Proteins, Enzymes and Amino Acids
Protein: Is It In You?
Protein Deficient? Chances Are You Are!
Did you know that 9 out of 10 people lack the proper amount of protein in
their systems in order for their bodies to function properly? Even though you
may be eating a sufficient amount of protein it does not mean that your body is
utilizing it. When our dietary proteins are consumed in the proper amount and
balance, as well as properly digested, our bodies will create systemic proteins,
which keep our bodies intact. When our diet is lacking in this essential
nutrient, our pancreas will stop creating the enzymes for proper digestion, and
our body will become unable to manufacture much needed systemic protein. In a
very short period of time this deficiency will cause our bodies to malfunction
and we will begin experiencing the symptoms of disease.
Why Is Protein Important?
Protein is throughout our body, providing structure, function, and
organization. It is in our skin, nails and hair. It is in our blood, lymph, and
plasma. It enables our muscles to contract. It provides integrity to the walls
of our intestines. It fights infection in our body and repairs any tissue damage
that occurs. It is in our bone and brain cells. It makes the enzymes that digest
our food, repair damaged DNA, and regulate all chemical reactions in our body.
It forms lung cells. It carries oxygen to cells. It removes toxins from the
liver. It makes up all neurotransmitters except one. It maintains a proper
pressure differential between the fluid inside and outside of our cells. It
makes 95 percent of all hormones in the body as well as carrying hormones,
vitamins, fatty acids and minerals to the cells.
Protein Turnover
The list goes on and on. The point is that when we talk about protein we are
not talking about a part of the system, we are talking about the system itself.
When we assimilate protein into the system daily, we are keeping the entire
system intact. When we are protein deficient, we will begin to miss pieces of
our system resulting in systemic malfunction. It would be as if the foundation
of your house started to degrade and so the walls cracked. Then the roof tiles
started to degrade and so the rain came in and rotted floor. Then the insulation
degraded and the unprotected wiring inside shorted out and set the rest of your
unstable, rotting house on fire! Luckily the materials comprising your house are
pretty stable and last for years before degrading. Protein, however, is not
stable, it is constantly being used up and exchanged for new protein in a
process called "protein turnover." About one pound of protein a day is used up
in this process, and so it needs to be replenished from the diet on a daily
basis.
Here are some examples of turnover times for different body proteins:
1. enzymes-7-10 min.
2. insulin-30 min.
3. liver protein-10 days
4. muscle protein-60 days
5. In 1 year all the protein in our body has turned over.
How Are Proteins Made?
When dietary protein is consumed in a healthy system it is broken down by
stomach acid and pancreatic enzymes into amino acids, (the molecules from which
protein is made) absorbed through the small intestine, and made available to the
body for systemic protein production. Literally thousands of different kinds of
proteins are being manufactured constantly in our body from 20 different amino
acids. The body can make 10 of these, and 10 are considered "essential", meaning
they must be acquired from the diet.
What Happens If You Don't Get The Proper Amino Acids?
Amino acids must be present in the body in the sufficient quantity and proper
ratio to one another in order for protein production to properly occur. Research
is finding consistently, that when amino acids are low, missing or out of
balance, the body will begin to malfunction. This malfunction starts with the
digestive system. Poor diet as well as certain illnesses (such as alcoholism and
hepatitis) cause amino acid deficiency due to pancreatic malfunction because,
when the pancreas can not make digestive enzymes (remember these are made from
amino acids) in sufficient quantity, dietary protein will not be broken down
sufficiently to be used by the body for systemic protein production. Lack of
systemic protein means the liver will start clogging with toxins, wounds will
heal more and more slowly and blood sugars will be less stable. Mineral and
vitamin deficiencies occur, hormones become unbalanced. The brain will cease
making enough of certain important chemicals leading to mood disorders,
hyperactivity, attention deficit, and depression. Immune system proteins become
low diminishing the work of antioxidants, leaving the body prey to viral and
bacterial infection.
How Can You Keep This From Happening?
Dr. Vickery's Platinum
Plus Amino Acids are a balanced blend of amino acids. When Platinum Plus
Amino Acids enter the body and move through the stomach, immediate production
of systemic protein begins. Pancreatic cells churn out digestive enzymes, which
properly break down foods into more amino acids. Amino acids are then carried
all over the body to produce the thousands of proteins necessary to sustain
the structure and function of our body.
In a well functioning system the body will not over produce any of the 10
non-essential amino acids. The amino acid production process has a built in
mechanism to keep this from occurring. The 10 essential amino acids in Platinum
Plus Amino Acids are combined in a balanced blend to encourage optimal amino
acid activity in the system. The Vickery's clinical studies have consistently
found that a well balanced diet supplemented with Platinum Plus Amino Acids
along with the vitamin blend Bio Multi Plus and the essential fatty acid blend
Platinum Flax/Borage, will maintain a healthy system and revitalize a diseased
one.
Enzymes and Amino Acids
The
keys to good health are an abundance of digestive enzymes and the
proper digestive pH for them to perform complete digestion. Here?s how the
system works:
The food goes into the mouth and gets mixed with enzymes that begin the
process of carbohydrate pre-digestion in the mouth (this is why it?s so
important to chew your food well.) The food travels to the upper stomach, where
it sits for one hour in a relatively high pH, pre-digesting and getting ready
for the more acidic pH of the lower stomach, where hydrochloric acid will begin
protein breakdown and fat emulsification. Then the food enters the duodenum
where pancreatic juices are supposed to raise the pH so that the pancreatic
enzymes can finish the job of digestion, breaking the food down to the point
that the body can use it for repair, protection, and maintenance. If the food is
not fully broken down, the body will not be able to use it. If this situation
continues over a period of time, chronic disease will set in. When the digestion
process is complete, the small intestine will allow the food to pass through
into the body where it is used to make blood, bone, muscle, hormones, enzymes,
neurons, and everything else it needs. Incompletely digested food may pass
through the intestinal lumen, but the body cannot use it.
Pancreatic juices
Say we have an over-production of hydrochloric acid in the lower stomach that
pours into the duodenum. This calls for an extra rich supply of sodium,
potassium and bicarbonate ions in the pancreatic juice to raise the pH enough so
that digestion can be successful. However, what if our diet is chronically acid,
what if we are under a lot of emotional stress, or what if we take certain
medications (such as anti-depressants, blood pressure medicine, or diuretics.)
All these are things that will leave our system poor in alkalizing elements and
we will not have enough sodium or potassium for our pancreas to put in its
juice. The pH of the duodenum will remain too low for optimal digestion. The
enzymes that complete protein and carbohydrate digestion in the pancreas, work
within a specific pH range. In the center of that range, they are at peak
performance. As the pH moves to the limits of the range, their performance
drops. So if we are right at the limit or just over the limit of the pH range
for these enzymes, we are getting incomplete digestion activity from the
enzymes. Now, if our pH goes and we can?t digest our food, then what is our body
going to use to make more digestive enzymes?
Digestive Enzymes
When protein is completely broken down it becomes single amino acids, which
our body uses to make, among many other things, digestive enzymes. (Amino acids
also create the mineral carriers of the body so that the alkalizing minerals
like sodium and potassium get where they need to go in the body, thereby
protecting the Ph of things like the pancreatic juice.) When protein cannot be
broken down into amino acids, our body can?t use it. So, if we are making less
and less digestive enzymes (as well as less and less of everything else our body
needs) our food is digesting less and less. Until finally we begin to experience
the symptoms of chronic illness. Fine, we say, we will take antacids to buffer
our digestive pH level. Antacids will raise the pH in the stomach, which needs to
be low to start protein breakdown. In this scenario, inefficiently pre-digested
fats and proteins enter the duodenum which:
1) is not designed to do the job of the stomach, and
2) still doesn?t have enough enzymes to do its part of the job.
Antacids Are Counterproductive
In other words: antacids compound the problem. The digestive system is so
complex that trying to control it from the outside is a losing proposition. The
only way to have success is to give the body the raw materials it needs and let
the digestive system heal itself. The basic raw materials for digestive enzymes
are amino acids. The body makes some of these itself and has a very complicated
system for keeping them in the proper balance. The amino acids that the body
does not manufacture are called essential amino acids and must be supplied from
outside sources. But if these are not supplied in the proper balance, the entire
amino acid system will reduce in efficiency. All we have to do is figure out the
essential amino acid combination that will fit into the delicate Acid/Alkaline
balance the body demands in order to create the enzymes it needs!
Healthy Digestion
Dr. Vickery spent years researching this phenomenon and formulating a very
specific balance of pure, professional grade essential amino acids, Platinum
Plus Essential Amino Acids. Platinum
Plus allows the body to reverse this cycle of mal-digestion so that it can
heal itself and maintain that health. (To understand more about amino acid supplements
see Product Notes.)
Four to six Platinum Plus Amino Acid capsules a day
will protect the pancreatic enzyme level in your system so food digestion will
normalize. Taking Platinum Plus along with eating a diet that balances digestive
pH levels, will heal the body and ensure that it stays well.
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