SuperNutrient
Corporation,
Vickery Sea Plant Minerals
Whole
Food Nutritional Support
Natural Kelp Vitamin & Mineral Supplement
Control Your Metabolism:
rganic Iodine feeds your thyroid gland, which controls metabolism and
promotes maturation of the nervous system.
Disinfect Your Blood:
Iodine is also the main natural disinfecting agent in our body. Every
15 minutes, all of yur blood goes through that small organ - the thyroid
gland.
Prevent Cardiovascular Disease:
Laminarin is a polysaccharide that is helpful in the prevention and
treatment of cardiovascular diseases. It helps to balance coagulation
of blood.
Detoxify From Heavy Metals:
Alginate is a natural absorbent of radioactive elements, heavy metals,
and free radicals. It has the unique ability of binding heavy metals
and radioactive elements to its own molecules. Because the Alginate
cannot be broken down by bile or saliva and cannot be absorbed by the
body, it is secreted from the body together with the heavy metals and
radioactive substances.
Directions for Use: Take 3 capsules every day.
Kelp, Seaweed
|
I started using your Vickery Essential Amino Acids
years ago and am in pretty good shape for a 79 year old. I had
one problem however which was getting worse over a 10 year span.
This was BPH or benign prostatic hypertrophy or enlargement of
the prostate. My PSA went up to 8.0 as I was taking saw palmetto
which helps to control this somewhat. In spite of that the PSA
was steadily rising and I had to see my urologist every four months.
I also heard that saw palmetto works by destroying prostatic cells.
About three months ago I started to take Vickery Sea Plant Minerals
and Glyconutrients. On my recent checkup the doctor asked me what
I was taking and proceeded to tell him. He said, I don't know
anything about that but keep on doing what you are doing because
your PSA is down to 6 and I won't see you for six months"! Thanks
again for this simple solution to my problem. I hope that this
will help other men who are having the same problem, which my
urologist says is very common after 70.
Donald K.
Aiken, SC
|
Coastal peoples all over the world have prized seaweed as a source
of valuable nutrients, primarily minerals, for millennia. In costal
areas the inland native peoples used to trade their most precious possessions
for a bag of dried seaweed laboriously carried on someone's back from
the coast.
Knowledge of the tonic and healing powers of seaweed was passed down
among coastal peoples from generation to generation. Much of their knowledge
is in the process of being confirmed by modern scientific analysis.
And demographic studies have shown that people who regularly incorporate
edible seaweeds into their diets have fewer problems from mineral depletion
and live longer than other peoples. (1.)
Sea vegetables contain 10 to 20 times the minerals and vitamins of
land vegetables. Gram for gram, they are higher in vitamins and minerals
than any other class of food. (2.)
The minerals are available in chelated, colloidal forms that make them
especially available to the bodies of humans and animals, a concept
known as "bioavailability." All sea vegetables contain significant
amounts of protein, sometimes as much as 48%. Sea plants are also a
rich sources of both soluble and insoluble dietary fiber. (3.)
The large brown seaweeds known as the "kelps" (including
wakame and kombu) contain alginic acid. Studies have shown that alginic
acid removes heavy metals and radioactive isotopes from the digestive
tract, as well as strontium 90 from the bones. (4.)
Essential for Type "O" Blood Type Diets!
Sea vegetables have traditionally been used in Asia to treat heart
disease, hypertension, cancer, and thyroid problems. Modern researchers
are trying to understand the physiological mechanisms by which seaweed
can be used to successfully treat these diseases, with some promising
results. One especially exciting theory proposes that consumption of
Laminaria (kombu) explains the low breast cancer rate in post-menopausal
Japanese women. (5 .)
Much more will be learned in future years as the study of these wondrous
plants from the sea continues.
Vitamins
Seaweed contains vitamins A, B, C, and E. (6.)
Many seaweeds contain significant amounts of vitamin B-12, a vitamin
normally found only in animal products. Avoiding B-12 deficiency has
traditionally posed a problem for people on raw foods, vegan, macrobiotic,
and vegetarian diets, but seaweed just might solve the problem. The
source of the B-12 in seaweed remains a mystery (is it made by bacteria
living on the surface or in the water?), and researchers wonder if it
really is B-12 or an "analogue" – something that resembles
B-12 but cannot be utilized by the human body. (7.)
Dr. Norman Cousens is quite convinced that the B-12 in seaweed is bio-available,
(8.) and the experience of some long-term vegan/vegetarians seems to
confirm that view. (9.)
Minerals
The mineral content of sea vegetables is extraordinary, and is probably
at the root of most of their healing properties. Several of the theories
put forth to explain the ability of seaweed to reduce heart disease
and hypertension are based in the high mineral content of seaweed, particularly
potassium, calcium, sodium, and chloride. In the words of Shep Erhart,
author of Sea Vegetable Celebration, "Every second of every day
your body depends on minerals to generate billions of tiny electric
impulses throughout your nervous system. Your heart would stop, your
muscles would freeze, and your brain would black out if these minerals
were not available in just the right amounts and the right form. The
minerals in seaweeds are in colloidal form, meaning they retain their
molecular identity while remaining in liquid suspension. Colloids are
very small in size and are easily absorbed by the body's cells. Plants
convert metallic minerals, which can be toxic, into colloids with a
natural, negative electric charge. Negatively charged minerals have
been shown to increase the transport and bioavailability of other foods
and supplements. (10.)
"Minerals that are attached to other substances such as amino
acids are also more bioavailable. These are call chelated (key-lated)
minerals, from the Greek word for claw. Seaweeds provide all of the
56 minerals and trace minerals required for your body's physiological
functions in chelated, colloidal forms. Most enzymatic functions depend
on minute amounts of bioavailable trace minerals. The major minerals
are instrumental in all kinds of life-sustaining activities in your
body: magnesium is crucial in calcium absorption, iodine in thyroid
function, iron in blood oxygen exchange, and chromium in blood sugar
regulation. All of these functions are facilitated by the presence of
chelated, colloidal minerals." (11.)
The minerals in sea vegetables are more important to humans and animals
today than ever. The 1997 edition of Food Composition Handbook shows
a 25–50% decline in the vitamin and mineral content of foods since
the last survey done in 1975. "This decline suggests a steady deterioration
in soil, air, and water quality, as well as reduced seed vitality, that
is depleting minerals and other inorganic compounds from our food."
(12.)
Minerals in Relation to Tofu, Beans, and Grains
Tofu, beans, and grains contain a substance called phytic acid which
blocks the absorption of minerals. With beans and grains you can mitigate
this problem by soaking them for 18 hours before cooking. The soaking
activates the seed embryo, which neutralizes the phytic acid. Alternatively,
you can add seaweed to your pot of grain or beans, which makes more
minerals available and ensures that some will be absorbed.
In Nourishing Traditions, Sally Fallon and Mary Enig point out that
Americans are using tofu very differently than it is used in Asia. In
Asia small quantities of tofu are usually served in a fish-based broth
with seaweed. The seaweed and the fish provide additional minerals that
balance the mineral-leaching effect of the phytic acid in the tofu.
But Americans, having identified tofu as a vegetable source of protein,
have isolated it from its culinary tradition and consume huge quantities
of it the way we would consume steak or hamburgers. Hundreds of substitute
meat products consist mainly of texturized soy protein, and many people
simply dip a slab of tofu in tamari and yeast and fry it. We would be
wise to eat in harmony with Asian traditions and use tofu in smaller
quantities and in combination with fish and/or seaweed.
References
1.) Erhart, Shep and Cerier, Leslie, Sea Vegetable Celebration, Book
Publishing Company, Summertown, TN, 2001, p. 22.
2.) Cousens, Gabriel, Conscious Eating, Essene Vision Books, Patagonia,
AZ, 1992, p 484.
3.) Erhart and Cerier, 25-27.
4.) Erhart and Cerier, 30.
5.) Erhart and Cerier, 29.
6.) Cousens, 484
7.) Erhart and Cerier, 24-25.
8.) Cousens, 484.
9.) Erhart and Cerier, 25.
10.) Erhart and Cerier, 27-28.
11.) Erhart and Cerier, 21-22.
12.) Jack, Alex, Let Food Be Thy Medicine, One Peaceful World Newsletter,
1999, 200 as quoted in Erhart and Cerier, Sea Vegetable Celebration,
22.
|