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"Killer" fats are what we hear so much about recently, with large

numbers of people turning to low fat diets. Little do they know, they

are also decreasing their intake of the healing fats that are required for life. Improper low fat diets, useful for atherosclerosis,

can kill you over the long term. Children are especially vulnerable to

damage from low fat diets. To balance the one-sided view on fats, we

must talk about essential fatty acids (EFAs): an adequate supply of healing fats is even more important to health than the avoidance of killer fats.

Please note

that it is extremely important to obtain an accurate diagnosis before

trying to find a cure. Many diseases and conditions share common

symptoms: if you treat yourself for the wrong illness or a specific

symptom of a complex disease, you may delay legitimate treatment of a

serious underlying problem. In other words, the greatest danger in

self-treatment may be self-diagnosis. If you do not know what you

really have, you can not treat it!Knowing how difficult it is

to weed out misinformation and piece together countless facts in order

to see the "big picture", we now provide simple online access to The

Analyst™. Used by doctors and patients alike, The Analyst™ is a

computerized diagnostic tool that sits on a vast accumulation of

knowledge and research. By combining thousands of connections between

signs, symptoms, risk factors, conditions and treatments, The Analyst™

will help to build an accurate picture of your current health status,

the risks you are running and courses of action (including appropriate

lab testing) that should be considered. Full information is available here.

Like vitamins, EFAs

are essential to health. Older literature, in fact, refers to them as

vitamin F. Vitamins and EFAs are essential for the following reasons:We must have them to live and to be healthyOur bodies cannot make them from other substancesWe must obtain an adequate supply from external sources - from food or from supplementsDeficiency results in gradual deterioration of cells and tissues, and ultimately, in deathIncreasing the intake to adequate levels reverses the signs brought about by deficiency.This

definition of essentiality reflects the fact that essential nutrients

perform key functions in our cells and tissues that the body cannot

live without.Special Properties Of EFAsWhile EFAs

are like vitamins in their essentiality, they differ in other respects.

Vitamins are required in very small amounts (a few mg per day) whereas EFAs are macronutrients, necessary in grams

per day. EFAs are perishable, deteriorating rapidly when exposed to

light, air, heat and metals. Unlike vitamins, EFAs cannot be dried,

powdered and stored for several years. EFA sensitivity makes careful processing and freshness extremely important.Omega-6 And Omega-3 EFAsMany

standard texts on nutrition suggest three EFAs: linoleic, linolenic,

and arachidonic acids. This outdated information is wrong. Two fatty acids are essential to human health. (Fish require only one fatty acid

and plants require neither - they make their own.) The first is the

omega-6 EFA, which is called linoleic acid (LA). LA is abundant in polyunsaturated

safflower, sunflower and corn oils. The second, known as the omega-3

EFA, is called alpha-linolenic acid (LNA) and is sometimes referred to

as super-unsaturated; it is found abundantly in flax and hemp seeds.LA

and its derivatives belong to the omega-6 family of polyunsaturates. In

addition to linoleic acid (LA), this family includes the down-line metabolites gamma-linoleic acid (GLA), dihomogamma-linolenic acid (DGLA), and arachidonic acid (AA).If

LA is provided by foods, our cells make GLA, DGLA, and AA. Omega-6

conversion can be inhibited by bad fats (margarines, shortenings,

trans-fatty acids, hard fats, sugar and cholesterol), lack of minerals (magnesium, selenium, zinc), vitamin deficiencies (B3, B6, C, E), viruses, obesity, diabetes,

aging, and rare genetic mutations. In such situations, oil containing

omega-6 derivatives can help. GLA is present in evening primrose,

borage, and black currant seed. DGLA is found in mother's milk and AA

in meats, eggs and dairy products.LNA and its derivatives belong to an omega-3 family of superunsaturates. Besides LNA, this family includes the down-line metabolites eicosapentanoic acid (EPA), and docosahexanoic acid (DHA). If LNA is provided by foods, our cells make DHA and EPA. When the conversion of EFAs

to their derivatives is inhibited by the factors listed above, DHA from

black currant seed oil, or EPA and DHA from fish oils and northern

ocean algae can be given.A study on elderly Japanese patients demonstrated that blood levels of the omega-3 fatty acids

EPA and DHA increase after prolonged consumption of ALA from a

plant-based oil. The change is slow and requires about 10 months of

supplementation. However, the result of the study suggests that

supplementation with ALA from flax oil

may to some degree have the same beneficial role as supplementation

with fish oil. This news may be particularly interesting to people

following a vegetarian diet or for those who do not eat fish products. [Journal of Nutrition Science Viturminol, December 1999]Properties Of EFAsThe

value of LA and LNA to health results from their chemical properties.

EFAs react with oxygen: EFA-rich oils such as flax, hemp and safflower

were traditionally used in paints because they oxidize, dry and harden

quickly when exposed to air. When fresh, these oils are valuable human

foods. EFAs absorb sunlight, increasing their ability to react with

oxygen by about 1,000-fold and making them very active chemically.EFA

molecules carry slight negative charges that cause them to repel one

another. They spread out in all directions. This property enables EFAs

to carry oil-soluble toxins from deep within the body to the skin

surface for eliminations. EFAs form associations with the sulfhydryl

group (cysteine) in proteins,

important in reactions that make possible the one-way movement of

electrons and energy on which life depends. EFAs store electric charges

that produce bioelectric currents important for muscle, cell membrane

and nerve functions, including the transmission of messages.SourceIn

nature's package, EFA-rich oils keep for years without spoiling. Once

processed and out of that package, light, air and heat attack EFAs.

Like perishable produce, EFA-rich oils should be made with care and

obtained fresh. Frying and deep-frying destroy EFAs by the combined

effects of light, oxygen and heat, producing toxic substances that can

lead to atherosclerosis and cancer.EFA-rich

oils should be made and packaged in the absence of light, oxygen and

heat. Frozen solid, oils remain unspoiled for a long time because

freezing does not damage them. Manufacturers should ship them directly

to retailers or consumers without stops along the way.Function; Reasons For UseEFAs play their essential roles by:Helping to form the membrane barrier that surrounds our cells and intracellular factories (organelles)Determining fluidity and chemical reactivity of membranesIncreasing oxidation rate, metabolic rate, and energy levelsServing as starting material for hormone-like regulating molecules (prostaglandins) that govern cell activities on a moment-to-moment basisAs structural components of membranes, EFAs help form a barrier that keeps foreign molecules, viruses, yeasts, fungi and bacteria outside of cells, and keeps the cells' proteins, enzymes,

genetic material and organelles (small organs) inside. They also help

regulate the traffic of substances in and out of our cells via protein channels, pumps and other mechanisms.They perform similar functions in membranes that surround organelles within our cells. EFAs fulfill many functions:Regulate oxygen use, electron transport, and energy production - our cells' most important moment-to-moment processesHelp form red blood pigment (hemoglobin) from simpler substancesKeep juice-producing (exocrine) and hormone-producing (endocrine) glands activeHelp make joint lubricantsAre precursors of prostaglandins (PGs), three families of short-lived, hormone-like substances that regulate blood pressure, platelet stickiness and kidney

function. A delicate balance between PGs with opposing functions, in

part determined by omega-6 and omega-3 intake, determines the health of

our cardiovascular system.Help transport cholesterolHelp generate the electrical currents that make our heart beat in an orderly sequenceAre precursors of derivatives such as DHA, which are needed by the most active tissues - brain, retina, adrenal glands and testesHelp our immune system fight infections by enhancing peroxide productionHelp prevent the development of allergies.EFAs

play a role in every life process in our body and life without them is

impossible. When consuming an EFA-poor diet, expect a diversity of

health problems.DirectionsOf

approximately fifty known essential nutrients, LA has the highest daily

requirement. The amount needed varies with season, latitude, levels of

activity and stress, nutritional state, and individual differences.

Just 1-2% of calories (1 teaspoon per day) prevent signs of deficiency in most healthy adults. LA optimums are around 3-6% of calories (1 tablespoon per day), requiring about 30 IU of vitamin E to help prevent rancidity. Obese people and those eating hard fats, sugar and trans-fatty acids require more.Nutrients essential for LA functions include magnesium, selenium, zinc, and vitamins A, carotene, B3, B6, C and E.An adult carries about 10 kilograms of body fat, of which approximately 1 kilogram

is LA. Vegetarians' bodies carry up to 25% of their body fat as LA.

People with degenerative disease average only about 8% of their body

fat as LA.Alpha-linolenic acid (LNA) optimums range between 1-2 tsp per day, averaging 2% of daily calories. Body content in healthy people is around 2% of fat, or half a pound of LNA. LNA requires the same antioxidants, minerals and vitamins necessary for LA functions.Omega-6 To Omega-3 RatioOmega-6 to omega-3 ratios in healthy populations range from 1:2.5 (Inuit diets) to 6:1 (other traditional diets). Since

1850, omega-3 consumption has decreased to one-sixth its traditional

level, resulting in an omega-6 to omega-3 ratio of 20:1 (contemporary polyunsaturated oil diets), which is associated with degenerative conditions.Long-term exclusion of omega-6 oils and excessive use of flax oil

can result in a reverse imbalance of the one commonly seen, i.e. too

much omega-3. They should remain in balance. If a person has cancer,

inflammatory conditions, or needs to lose weight, omega-3 should be

favored. Otherwise, an omega-6 to omega-3 ratio of between 2:1 and 3:1

is suitable.RequirementsFlax, our richest source of omega-3, quickly replenishes a long-standing omega-3 deficiency. 1-2 tbsp

per day of good quality flax oil for a few months should suffice.

Cold-water fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel, herring) are a good source

of the metabolites EPA and DHA. There is now an algae-derived oil (click here for details) that has both DHA and EPA, suitable for vegans and vegetarians. Fish obtain their DHA and EPA ultimately from the consumption of algae.Hemp seed oil has a remarkable fatty acid profile, being high in the desirable omega-3s and also delivering some GLA,

which is absent from the fats we normally eat. Hemp oil contains 57%

linoleic and 19% linolenic acids, in the 3:1 ratio that matches our

nutritional needs. Once difficult to find, many health food stores now

routinely make hemp seed oil available as the demand for it has

increased. Enig, PhD is a respected researcher in the field

of fats and oils, especially the hydrogenated, partially-hydrogenated

and trans fats. The latest findings appear to implicate all seed oils

in the promotion of cancer, heart disease, diabetes, obesity, allergies, adrenal failure and stroke.

The list of implicated oils includes canola, soy, corn, safflower,

sunflower and all hydrogenated and partially-hydrogenated fats and

oils. If this turns out to be true, then limiting the intake of the

omega-6 EFAs becomes increasingly important.A tablespoon of flax seed has about 7.5gm of the short chain omega-3 which would be converted by the body to about 750mg of the long chained EPA and DHA.

A tablespoon of hemp oil has about 2.5gm ALA (or 250mg of EPA and DHA).

A tablespoon of fish oil, on the other hand, has about 12,000mg of EPA

and DHA. Since the informal NIH recommendations are for 660mg of the long chained omega-3s, the recommended daily intake would be the equivalent of about:1 tablespoon of flax == 3 tablespoons of flax seed == 3 tablespoons of hemp oil == 4 tablespoons of canola oil == 1/4 teaspoon of fish oil.http://www.diagnose-me.com/treat/T19447.html

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