Chlorella: This Almost Perfect Food Gobbles Up Your Body's Toxins by plzchuckle ..... Barefooters' Library
Date: 11/18/2015 6:09:27 PM ( 9 y ago)
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The website Green Med Info has assembled a list of studies that found evidence of over 40 conditions that chlorella can help to prevent or ease.
The conditions include:
According to one of the studies on the subject:
“Chlorella vulgaris (CV) has been reported to have antioxidant and anticancer properties ... Our study shows that CV has definite chemopreventive
effect by inducing apoptosis ... in hepatocarcinogenesis [liver cancer] induced rats”.
Dr. Mercola's Comments:
|
Repairing nerve tissues | Increasing your energy levels |
Enhancing your immune system | Normalizing your blood sugar |
Improving digestion | Normalizing your blood pressure |
Promoting healthy pH levels in your gut, which in turn helps good bacteria to thrive | Removing potentially toxic metals from your body |
Enhancing your ability to focus and concentrate | Eliminating bad breath |
Chlorella can also be of benefit to vegetarians and vegans looking for proteins and B vitamins from a non-animal source.
About 60 percent of it is protein, and because it contains all the essential amino acids your body needs, it's considered
to be a "complete protein."
Chlorella also rich in:
GABA
Folate
Vitamin B12
Iron
As mentioned earlier, chlorella has and still is being researched for a number of health conditions. Here's a list of six
common health problems and diseases where chlorella may be of particular benefit:
Insulin resistance
—Earlier this year, researchers discovered that
chlorella has the ability to improve fructose-induced insulin sensitivity
. As I’ve discussed on numerous occasions, excessive fructose consumption is the number one cause of insulin resistance
and type 2 diabetes. In this animal study, after being fed fructose-rich chow for four weeks, the rats were then given
chlorella three times a day for five days, which brought their elevated glucose-insulin values back to normal.
The authors concluded that: “Oral administration of chlorella has the ability to improve insulin sensitivity, which may
be used as an adjuvant therapy for patients with insulin resistance.”
Detoxification.
Is particularly helpful when used in conjunction with an infrared sauna and taken two hours before you go in the sauna.
This way the chlorella will be in your intestine and read to bind to the toxins that are released when you are in the
sauna. It will bind irreversibly to the toxins and be safely excreted when you have your bowel movement.
Diabetes
—Additional evidence supporting the theory that chlorella can improve insulin sensitivity can be found in an earlier study. Here, the algae was found to
improve insulin sensitivity and glucose uptake in the liver in type 1 diabetic rats. The authors suggest chlorella’s
hypoglycemic effects may be due to improved glucose uptake in the liver and the soleus muscles. Another mechanism may
be related to decreased levels of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), since insulin sensitivity is usually blunted by
elevated NEFA in type 1 diabetes.
Hypertension
—The results from a placebo-controlled, double-blind study published two years ago suggest that chlorella can
significantly decrease high-normal blood pressure and borderline hypertension. The authors proposed that it may be a
beneficial dietary supplement for preventing hypertension, with no apparent adverse side effects.
Anemia, proteinuria and edema in pregnant women
—Pregnancy-induced hypertension and anemia are common, and potentially dangerous. One of the primary causes for these
conditions is the woman’s nutritional status. A study published last year found that chlorella may help
improve both of these conditions in pregnant women, likely due to its high folate, B12 and iron content.
Subjects took six grams of chlorella per day, starting somewhere between the 12th to the 18th week of gestation, until
delivery. The chlorella group had significantly lower rates of anemia compared to the control group. They also had
fewer incidences of proteinuria and edema; two symptoms associated with pregnancy-induced hypertension. Here too, the
authors concluded that: “Chlorella supplement may be useful as a resource of natural folate, vitamin B-12 and iron for
pregnant women.”
Fibromyalgia
—Although the individual results were varied, it may be worth considering chlorella if you suffer with fibromyalgia. A study published in 2000 tested the effectiveness of two
commercially available chlorella-based products on patients diagnosed with fibromyalgia, and the overall results showed
a 22 percent decrease in pain intensity. However, while seven patients reported improvement in their fibromyalgia
symptoms, six reported no effect at all, and five claimed their symptoms had worsened during the trial... So keep that
in mind if you decide to try it. While it may help some, it might not work at all for others.
Liver cancer
—A study published in 2009 discovered that chlorella triggers
cell death (apoptosis) in rat liver cancer cells, which suggests it may be useful in the prevention of liver cancer.
The authors concluded that: “Our study shows that chlorella has definite chemopreventive effect by inducing apoptosis
via decreasing the expression of Bcl-2 and increasing the expression of caspase 8 in hepatocarcinogenesis-induced
rats.”
For additional research findings, check out Green Med Info's chlorella page, which lists
more than 40 health conditions for which chlorella may be of benefit.
Heavy metal toxicity, just like chemical toxicity, has become one of the most pressing health hazards of our day, and this
is where chlorella may be profoundly useful. Its ability to bind to heavy metal toxins, allowing them to be safely excreted
from your body, has been well established. It's particularly crucial for systemic mercury elimination, because the majority
of mercury is rid through your stool. Once the mercury burden is lowered from your intestines, mercury from other body
tissues will more readily migrate into your intestines where chlorella will work to remove it.
You can also add cilantro
, which works as a synergetic detoxification aid along with the chlorella. This combination is particularly useful to take
when you're consuming seafood, as most are invariably contaminated with heavy metals and chemicals. Ideally you would take
it with the meal so the chlorella can bind directly to the toxins while they are in your gut, before they absorbed
into your body.
In order to optimize heavy metal detox, you'll want to take at least four grams of chlorella every day,
year-round.
Be aware that side effects may occur. As your body starts to detox, you may initially experience some slight nausea, and/or
mild diarrhea. If these symptoms are too bothersome, you may want to lower your dose initially, and slowly increase the
dose. As your body is cleansed of toxins, these side effects should disappear. Infrared saunas are another phenomenal detox
approach. I seek to do a 20 minute sauna virtually every day I am home. I will be writing more about this useful tool in
the near future.
The key to chlorella's detoxing abilities lies within its membrane, but the fibrous cell wall of chlorella is
actually indigestible to humans. This is why most chlorella products use the term "broken cell wall," to describe the fact
that the chlorella has been rendered digestible.
If a product does not specifically tell you that the cell wall has been broken, you are likely flushing your money down the
toilet as the chlorella will simply pass right through you without doing you any good. As
Ginny Banks explains in this previous interview
, it's in your best interest to make sure you're getting a high quality product for this reason.
While there are a number of proprietary methods to break the cell wall, the key comparison you need to pay attention to is
the nutritional profile of the end product. In addition to making sure it's "broken cell wall" chlorella, this is the other
factor that will help you evaluate the quality of any given product. Keep in mind that, according to the legal
requirements, a natural product may contain plus or minus 20 percent of the stated level of any nutritional component.
Therefore, I recommend sticking with reputable companies only, as they will adhere to certain processes that increase your
chances of getting the levels of nutrients stated on the label.
Recent changes to the Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs) guidelines and the labeling requirements now make it much easier
for you to investigate and verify company claims, because companies are now required to list their phone number and website
on every label. They must also maintain a paper trail showing where the material came from and any testing that has been
done.
Key questions to ask when calling a company directly include:
How often do you test batches for nutritional consistency?
Ask for a specification sheet ('spec sheet'), or the Certificate of Analysis, known as the 'C of A'. These are
documents that itemize every single test that the final product gets tested for.
How and where is the chlorella grown? Variations in climate and season can cause nutritional variations, but if the
chlorella is grown in artificial ponds the producer has greater control over consistency. You'll also want to make sure
the chlorella is grown in unpolluted areas, since chlorella binds to heavy metals.
Does the producer test for heavy metal contamination? A high quality producer will perform regular heavy metal
analysis', for which there should also be a verifiable paper trail. And organic producers must adhere to even more
stringent rules in order to become certified organic, which is another sign of a clean, high quality product.
Although I do not promote the use of many supplements in general, believing it is far better to get your nutrition from
food, there are exceptions to this rule. In this case though, chlorella truly is a food, but it must be properly
processed into supplement form in order to unlock its greatest health benefits. Whether you want to help reduce your toxic
burden, prevent a particular health ailment, or just boost overall nutrition, I believe chlorella can be a phenomenal
addition to a healthy diet.
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