Soak Your Way to Health
DHEA, Magnesium and the Fountain
of Youth
The Bob Livingston Letter, December 2001
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our full line of Mineral supplements
Your age typically determines your DHEA level, your magnesium level, and your
likely present state of health.
DHEA, dehydroepiandrosterone, is the most prevalent and one of the most
essential hormones in human health. Unfortunately, the majority of Americans
lose 80-90% of their optimal DHEA between ages 30 and 80.
According to Dr. Norman Shealy, every known illness is associated with a
magnesium deficiency and low levels of the hormone DHEA. DHEA is the health and
youth hormone. If DHEA is low, magnesium is low. They go together.
Even a 10% increase in magnesium and DHEA levels is associated with a 48%
decrease in death from cardiovascular disease and a 36% decrease in mortality:
from all causes. The human being has the only
body that has a significant level of DHEA.
It is striking that low levels of both DHEA and magnesium characterize most
illnesses. A connection between these essential chemicals appears to be basic
the understanding of health, wellness and the restoring and maintaining of
youth. Low levels of DHEA are found in women up to nine years BEFORE development of
breast cancer. And men may have low DHEA levels for four or more years prior to
development of prostate cancer. There is a long list of DHEA/magnesium
deficiency symptoms. They are anxiety, hyperactivity, confusion, depression,
diarrhea or constipation, faintness, fatigue, hyperventilation, lack of
coordination, insomnia, intestinal problems, muscle cramps, muscle tightness,
pain, poor memory, seizures, tinnitus and vertigo; and these are just the symptoms!
Major diseases associated with DHEA/ magnesium deficiency are: angina pectoris,
arrhythmia, asthma, atherosclerosis, Attention Deficit Disorder (ADHD),
auricular fibrillation, bulimia, cancer, cardiomyopathy, chronic fatigue,
chronic bronchitis, congestive heart failure, cirrhosis, depression, diabetes,
emphysema, gall bladder infections and stones, hearing loss, heart attack, high
cholesterol, hypertension, hypoglycemia, chronic infection (viral and bacterial)
intermittent claudication (leg calf pain), kidney stones, migraine, mitral valve
prolapse, osteoporosis, panic attacks, PMS (premenstrual syndrome), benign
prostate hypertrophy, PVC's and strokes.
In no illness is DHEA /magnesium deficiency prevalent than myocardial infarction
(acute heart attack). On average, patients given magnesium intravenously have a
50% greater survival rate. It has also been shown that mothers who are given magnesium
IVs just before giving birth are much less likely to have children who develop cerebral
palsy.
When DHEA is raised, testosterone levels are raised. This raises libido in
both men and women.
DHEA is a major reflector of overall health and stress reserves. Raising DHEA
results in a remarkable increase in perceived physical and psychological well
being for both men and women. There is increased energy, deeper sleep, improved
mood, more relaxed feelings and an improved ability to deal with stressful
situations.
The Fountain of Youth
"With few exceptions, low or deficient DHEA is found in every illness. Most
critically, DHEA blocks carcinogenesis retards aging and cardiovascular disease,
diabetes and even obesity. Interestingly, US Today, on 9/5/96, carried a cover
story `DHEA: Is This Hormone the Fountain of Youth?' And The Sciences, in its
September/October 1995 issue, carried an article, `Forever Young."' From the
book Holy Water, Sacred Oil, The Fountain of Youth by Dr. C. Norman Shealy,
M.D., Ph.D., pp. 90-97.
DHEA is produced in the adrenal glands in both men and women. Men
produce about one third more than women do as they produce DHEA in the testes.
DHEA lowers cholesterol and enhances immune function. It is also an antioxidant.
DHEA is a major marker for age and health. Its major effect is anti-stress;
meaning that the increased cortisone produced by stress is brought back down to
baseline by a rise in DHEA.
DHEA similarly has anti-diabetic action by sparing or enhancing the effects of
insulin. DHEA protects against both immune and autoimmune
disease; it enhances immune function, protecting against infections, especially
viral infections, as well as protecting against cancer. It has very significant
anti-obesity effects and a corresponding down-regulation of the stress response.
High animal fat diets and obesity lead to low levels of DHEA. DHEA is ultimately
related to thyroid function. Especially low thyroid production leads to low
DHEA levels.
Levels of DHEA decline with age. The research suggests that supplements with the
DHEA hormone in our middle age and older
years will bring the levels trick to those of' youth. This could help us live
longer and improve the quality of our lives. Remember that when we bring DHEA
up, we also bring up the critically important mineral magnesium. There is
virtually no illness that is not helped significantly by magnesium! Please
review the long list of illnesses above associated with magnesium deficiency.
DHEA level is the major reflector of stress reserves and overall health. Low
levels of DHEA have been reported in AIDS, Alzheimer's, many types of cancer,
coronary artery disease, depression, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, hypertension,
lupus, erythematosus, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis and viral infections;
i.e., almost all disease!
Soil throughout the world is deficient in magnesium with the exception of the
soil in Egypt. Most foods in America have almost no magnesium, and most seniors
may not be absorbing the little that they do get in their food.
As a single essential nutrient, lack of magnesium may be responsible for more
disease than any other deficiency. Assimilation and utilization of magnesium
through supplementation is slow and low.
Farmers are well aware of the major impact of magnesium depletion. Horses and
cattle may die from "blind-staggers" or "grass-staggers," an uncoordinated gait,
severe muscle spasms and even seizures. All this is curable with magnesium
supplementation if caught early.
White flour and white sugar are junk foods that deplete magnesium. So-called
soft drinks are the ultimate junk food and a serious detriment to health.
Prescription drugs deplete magnesium from the body.
Diabetes: Another major disease in which magnesium deficiency is rampant is
diabetes. In fact, in diabetes, extreme magnesium loss is common. Magnesium is
an important co-factor in the production of insulin by the pancreas. Normal
total body magnesium is essential for glucose metabolism. Thus, the rampant
magnesium deficiency in our society may be a contributing cause of diabetes.
Cerebral palsy may be the result of magnesium deficiency. Mothers given
intravenous magnesium just before giving birth are much less
likely to have children who develop the disease.
Hypertension: Both calcium deficiency (70% of patients) and magnesium deficiency
(80%) are important factors in hypertension. Replacement of both calcium and
magnesium may make anti-hypertension drugs unnecessary. Doing away with "drug
therapy" for hypertension of itself would save lives, to say nothing of the
improved quality of life. Have you ever read the inserts that drug companies put
out with so-called anti-hypertension drugs? If you haven't, ask your pharmacist
for the original company insert. Do this with any drug. You will be shocked!
Migraine: Migraine is a disabling condition for 12 to 13% of Americans. A shot
of magnesium is as effective as most drugs. Long-term magnesium supplementation
reduces the frequency of migraines.
Chronic Fatigue and Fibromyalgia: Neither of these is likely to be cured without
magnesium replacement.
Depression: In depression, magnesium deficiency is universal. Magnesium
replacement is one of the key elements for long--term success in this perhaps
most common illness in the world.
Osteoporosis: As in the supplement Calcium Lactate, calcium is balanced with
magnesium to give the unique chemical combination that
makes bones and teeth sound.
Magnesium and DHEA go together. When we raise intercellular magnesium, we raise
DHEA. This is the natural way to raise the body's DHEA levels. A catch in this
equation is that whole blood, serum, plasma and even white blood cell levels of
magnesium do not give an accurate picture of optimal magnesium Looking back at
the graph again we can see that DHEA is present in a baby in the first months
then collapses until the beginning of puberty. Why couldn't we raise the DHEA
in our infants and rear a generation of highly intelligent and healthy people?
DHEA and Magnesium Replacement: Oral magnesium is potentially laxative and even
if it's not, it requires about a year to rise to sufficient levels. Intravenous
magnesium is the most rapid. For most people, ten IVs given over a two-week
period is adequate. Then there is follow-up, but most people don't like
needles, and it may be difficult to find a physician to give them.
The simple, painless, no risk method is absorption of magnesium through the
skin. The right amount of "Magic Oil" or "Dollop of Love"
(DOL) can normalize intercellular magnesium and DHEA. Diluted Magic Oil can be
re-used for foot soaking several times before discarding. Use a plastic pan that
is large enough to soak both feet at once.
Note: Your condition comes about over years. Be persistent over a few months to
expect health reversal. Restoration to health is not instant. Do a 20 minute
foot soak with diluted Magic Oil every day for four to six weeks. To get added
benefit, rub oil or spray a 50% solution on the bottom of the feet, as needed.
You may have found your Fountain of Youth!
Modified as needed by Thomas Narvaez, Ph.D. according to information from Jim
Carter and the book: Holy Water, Sacred Oil, The Fountain of Youth, by Dr. C.
Norman Shealy, M.D., Ph.D.
THE BOB STEVENSON LETTER, used with permission, is available by subscription
(12 issues for $65, from P.O. Box 110013, Birmingham, Alabama 35211
DHEA, The Youth and Health Hormone
Dehydroepiandrosterone, or DHEA as it is more often called, is a steroid
hormone naturally produced in the adrenal gland. It is the most abundant steroid
in the bloodstream and is present at even higher levels in brain tissue. DHEA levels
are known to fall precipitously with age, falling 90% from age 20 to age 90.
DHEA is known to be a precursor to the numerous steroid sex hormones (including
estrogen and testosterone) which serve well-known functions.
DHEA and Cancer
Early reports from England [Bulbrook, 1962, 1971] suggested that DHEA was abnormally
low in women who developed breast cancer, even as much as nine years prior to the
onset or diagnosis of the disease. Of the 5000 women followed in the study, 27 developed
cancer. Most of the 27 had abnormally low levels of DHEA. Many years later, Dr. Arthur
Schwartz of Temple University found that supplemental DHEA significantly protected cell
cultures from the toxicity of carcinogens. Cell cultures usually respond to powerful
carcinogens with mutations (changes in DNA), transformations (changes in cell appearance),
and a high rate of cell death. But when Schwartz added DHEA along with the carcinogen,
all three of these effects were significantly diminished.
DHEA and Glucose Metabolism
Investigators have shown that DHEA inhibits glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH),
an enzyme that breaks down glucose. There are two glucose-metabolizing pathways in
the body, the catabolic, energy-yielding pathway and the anabolic, biosynthetic pathway.
G6PDH happens to be the first enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, the one which results
in the synthesis of fatty acids and ribose (the sugar used in making deoxyribonucleic
acid, or DNA). In simple language, G6PDH turns glucose into fat.
DHEA and Aging
The body?s production of DHEA drops from about 30 mg at age 20 to less than 6 mg per
day at age 80. According to Dr. William Regelson of the Medical College of Virginia,
DHEA is ?one of the best biochemical bio-markers for chronologic age.? In some
people, DHEA levels decline 95% during their lifetime ? the largest decline of an
important biochemical yet documented.
DHEA levels are directly related to mortality (the probability of dying) in humans.
In a 12-year study of over 240 men aged 50 to 79 years, researchers found that DHEA
levels were inversely correlated with mortality, both from heart disease and from
all causes. This finding suggests that DHEA level measurements can become a standard
diagnostic predictor of disease, mortality and lifespan. Furthermore, if animal results
hold true, supplemental DHEA may prevent disease, reduce mortality, and extend lifespan in
humans.
DHEA: The Buffering Steroid?
DHEA may be unique among hormones for it?s lack of specificity for hormone receptor sites.
Just as vitamin E has never been shown to have a specific metabolic role (it is only
proven essential as a general antioxidant), DHEA may serve an equally general purpose.
?DHEA is the first example of a buffer action for hormones that I know of,? states
William Regelson. ?It is a broad-acting hormone that only demonstrates itself under a
specific set of circumstances. In that way, it is like a buffer against sudden changes
in acidity or alkalinity. That is why when you get older, you?re much more vulnerable
to the effects of stress. As DHEA declines with age, you are losing the buffer against
the stress-related hormones. It is the buffer action that [helps prevent] us from aging.?
The decrease of DHEA with age may result in gradual decline of a system for suppressing
enzyme systems responsible for creating the building blocks of new cells, like lipids,
nucleic acids (RNA and DNA) and sex steroids. The resulting rise in enzymatic activity
in advanced age may be responsible for the proliferative events (cancer) and degenerative
disease that become more frequent in advanced age. In this respect, DHEA might be best
considered to be an anti-hormone, which might ?de-excite? steroid-sensitive receptors
that would otherwise lead to enhanced metabolic activity.
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