Increasing Anabolism With Enzymes
Most
of us in Exercise Science and Sports Medicine during the 1970's and
80's had supposed that the monumental achievements of the totalitarian
Communist countries in Olympic sport had been solely the result of their
widespread use of drugs, anti inflammatory cortico steroids, growth
enhancing drugs such as Human Growth Hormone, Thyroid hormone, IGF 1
hormone and muscle building anabolic steroids. (1). And indeed the uses
of these drugs and other medical techniques to improve performance,
such as blood doping, was standard practice in the Eastern Block sports
institutes.
But some pieces of information were missing. It was no wonder that
a country as vast as the Soviet Union could field extensive sports teams
with star athletes in most every different sport. The old Soviet Union
had over 100 nationalities in their country and enough genetic diversity
that a gene type (body type) could be found to fit into most any sport.
But what was puzzling was the ability of small countries like East Germany
and Romania, with their limited genetic variations, to field powerhouse
teams that could steamroll the best of what the rest of the world had
to offer in certain events. How did they do it?
With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of
Communism many of the eastern European and Russian sports scientists, sports
physicians, exercise physiologists and coaches came out of the cold and went to
the greener pastures of the West, bringing with them their tried and true
training techniques and telling of the constant experimentation done with drugs
and nutritional supplements in the persistent effort to improve performance and
reactions to training.
During the first year of German reunification a business
luncheon was given by the government where West German nutritional and
pharmaceutical manufacturers were introduced to their counterparts and
physicians from the old East Germany. It was there that Dr. Karl Ransberger;
owner of an enzyme pharmaceutical company near Munich met a man who claimed to
be one of the leading doctors in the East German Sports program. On hearing who
Dr. Ransberger represented, the sports doctor commenced to tell the West Germans
a story. The tale ran something like this: Tired with the performance
deteriorating side effects of the cortico steroid drugs they used to control
training induced inflammation in their athletes East German and Russian sports
docs were looking for a way to naturally control inflammation that was 1) non
toxic, 2) had none of the side effects of the cortisone or the kidney and liver
killing effects of the aspirin and ibuprofen.
They heard of research that had been done fighting
inflammation with the use of proteolytic systemic (body wide) enzyme product Dr.
Ransberger was making and arranged to surreptitiously purchase lots of the
product for testing. To the delight of the Communist docs the enzymes worked to
not only lower inflammation with out side effect, they also increased the rate
of healing and recovery from the injury, the enzymes ate away at restrictive
scar tissue from previous injuries or from the accumulation of micro trauma.
But the effect that knocked their socks off was the effect of increasing muscle
density and strength in their athletes. They figured out the effect was caused
by something called protein sparing.
Protein sparing means that muscle mass loss is curtailed.
Severe training, as the eastern block athletes did 8 hours + per day in
conditioning and skills, 5 or more days per week created catabolism, a break
down of muscle and increased inflammation which elicits a response by the body
in an attempt to lower inflammation. In this response the adrenal glands
release the natural anti inflammation hormone cortisol. Cortisol like it's drug
cousin cortisone eats away at muscle mass. This protein sparing effect was
first noted by West German oncologists when enzymes were used to improve the
effects of chemotherapy. Patients taking chemo usually waste away. Those chemo
patients who were treated with the enzymes, (to reduce the side effects of the
chemo and strip away the fibrous outer layer of the cancer allowing the chemo to
enter the sick cells better), were found to not lose as much weight and retained
their strength better thorough out the course of the chemo therapy. (2,3,4).
In both the case of the cancer patient and the hard training
athlete the enzymes prevented the loss of much muscle tissue. An added plus
was found from the enzymes. The enzymes greatly improved digestion and
absorption of nutrients from food which also preserved muscle mass in the cancer
patient while in athletes accelerated the rate of muscle growth.
The East German physician reminded Dr. Ransberger that in
1973 the International Olympic committee banned completely the use of cortisone
drugs in amateur athletics. The Eastern Block, he said, didn't miss a beat;
they had already forsaken the damaging cortico steroids drugs for the enzymes.
Their athletes were not only healthier for it they were stronger. So much so
that the doctors were able to lower the amount of anabolic steroids administered
to the athletes. That and the development of testosterone producing Androstene
by the East Germans by 1975 allowed for an even further lowered use of anabolic
drugs but that?s for another story.
What does this story mean for us? In the process of
Catabolism (the opposite of Anabolism) the body breaks down muscle. This break
down happens from micro trauma, which occurs from all the stress of all physical
training. Secondary to this, the inflammation created by training causes the
body to release cortisol in an attempt to reduce the inflammation. Cortisol, it
is widely recognized, eats away at muscle and creates body fat. We can't do a
thing about the micro trauma caused by exercise, that's part of the stimulus /
response mechanism from training. If you're not creating some micro trauma
during training you're not training hard enough. The body adapts and gets
stronger in response to the stimulus of the training and the inability of the
muscles at that point to cope with the breakdown and micro trauma. The response
is for the body to build a larger denser muscle that can deal with the stress
placed upon it. That's when we increase the stress (resistance) and start the
process anew in a continuous cycle.
While we can't do a thing about the micro trauma, we can do
something to lower post training inflammation and our body?s cortisol response
to that inflammation. By harnessing the well known and recognized anti
inflammatory effect (5,6,7), of the enzymes the cortisol response of the body
can be lowered or eliminated altogether and with it eliminating is eliminated
the catabolic effect of cortisol.
A word is needed here about sport / exercise based
inflammation. Most of us think of inflammation in terms of joints and muscles.
Until the late 1990's. It was then that a large number of "30 and 40
something?s", who were hard charging business types and hard charging exercise
fanatics, dropped stone cold dead from dry strokes or heart attacks. They did
not have a lick of arterial plaque; they all had wonderful cholesterol readings,
all worked out and ran several times per week. By the medical standards of the
early 90's these men were as strong and fit as racehorses and would live
forever. But they didn't. Turns out that the stress of business and the stress
of exercise both create inflammation not so much in the joints but in the blood
vessels and heart. Inflammation that shut down the blood vessels as surely or
better than arterial plaque could. Today?s understanding of heart and vascular
disease holds inflammation to be the #1 cause of strokes and heart attacks as
well as being the causative precursor to such things as diabetes, Alzheimers and
cancer!
Fighting inflammation with the usual array of Cox 1 (aspirin,
ibuprofen, naproxen etc and Cox 2 (Vioxx and Celebrex) creates life-threatening
problems of their own. According to the July 1999 issue of the New England
Journal of Medicine these drugs kill on average 20,000 Americans a year and if
listed as it own classification would be the 20th leading cause of death in the
country! (8). According to the April 19, 1999 Wall Street Journal, these drugs
not only kill the mentioned 20,000 but land another 100,000 in the hospital with
the side effects of those drugs: liver damage, kidney damage and intestinal
hemorrhage. As the East Germans, Russian and lately the NBA with Alonzo
Mourning found, these drugs are definitely not the way to go for long term anti
inflammation.
So it turns out one of the drug secrets of the old Iron
Curtain powerhouses wasn't a drug at all! It was a mixture of natural protein
cleaving enzymes, the use of which actually allowed for lowered drug use in
terms of anti-inflammatory drugs and of anabolic steroids. Today most every
European Olympic team uses systemic proteolytic enzymes, as do most all of the
European sports teams. In the US several NBA, NFL, and individual professional
athletes have switched to systemic enzymes as their primary anti inflammatory
and the other benefits are a plus. Worth a try don't you think?
Maintenance dose of high quality systemic enzymes: 1500 mg 3
times per day in between meals.
Dose during heavy training: 2500 mg 3 times per day.
References:
- Death In the Locker Room, Bob Goldman, Berkley Publishing Group.
- The effect of systemic enzyme therapy in the treatment of
radiomucositis in patients with laryngeal cancer. M. S. Pluzhnikov,
M.A. Ryabova, S.A. Karpiscenka. Folia Otorhinolaryngologiae et
Pathologiae Respiratoriae 1999: Vol. 5, No.1-2/99, pp. 73-75.17 KR
- Impact of complementary oral enzyme application on the
postoperative treatment results of breast cancer patients - results
of an epidemiological multicentre retrolective cohort study. Josef
Beuth et al.Institute for Scientific Evaluation of Naturopathy,
University of Cologne, Koln, Germany. Ifag Basle, Switzerland
Institute of Biometrics, Medical University Hannover, Germany.
Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 2001, Vol. 47, Suppl: July 2001, S45 ?
S54 513 KA (3-00-2)(2000-2)
- Influence of a complementary treatment with oral enzymes on
patients with colorectal cancers ? an epidemiological retrolective cohort
study. Tadeusz Popiela et at. First Department of General and
Gastroenterological Surgery, Cracow, Poland. Ifag Basle, R?mlingen (BL),
Switzerland. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 2001, Vol. 47, Suppl: July 2001, S55
521 KA (3-00-3)-(20-00-2)
- Carroll A., R.: Clinical examination of an enzymatic
anti-inflammatory agent in emergency surgery. Arztl. Praxis 24 (1972), 2307.
- Mazzone A, et al.: Evaluation of Serratia peptidase in acute
or chronic inflammation of otorhinolaryngology pathology: a multicentre,
double blind, randomized trial versus placebo. J Int Med Res. 1990;
18(5):379-88.
- Kee W., H. Tan S, L., Lee V. Salmon Y. M.: The treatment of
breast engorgement with Serrapeptase: a randomized double blind
controlled trial. Singapore Med J. 1989:30(l):48-54.
- Wolfe, M. MD, Lichtenstein, D.,MD, and Singh Gurkipal MD:
?Gastrointestinal Toxicity of Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs?. The New
England Journal of Medicine, June 17, 1999, Vol. 340, No 24,page 1888-1889.
|