Dr. Wellhausen interviewed with NBC4 yesterday to share about the city of Loma Linda’s pride in their Blue Zone status and their fight to keep more fast food chains from corrupting their healthy city!
Dr. Wellhausen on NBC4 News!
June 16th, 2011Condition Spotlight: Osteoporosis
March 7th, 2011What is causing it?
Osteoporosis is an inflammatory disease and not merely a lack of calcium in the diet. Inflammation can be caused by a number of different factors, and it increases harmful prostaglandins and pushes the PH in each cell toward more acidic. In response, the body robs minerals from the bones to bring the pH of each cell back towards alkaline.
What are the common causes and risk factors?
- Vitamin D deficiency (optimal blood levels are 50-90)
- Causes calcium to be less absorbed into the bloodstream
- Magnesium and calcium deficiency
- Causes bone density deterioration
- Tobacco and excess alcohol
- Robs minerals from the bone
- Malnutrition / Malabsorption
- Causes you to not get enough natural calcium and magnesium
- High protein diet
- Pushes the cell pH toward acidity and robs minerals from bones
- Inactivity
- Similar to atrophy of the muscles, there is demineralization of the bones. If you don’t use them, you lose them
- Soft drinks and refined sugar
- Strongly push pH toward acidity; one of the worst culprits
- Any Chronic disease
- Weakens the body’s immune system and puts it in a survival state
- Inflammatory and Autoimmune disease (Like Lupus, RA, Chron’s/Colitis, etc)
- Pushes the cell pH toward acidity and robs minerals from bones
- Endocrine imbalance (thyroid / sex hormones)
- Disrupts the body’s ability to regulate itself, including managing calcium
- Gastrointestinal disorders
- Disrupts the body’s absorption of minerals
- Prescription drugs (steroids – Anti acids /proton inhibitors and more)
- Push body pH, changes the body’s natural cycles, affect the absorption of calcium
Who is at risk?
Women are at higher risk of osteoporosis, and consequently hip and spinal compression fractures, due to three factors :
1. Women have smaller bones to start with
2. They tend to be less physically active
3. Menopause reduces estrogen which plays a role in bone remodeling
Hip fractures and prolonged hospital stays increase the patient’s risk of contracting pneumonia and other infections. Genetic predisposition to osteoporosis is seen in some races but could partially be due to some cultural behavior that discourages physical activity after a certain age. Having a small skeletal frame is also a factor.
How can I know if I have it?
A DXA scan is an imaging tool that can give you a definite diagnosis.
There are also blood and urine tests available that can predict your risks:
- Urine Desoxypiridinoline
- Blood calcium level (should be <9.4)
- Vitamin D 25 Hydroxy ( 50 to 90 )
Once a person has confirmed that their bone density is low, they need to determine the cause(s) of their condition. A complete evaluation, and tests if needed, can determine the specific cause(s) to be treated.
At what age should I start getting tested and how often?
Inactive men and women should get a baseline DXA Scan starting at 45. If the score comes back normal, get a scan every 5 years.
Active women should get a baseline DXA Scan at the onset of menopause and active men at 55. If the score comes back normal, get a scan every 5 years.
How do you treat it?
Remedies are based on a person’s individual causes, however there are several extremely common causes and remedies.
- Anti Inflammatory Mediterranean diet
- Replaces the pH culprits with the nutrients the body needs to function properly. It will likely reduce any other chronic, inflammatory, or autoimmune conditions. The diet also increases the supply of the correct natural calcium and vitamin D.
- Identification and Treatment of Existing Chronic Conditions
- Restores the body’s immune system, natural cycles, and absorption of nutrients
- Magnesium glycinate
- Helps rebuild bone
- Vitamin D3
- Regulates bone mineralization
- Exercise (Cardio and weights)
- Activates more bone building
- Evaluating current prescription regimen
- This can determine which other conditions can be treated naturally, therefore reducing the amount of artificially derived chemicals contributing to the system disruption.
Why don’t you include dairy in your diet? Where am I going to get the calcium I need?
Actually no, the calcium in dairy is the wrong type of calcium. Dairy actually negatively affects the absorption of calcium and pushes the pH of the cells toward acidity! Dairy also causes several other negative affects, like the overproduction of mucus in the lungs which is one of the leading cause of asthma and bronchitis. It also contributes to several inflammatory diseases and malabsorption.
If you consider the cow and how much calcium it produces in its milk, cows must have a great supply of calcium in the food they eat in order to not develop osteoporosis themselves. Where do they get it? Greens. That is where you will find the calcium your body needs too.
Why don’t you recommend prescriptions such as Boniva or Fosamax (also known as Biphosphonate)?
Your liver can become inflamed (indicated by elevated liver enzymes) and the quality of the bone remodeling is poor. The brittle bone actually puts a person more at risk for breaks and more serious conditions. The other problem is that by just refocusing on bone regrowth, prescriptions do not treat the underlying causes of depletion.
Have you seen improvement in the conditions of your patients?
Yes. Our patients regularly improve 2 points on their DXA scan in 8 months without prescriptions harmful to their liver. You can read the success story of one patient who was able to completely reverse his bone loss on our Success Stories page here. If you would like a complete evaluation, you can make an appointment with Dr. Wellhausen.
Diabetes: Preventable AND Reversible?
February 9th, 2011Current state of the nation
Currently, ten percent of the US population is diabetic, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and that figure does not include borderline patients. “As many as 1 in 3 U.S. adults could have diabetes by 2050 if current trends continue,” projects the CDC1. They estimate that the costs of diabetic health care exceed $174 billion a year, of which 33% are indirect costs of disability, work loss, and premature mortality. If the diabetic population triples by 2050 as projected, it has the potential to severely impact our economy, skyrocket health insurance costs, and reduce our quality of life.
Diabetes also leads to a host of problems including blindness, kidney failure, limb amputation, heart disease, cancers, sexual dysfunction, and premature dementia. Most of these conditions, including diabetes itself, are reversible and preventable, and we could see significant national and personal cost savings by treating it correctly.
Can we predict diabetes?
Yes. The strong indicators and predisposing factors for diabetes are poor diet, obesity or overweight status, family history, and lack of exercise. A sign of poor insulin function is a craving for sweets 20 minutes after a meal.
Predicting diabetes with a blood test is also easy. A triglyceride level higher than 80 in children, and 110 in adults, is a negative predictive number.
The foods that most often contribute to these conditions are sodas, cookies, cakes, candies, breads, fruits juices, and dairy products (which interfere with the quality of insulin).
How do I know if I have it?
Diagnosing diabetes with a blood test is easy with 2 tests: fasting glucose and A1c. Other simple blood tests are available as well.
Can I reverse my Diabetes?
Type II adult onset diabetes is completely reversible. All prescriptions can be gradually stopped as numbers normalize. Type I Diabetes is considerably helped with the same treatment, and insulin dependence can be cut in half.
How do I treat it, reverse it, or even prevent it?
A balanced Mediterranean diabetic diet with foods that prevent and treat diabetes consists of vegetables, herbs, spices, and legumes high in protein. Good fats found in fish and nuts restore and protect you as well.
Are there any supplements that protect you against Diabetes?
Certain minerals and antioxidants as well as anti-inflammatory herbs do improve the quality of your insulin as well as reduce your sugar craving! They can reverse diabetes when taken with a balanced Mediterranean diabetic diet.
Who can help me?
If you dealing with diabetes or would like to know if you are predispositioned for it, you can make an appointment with Dr. Wellhausen and receive a full evaluation and lifestyle recommendation to restore or maintain optimum health. Visit http://drwellhausen.com/make-an-appointment or call us at (909) 799-6212.
1. “Number of Americans with Diabetes Projected to Double or Triple by 2050,” CDC.gov, last modified October 22, 2010, http://www.cdc.gov/media/pressrel/2010/r101022.html/.
Love and Protect Your Skin
December 20th, 2010Skin exposure risk:
Many of the same poisons that pollute our environment, from dioxins to petrochemicals, can be found in the jars and bottles that line our bathroom shelves.’
Dermal Absorption
Dermal absorption is the transport of a chemical from the outer surface of the skin both into the skin and into the body. Studies show that absorption of chemicals through the skin can occur without being noticed by the worker, and in some cases, may represent the most significant exposure pathway. Many commonly used chemicals in the workplace could potentially result in systemic toxicity if they penetrate through the skin (i.e. pesticides, organic solvents). These chemicals enter the blood stream and cause health problems away from the site of entry.
Cosmetology
Avoid all skin and hair products that are not organic. A higher percentage of hairdressers develop various autoimmune disorders.
Figure 1: Intercellular lipid pathway
As shown in Figure 1, The spaces between the skin cells are filled with substances such as fats, oils, or waxes known as lipids. Some chemicals can penetrate through these lipid-filled intercellular spaces through diffusion.
Figure 2: Transcellular permeation
As shown in Figure 2, another pathway for chemicals to be absorbed into and through the skin is transcellular, or cell-to-cell, permeation whereby molecules diffuse directly through the epidermis (top layer of skin).
Recommendations:
- Buy all organic make up, shampoos, hair dyes, creams, and soaps (from stores like Clarks Nutrition or organicdivas.com)
- Eat a sufficient amount of good oils such as olive, flax, walnut, and fish oil to protect your skin (3 oz daily minimum)
- Take sufficient amount of vitamin D (Optimal blood levels are from 50 to 90 ng/ml)
- Stop by our office and try a sample of our day cream; it will feel great on your skin!