listed above, three or four may not have

universal agreement as essential, but a majority of creditable sources

admit that most of them are essential.

 

Deficiency amounts have never been determined for most trace minerals,

although several diseases have been linked with deficiencies of certain

ones.

 

Conclusive evidence has not been found regarding the exact daily intake

amounts necessary, since some of the actual requirements may be too

small to measure; hence the name " trace. "

 

Minerals trigger the vitamins and enzymes to act; that means digestion.

 

 

" The alarming fact is that food...now being raised on millions of acres

of land that no longer contain enough...minerals are starving us, no

matter how much of them we eat. "

 

 

" Lacking vitamins, the system can make use of minerals,

 

but lacking minerals, vitamins are useless. "

 

Different studies show different figures, of course, but there is

certainly no lack of explanation for mass deficiencies of mineral

intake.

 

The most obvious of these is soil depletion and demineralization.

 

 

The second contributor to mineral deficiency within the population is

obviously, diet. Even if our produce did contain abundant minerals, less

than 4% of the population eats sufficient fruits and vegetables to

account for minimal RDAs.

 

To compound matters further, mass amounts of processed food, excess

protein, and refined sugars require most of our mineral stores in order

to digest it and remove it.

 

The removal process involves enzymes, which break things down. Enzyme

activity, remember, is completely dependent on minerals like zinc and

copper and chromium.

 

No minerals - no enzyme action.

 

In addition, milk and dairy products, alcohol, and drugs inhibit the “

absorption” of these minerals, further ‘depleting’ reserves.

 

So it is cyclical: refined foods inhibit mineral absorption, which then

are not themselves efficiently digested because of diminished enzyme

activity.

 

And then we go looking for bugs as the cause of disease?

 

 

The third reason for inadequate minerals in the body is a phenomenon

known as “secondary deficiency”.

 

It has been proven that an excess of one mineral may directly cause a

deficiency of another, because minerals compete for absorption, compete

for the same binding sites, like a molecular Musical Chairs.

 

Secondary deficiency means an “excess” of one mineral may cause a

“deficiency” of another.

 

 

For example, iron, copper, and zinc are competitive in this way.

 

Copper is necessary for the conversion of iron to hemoglobin, but if

there is “excess” zinc, less iron will be ‘available’ for “conversion”

 

.. This may cause a secondary deficiency of iron, which can manifest

itself as iron deficiency anemia.

 

All due simply to excessive zinc.

 

Researchers have found that these secondary deficiencies caused by

excess of one mineral are almost always due to mineral supplements,

since the quantities contained in food are so small.

 

A fourth reason for mineral deficiency in humans is overuse of

prescription drugs.

 

It has been known since the 1950s that antibiotics interfere with uptake

of minerals, specifically zinc, chromium, and calcium. (The Plague

Makers)

 

Also Tylenol, Advil, Motrin, and aspirin have the same inhibitive effect

on mineral absorption.

 

When the body has to try and metabolize these drugs to clear the system,

its own mineral stores are heavily drawn upon.

 

Such a waste of energy is used to metabolize laxatives, diuretics,

chemotherapy drugs, and NSAIDs, such as Tylenol, Advil, and aspirin out

of the body.

 

This is one of the most basic mechanisms in drug-induced

immunosuppression: minerals are essential for normal immune function.

 

 

Ultimately, the only issue that really counts with minerals is

bioavailability.

 

Really doesn't matter what we eat; it only matters what makes it to the

body's cells.

 

 

Food-bound iron, like that contained in raisins or molasses, will have

a much higher rate of absorption, since it is complexed with other

living, organic forms, and as such is classed as a nutrient mineral.

 

Minerals are not living, though they are necessary for life.

 

Minerals are necessary for cell life and enzyme reactions and hundreds

of other reasons.

 

But they must be in a form that can make it as far as the cells.

 

What is not bioavailable passes right through the body, a waste of time

and sometimes money.

 

Let's say the mineral is contained within some food, such as iron in

molasses, or potassium in bananas.

 

Food-bound minerals are attached or complexed to organic molecules.

 

Absorption into the blood is vastly increased, made easy.

 

The mineral is not just a foreign metal that has been ingested; it is

part of food.

 

 

Fruits and vegetables with high mineral content are the best way to

provide the body with adequate nutrition.

 

Food-bound minerals are the original mode.

 

Most minerals can be toxic if taken to excess.

 

And this excess would not happen from food; only from supplements.

 

Again, we only need a little.

 

 

So any mineral supplements we take should be as absorbable and as

bioavailable as possible - that way we won't have to take much.

Less chance of toxicity.

 

Bioavailability has a precursor, an opening act.

It is called absorption.

 

 

Some of the Individual functions of minerals in the body:

 

 

 

Structural: bones, teeth, ligaments

 

Solutes and electrolytes in the blood

 

Enzyme actions

 

Energy production from food breakdown

 

Nerve transmission

 

Muscle action

 

 

Copper :Forms hemoglobin from iron

 

Many essential minerals are toxic in excess, but essential in small

amounts.

Iron, chlorine, sodium, zinc, and copper are in this category.

 

Heavy metal toxins:

 

Heavy metals are involved in many patients suffering

with fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, headaches, PMS, and menopausal

symptoms.

 

Our exposure to toxins such as mercury, lead, aluminum,

arsenic, copper, cadmium, and others is increasing with time.

 

After exposure to toxins our body often stores toxins that it is not

able to detoxify.

 

 

Aluminum: Documented since the article in Lancet 14 Jan 1989 to be

associated with Alzheimer's as well as blocking absorption of essential

minerals like iron.

 

 

" This is particularly common for those with learning disabilities.

 

One young man I saw had an extraordinary copper/zinc ratio.

 

He was taking multiple vitamins which contain copper, and this was

like poison to him. "

 

 

Treatment in such cases is to avoid multiple vitamins and enriched

foods containing copper, prescribing instead a supplement that will

bring the copper and zinc levels back to normal.

 

" We make sure that they don't drink water that may be copper-

bearing, and suggest that they stay away from other possible sources

of copper, " adds Dr. Walsh.

 

" Swimming pools, for example, are treated with antialgae agents

which are loaded with copper,

and patients ought to make sure they

shower afterward and not drink any of the water. "

 

Our only hope of better health is to do everything possible to build up

our natural immune system.

 

One of these preventative measures is nutritional supplementation. It

may not be dramatic, but daily deposits to the immune system bank

account will pay off down the road. Healthy people don't get sick.

 

 

With respect to minerals, then, what are our goals?

 

My opinion is that having once realized the necessity for mineral

supplementation, our objectives should be simple:

 

Take only the minerals we absolutely need

 

Take the smallest amounts possible

 

Nothing left over ( no metabolic residue)

 

Most of the new holistic supplements are less toxic than standard

pharmaceutical drugs, because they're in a category the FDA calls GRAS

(Generally Regarded As Safe.

 

That's probably more than we can say for Prozac, fen-phen, and Viagra.)

 

Many of the extraordinary holistic supplements won't be sold in stores,

and no one is going to give them away.

 

So welcome to the American marketplace.

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes.html

 

" Marketing is the art of persuasion by suspending logic. "

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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