Enzymes and Longevity
originally published by University
of Natural Healing, Inc.
Food enzyme researcher Dr. Edward Howell tells why he believes: "Enzymes
may be the key factor in preventing chronic disease and extending the
human lifespan."
Dr. Edward Howell was born in Chicago in 1898. He is the holder of
a limited medical license from the State of Illinois. The holder of
a limited practice license is required to pass the same medical examination
as a medical doctor. Only surgery, obstetrics and materia medica are
excluded. After obtaining his license, Dr. Howell joined the professional
staff of the Lindlahr Sanitorium, where he remained for six years. In
1930, he established a private facility for the treatment of chronic
ailments by nutritional and physical methods. Until he retired in 1970,
Dr. Howell was busy in private practice three days each week. The balance
of his time he devoted to various kinds of research.
Dr. Howell is the first researcher to recognize the importance of the enzymes
in food to human nutrition. In 1946, he wrote the book, "The Status
of Food Enzymes in Digestion and Metabolism." Dr. Howell's forthcoming
book is entitled, "Enzyme Diet." This book contains the reference
and source materials for the enzyme theories which Dr. Howell has collectively
called, "The Food Enzyme Concept." The manuscript for "Enzyme
Diet" reviews the scientific literature through 1973. 1t is approximately
160,000 words long and contains 47 tables and 695 references to the
world's scientific literature.
In this interview, Dr. Howell tells: What enzymes are, what they do in our
bodies, why he believes a state of enzyme deficiency stress exists in most people,
and finally, what he believes you can do about it.
"Neither vitamins, minerals or hormones can do any work -- without enzymes."
HDN: What are enzymes?
HOWELL: Enzymes are substances which make life possible. They are needed for
every chemical reaction in that occurs in our body. Without enzymes, no activity
at all would take place. Neither vitamins, minerals, or hormones can do any
work -- without enzymes.
Think of it this way: Enzymes are the "labor force" that builds your
body just like construction workers are the labor force that builds your house.
You may have all the necessary building materials and lumber, but to build a
house you need workers, which represent the vital life element.
Similarly, you may have all the nutrients -- vitamins, proteins, minerals,
etc., for your body, but you still need the enzymes -- the life element -- to
keep the body alive and well.
HDN: Are enzymes then just like chemical catalysts which speed up various reactions?
HOWELL: No. Enzymes are much more than catalysts.
Catalysts are only inert substances. They possess none of the life energy we
find in enzymes. For instance, enzymes give off a kind of radiation when they
work. This is not true of catalysts.
In addition, although enzymes contain proteins -- and some contain vitamins
-- the activity factor in enzymes has never been synthesized.
Moreover, there is no combination of proteins or any combination of amino acids
or any other substance which will give enzyme activity.
There are proteins present in enzymes. However, they serve only as carriers
of the enzyme activity factors.
Therefore, we can say that enzymes consist of protein carriers charged with
energy factors just as a battery consists of metallic plates charged with electrical
energy.
HDN: Where do the enzymes in our bodies come from?
HOWELL: It seems that we inherit a certain enzyme potential at birth.
This limited supply of activity factors or life force must last us a lifetime.
It's just as if you inhented a certain amount of money. If the movement is all
one way -- all spending and no income -- you will run out of money.
Likewise, the faster you use up your supply of enzyme activity, the quicker
you will run out. Experiments at various universities have shown that, regardless
of the species, the faster the metabolic rate, the shorter the lifespan.
Other things being equal, you live as long as your body has enzyme activity
factors to make enzymes from. When it gets to the point that you can't make
certain enzymes, then your life ends.
HDN: Do people do anything which causes them to waste their limited enzyme
supply?
HOWELL: Yes. Just about every single person eats a diet of mainly cooked foods.
Keep in mind that whenever a food is boiled at 212 degrees, the enzymes in it
are 100% destroyed.
If enzymes were in the food we eat, they would do some or even a considerable
part of the work of digestion by themselves. However, when you eat cooked, enzyme-free
food, this forces the body itself to make the enzymes needed for digestion.
This depletes the body's limited enzyme capacity.
HDN: How serious is this strain on our enzyme "bank" caused by diets
of mostly cooked food?
HOWELL: I believe it's one of the paramount causes of premature aging and early
death. I also believe it's the underlying cause of almost all degenerative disease.
To begin with, if the body is overburdened to supply many enzymes to the saliva,
gastric juice, pancreatic juice and intestinal juice, then it must curtail the
production of enzymes for other purposes.
If this occurs, then how can the body also make enough enzymes to run the brain,
heart, kidneys, lungs, muscles and other organs and tissues?
This "stealing" of enzymes from other parts of the body to service
the digestive tract sets up a competition for enzymes among the various organ
systems and tissues of the body.
The resulting metabolic dislocations may be the direct cause of cancer, coronary
heart disease, diabetes, and many other chronic incurable diseases.
This state of enzyme deficiency stress exists in the majority of persons on
the civilized, enzyme-free diet.
HDN: Did human disease begin when man started cooking his food?
HOWELL: This is what the evidence indicates.
For example, the Neanderthal Man of 50,000 years ago used fire extensively
in his cooking. He lived in caves and ate mostly roasted meat from the continuous
fires which warmed the caves. These statements are documented by scientific
evidence in my published and unpublished works.
From fossil evidences we know that the Neanderthal Man suffered from
fully-developed crippling arthritis.
It's possible that the Neanderthal Man also had diabetes or cancer or kidney
disease and so forth. However, we'll never know since all soft tissues have
disappeared without a trace.
Incidentally, another inhabitant of the caves was the cave bear. This creature
protected the Neanderthal Man from the cave tiger, who also wanted
the protection of the cave to avoid the frigid weather. The cave bear, according
to paleontologists, was a partially domesticated animal and most likely lived
on the same roasted meat that the cave man ate.
Like the cave man, the cave bear also suffered from chronic, deforming arthritis.
HDN: Isn't it possible that cold weather, not cooked food, was responsible
for the arthritis of the Neanderthal Man?
HOWELL: No, I don't think weather had much to do with it.
For example, consider the primitive Eskimo. He lived in an environment just
as frigid as that of the Neanderthal Man. And yet, the Eskimo never suffered
from arthntis and other chronic diseases.
However, the Eskimo ate large amounts of raw food. The meat he ate was only
slightly heated and was raw in the center. Therefore, the Eskimo received a
large quantity of food enzymes with every meal.
In fact, the word Eskimo itself comes from an Indian expression which means,
"He who eats it raw."
Incidentally, there is no tradition of medicine men among the Eskimo people.
But among groups like the North American Indian, who ate cooked food extensively,
the medicine man had a prominent position in the tribe.
HDN: What evidence is there that human beings suffer from food enzyme deficiency?
HOWELL: There's so much evidence that I can only briefly summanze a small fraction
of it. Over the last 40 years, I have collected thousands of scientific documents
to document my theories.
To begin with, human beings have the lowest levels of starch digesting enzymes
in their blood of any creature. We also have the highest level of these enzymes
in the urine, meaning that they are being used up faster.
There's other evidence showing that these low enzyme levels are not due to
a pecularity of our species. Instead, they are due to the large amounts of cooked
starch we eat.
Also, we know that decreased enzyme levels are found in a number of chronic
ailments, such as allergies, skin disease, and even serious diseases like diabetes
and cancer.
In addition, incriminating evidence indicates that cooked, enzyme- free diets
contribute to a pathological over-enlargement of the pituitary gland, which
regulates the other glands. Furthermore, there is research showing that almost
100% of the people over 50 dying from accidental causes were found to have defective
pituitary glands.
Next, I believe that food enzyme deficiency is the cause of the exaggerated
maturation of today's children and teenagers. It is also an important cause
of overweight in many children and adults.
Many animal experiments have shown that enzyme-deficient diets produce a much
more rapid maturation than usual. Animals on cooked diets are also much heavier
than their counterparts on raw diets .
Another piece of related evidence is that farmers use cooked potatoes to fatten
pigs for market. The've found that pigs on cooked potatoes fatten faster and
more economically than pigs on raw potatoes.
This evidence shows the great difference between cooked calories and raw calories.
Indeed, from my work in a sanitarium many years ago, I've found that it was
impossible to get people fat on raw foods, regardless of the calorie intake.
Incidentally, another effect associated with food enzyme deficiency is that
the size of the brain decreases. In addition, the thyroid overenlarges, even
in the presence of adequate iodine. This has been shown in a number of species.
Of course, you can't prove it on human beings. The evidence, however, is very
suggestive.
HDN: What else is there?
HOWELL: Next, consider that the human pancreas is burdened with enzyme production
far in excess of any creature living on a raw food diet.
In fact, in proportion to body weight, the human pancreas is more than twice
as heavy as that of a cow.
Human beings eat mainly cooked food, while cows eat raw grass.
Then, there is evidence that rats on a cooked diet have a pancreas about twice
as heavy as rats on a raw diet.
Moreover, evidence shows that the human pancreas is one of the heaviest in
the animal kingdom, when you adjust for total body weight.
This overenlargement of the human pancreas is just as dangerous -- probably
even more so -- than an overlargement of the heart, the thyroid and so on. The
overproduction of enzymes in humans is a pathological adaption to a diet of
enzyme-free foods.
The pancreas is not the only part of the body that oversecretes enzymes when
the diet is cooked. In addition, there are the human salivary glands, which
produce enzymes to a degree never found in wild animals on their natural foods.
In fact, some animals on a raw diet do not have any enzymes at all in their
saliva. The cow and sheep produce torrents of saliva with no enzymes in it.
Dogs, for instance, also secrete no enzymes in their saliva when they're eating
a raw diet. However, if you start giving them cooked starchy food, their salivary
glands will start producing starch-digesting enzymes within 10 days.
In addition, there's more evidence that the enzymes in saliva represent a pathological
and not a normal situation. To begin with, salivary enzymes cannot digest raw
starch. This is something I demonstrated in the laboratory.
The enzymes in saliva will only attack a piece of starch once it's cooked.
Therefore, we see that the body will channel some of its limited enzyme producing
capacity into saliva only if it has to.
Incidentally, there is some provocative animal research which I have done in
my own laboratory some years ago. If you'd like, I can explain it now for your
readers.
HDN: Yes, please do.
HOWELL: I fed one group of rats a cooked diet and one group a raw diet and
let them live out their lifespan to see which group would live longer.
The first group got a combination of raw meat and various raw vegetables and
grains. The second group got the same foods boiled and therefore enzyme-free.
I kept these rats until they died, which took about three years.
As the experiment came to a close, the results surprised me. It turned out
that there was no great difference between the lifespans of the two groups.
Later on, I discovered the reason.
It turned out that the rats on the cooked diet were still getting enzymes,
but from an unexpected source. They had been eating their own feces, which contained
the enzymes excreted from their own bodies.
All feces, including those of human beings, contain the enzymes that the body
has used. My rats had been recycling their own enzymes to use them over again.
And that's why they lived as long as the rats on the raw diet.
Incidentally, the practice of eating feces is almost universal among today's
laboratory animals. Although these animals receive scientific diets containing
all known vitamins and minerals, the animals instinctively know they need enzymes.
Because of this, they eat their own feces.
In fact, the animals on these scientific diets develop most of the chronic
human degenerative diseases if they are allowed to live out their lifespans.
This shows that vitamins and minerals alone are not sufficient for health.
HDN: How do you know that people would benefit from additional enzyme intake?
HOWELL: To me, the most impressive evidence that people need enzymes is what
occurs as a result of therapeutic fasting. As you know, I spent some years in
a sanitarium working with patients on various fasting programs.
When a person fasts, there is an immediate halt to the production of digestive
enzymes. The enzymes in saliva, gastric juice and pancreatic juice dwindle and
become scarce. During fasting, the body's enzymes are free to work on repairing
and removing diseased tissues.
Civilized people eat such large quantities of cooked foods that their enzyme
systems are kept busy digesting food. As a result, the body lacks the enzymes
needed to maintain the tissues in good health.
Most people who fast go through what is called a healing crisis. The patients
may feel nausea, vomiting and dizziness. What's happening is that the enzymes
are working to change the unhealthy structure of the body. The enzymes attack
pathological tissues and break down undigested and unprocessed substances; and
these then get thrown off through the bowels, through vomiting, or via the skin.
HDN: When people get enzymes from food, aren't they destroyed by stomach acid
and therefore of little or no value?
HOWELL: This is not true. Although most nutntionists claim that enzymes in
food are destroyed in the stomach, they overlook two important facts.
First of all, when you eat food, acid secretion is minimal for at least thirty
minutes. As the food goes down the esophagus, it drops into the top portion
of the stomach. This is called the cardiac section, since it's closer to the
heart.
The rest of the stomach remains flat and closed while the cardiac section
opens up to accommodate the food. During the iime the food sits in the
upper section, little acid or enzymes are secreted by the body. The
enzymes in the food itself go about digesting the food. The more of
this self-digestion that occurs, the less work the body has to do later.
When this 30 to 45 minute period is over, the bottom section of the stomach
opens up and the body starts secreting acid and enzymes. Even at this
point, the food enzymes are not inactivated until the acid level becomes
prohibitive. You see, food enzymes can tolerate chemical environments
many times more acid than neutral.
HDN: Do animals also have a special section of the stomach where food digests
itself?
HOWELL: Absolutely. In fact, some creatures have what I call a food enzyme
stomach.
There are the cheek pouches of monkeys and rodents, the crop of many species
of birds, and the first stomachs of whales, dolphins and porpoises.
When birds, for instance, swallow seeds or grains, these grains lie in the
crop for 8 to 12 hours. As they sit, they absorb moisture, swell up and begin
to germinate. During germination, enzymes are formed which do the work of digesting
the seeds and grains.
Whales, dolphins and porpoises have a first stomach which secretes no enzymes.
Whales, for examples swallow large quantities of food without chewing it. The
food simply decomposes and digests itself. In the flesh of the fish and other
marine life the whale eats is an enzyme, called cathepsin, which breaks down
the fish once it has died. In fact, this enzyme is present in almost all creatures.
After the whale's catch has liquefied itself, it passes through a small hole
into the whale's second stomach. It mystifies scientists how the whale's
catch can get through that small hole into the second stomach. They
have no idea that self-digestion was at work.
HDN: Most -- if not all of us, eat lots of cooked foods every day. Can we make
up for this enzyme loss by eating raw foods in addition?
HOWELL: No. Cooked foods cause such a large drain on our enzyme supply
that you can't make it up by eating raw foods. In addition, vegetables
and fruits are not concentrated sources of enzymes. When produce ripens,
enzymes are present to do the ripening. However, once the ripening is
finished, some of the enzymes leave and go back into the stem and seeds.
For example, when companies want to get enzymes from papaya, a tropical
fruit, they use the juice of unripe papaya. The ripe papaya itself has
no great concentration of enzymes.
HDN: Are there any foods particularly high in enzymes?
HOWELL: Bananas, avocadoes and mangoes are good sources. In general, foods
having a higher calorie content are richer in enzymes.
HDN: Do you recommend all raw foods as sources of enzymes?
HOWELL: No. There are some foods, seeds and nuts, that contain what
are called enzyme inhibitors. These enzyme inhibitors are present for
the protection of the seed. Nature doesn't want the seed to germinate
prematurely and lose its life. It wants to make sure that the seed is
present in soil with sufficient moisture to grow and continue the species.
Therefore, when you eat raw seeds or raw nuts, you are swallowing enzyme inhibitors
which will neutralize some of the enzymes your body produces. In fact, eating
foods with enzyme inhibitors causes a swelling of the pancreas.
All nuts and seeds contain these inhibitors. Raw peanuts, for example, contain
an especially large amount. Raw wheat germ is also one of the worst offenders.
In addition, all peas, beans and lentils contain some.
Potatoes, which are seeds, have enzyme inhibitors.
In eggs, which are also seeds, the inhibitor is contained mainly in the eggwhite.
As a general rule, enzyme inhibitors are confined to the seed portions of food.
For instance, the eyes of potatoes. The inhibitors are not present in the fleshy
portions of fruits or in the leaves and stems of vegetables.
There are two ways to destroy enzyme inhibitors. The first is cooking; however,
this also destroys the enzymes. The second way, which is preferable, is sprouting.
This destroys the enzyme inhibitors and also increases the enzyme content from
a factor of 3 to 6.
Some foods, like soybeans, must be especially well heated to destroy the inhibitors.
For example, many of the soy flours and powders on the market were not heated
enough to destroy the inhibitors.
There is one other way to neutralize enzyme inhibitors, but we'll get to it
in just a minute.
HDN: You said that it's not possible to overcome the enzyme drain of cooked
foods just by eating other raw foods. What then can people do?
HOWELL: The only solution is to take capsules of concentrated plant enzymes.
In the absence of contraindications, you should take from l to 3 capsules per
meal. Of course, if you are eating all raw foods, then no enzymes will be necessary
at that meal.
The capsules should be opened and sprinkled on the food or chewed with the
meal. This way, the enzymes can go to work immediately. Incidentally, taking
extra enzymes is the third way to neutralize the enzyme inhibitors in unsprouted
seeds and nuts.
Concentrates of plant enzymes or fungus enzymes are better for predigestion
of food than tablets of pancreatic enzymes. This is because plant enzymes can
work in the acidity of the stomach, whereas pancreatic enzymes only work best
in the alkalinity of the small intestine.
If the enzyme tablet has an enteric coating, then it's not suitable, since
it will only release after it has passed the stomach. By this time, it's too
late for food predigestion. The body itself has already used its own enzymes
to digest the food.
HDN: Would people benefit from taking enzymes, even if they have no problem
with digestion or if they eat mainly raw foods?
HOWELL: They probably would benefit. Our bodies use up enzymes in so many ways
that it pays to maintain your enzyme bank, regardless of what you eat.
For example, enzymes are used up faster during certain illnesses, during extremely
hot or cold weather, and during strenuous exercise.
Also, keep in mind that any enzymes that are taken are not wasted since they
add to the enzyme pool of your body.
Furthermore, as we pass our prime, the amount of enzymes in our bodies and
excreted in our sweat and urine continues to decline until we die. In fact,
low enzyme levels are associated with old age and chronic disease.
So far, there's not much hard evidence on whether taking additional enzymes
will extend the lifespan. However, we do know that laboratory rats that eat
raw foods will live about 3 years. Rats that eat enzymeless chow diets will
live only 2 years. Thus, we see that diets deficient in enzymes cause a 30%
reduction in lifespan.
If this held true for human beings, it may mean that people could extend their
lifespans by 20 or more years -- just by maintaining proper enzyme levels.
Editor's Note: Dr. Howell and his wife Evangeline can be offered as examples
of the benefits of taking enzymes. She looks about twenty years younger
than her age. And Dr. Howell, though well over 70, feels as alert and
vital as 30 years ago. He still goes jogging frequently.
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