Dr. David Brownstein’s P 6 Steps to Prevent Prostate Cancer rostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in men (behind lung cancer), with 238,590 new cases and nearly 30,000 deaths each year,1, 2 according to the National Cancer Institute. That’s why it’s imperative to do everything you can to prevent this disease. The good news is that there are six simple, natural steps that can help you stave off prostate cancer without resorting to expensive drugs or therapies: 1.Eating a healthy diet 2.Maintaining optimal hydration 3.Ensuring adequate iodine intake 4.Balancing your hormonal system 5.Not relying on PSA tests 6.Avoiding harmful prostate drugs Maintaining Prostate Health The prostate gland is part of the male reproductive system. Located just in front of the rectum, the gland surrounds the urethra and produces seminal fluid. But cancer isn’t the only concern when it comes to prostate health. Two common conditions can cause pain and swelling of the gland: benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), and prostatitis. A swollen prostate, which can be detected through a rectal exam, may seriously slow or even block the flow of urine. BPH. More than 70 percent of men over the age of 70 suffer from BPH.3 And while it’s unclear if BPH is a precursor to prostate cancer, it can nonetheless make a man’s life miserable. In Special Report severe cases of BPH, men cannot fully empty their bladders. They have frequent urges to urinate and often can’t sleep through the night because they feel the need to get up and go. Prostatitis. At least half of all men will experience prostatitis, which occurs when the prostate gland becomes inflamed, leading to painful, difficult urination and lower abdominal pain. It can also cause discomfort in the groin, testicles, penis, rectum, and lower back. About 15 percent of cases are caused by an infection, which is often accompanied by fever, chills, nausea, and vomiting. Prostatitis can also stem from a bladder infection, dehydration, or trauma to the prostate gland from such activities as horseback or bicycle riding. Antibiotics — including tetracyclines and quinolones — are very effective treatments. But quinolones (notably Cipro and Levaquin) should only be used as a last resort as they can cause serious In This Issue . . . Eat a Healthy Diet....................................................2 Ensure Proper Hydration........................................3 Get Adequate Iodine...............................................3 Balance the Hormonal System................................5 In the News: Problems With PSA Testing..............6 Take the Right Supplements...................................7 Avoid Harmful Prostate Drugs...............................7 Ask Dr. B...................................................................8 adverse side effects. Antibiotic therapy usually does not result in a complete cure of prostatitis. Over many years, men can suffer with recurrent episodes. You can see how a swollen or inflamed prostate gland can cause big problems in men. Inflammation may also be a precursor to cancer. Consequently, men who want to age gracefully and stay healthy need to be sure that their prostate glands do not become too enlarged or inflamed. The following six steps can help you protect your prostate and also help you heal if you are having problems with BPH, prostatitis, or even cancer. 1. Eat a Healthy Diet Since my first book 15 years ago — The Miracle of Natural Hormones — I have been writing constantly about the importance of eating a healthy diet. Eating a healthy diet should be the first step you take to improve your health, no matter who you are or what health conditions you may have. But talking with patients about their diets is one of the most frustrating things I do. Americans generally do not eat healthy. The processed foods many of us eat are loaded with refined sugar, salt, oils, flour, and salt. They lack basic vitamins, minerals, and enzymes that all are essential to our bodies. Remember, eating “devitalized” processed food leads to a devitalized body. We cannot live without essential nutrients; we must get them from our diet. A lack of basic nutrients sets the stage for health problems. I have seen many men who complain of prostate problems — including BPH and prostatitis — who are able to improve their condition by simply cleaning up their diet. Why would that occur? Because eating a diet full Dr. David Brownstein’s Natural Way to Health is a publication of Newsmax Media, Inc., and Newsmax.com. It is published monthly at a charge of $54.95 for print ($48.95 for digital delivery) per year through Newsmax.com and NewsmaxHealth.com. The owner, publisher, and editor are not responsible for errors and omissions. Rights of reproduction and distribution of this newsletter are reserved. Any unauthorized reproduction or distribution of information contained herein, including storage in retrieval systems or posting on the Internet, is expressly forbidden without the consent of Newsmax Media, Inc. For rights and permissions, please contact the publisher at PO Box 20989, West Palm Beach, Florida 33416 or by email at copyright@newsmax.com. Page 2 of processed food promotes inflammation. Inflammation can occur at weak points in the body — especially at sites of injury or areas suffering from infection. In the case of the prostate, if there is trauma to the area, eating a pro-inflammatory diet will increase your chances of developing prostatitis, BPH, or even cancer. On the other hand, eating a diet free of processed food is anti-inflammatory for the body. A healthy diet can supply the body with the essential nutrients needed to promote healing and optimize the immune system. It does not take a medical license to understand that eating good food will help any area of the body heal and optimally function — the prostate included. One very common pro-inflammatory food is dairy products. My partners and I have been testing patients for dairy allergies for more than 15 years. After testing thousands of patients, we have found dairy allergies in more than 80 percent of our patients. There is no question that dairy from pasteurized products is pro-inflammatory. Studies have suggested dairy may also increase the risk of prostate cancer. Compared to men with the lowest intake of dairy, men with the highest dairy intake had an 11 percent higher risk of developing prostate cancer, according to a recent meta-analysis (a larger review of multiple studies). Furthermore, men with the highest intake of calcium had a 39 percent greater risk of developing prostate cancer, according to a study published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.4 Milk is designed to raise baby cows. Humans do not need to ingest cow’s milk to be healthy — regardless what the dairy industry claims. Publisher Travis Davis Doctor David Brownstein, M.D. Contributing Editor Matthew Kalash Art/Production Director Phil Aron To contact Dr. David Brownstein’s Natural Way to Health send e-mail to: askdrdavid@newsmax.com. For Subscription/Customer Service inquiries, call 1-800-485-4350 or e-mail customerservice@newsmax.com. Send e-mail address changes to customerservice@newsmax.com © 2013 Newsmax Media, Inc. All rights reserved. health drbrownstein.newsmax.com Please note: All information presented in Dr. David Brownstein’s Natural Way to Health (including answers to reader questions) is for informational purposes only, and is not specifically applicable to any individual’s medical problem(s), concerns, and/or needs. No content is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. All information presented in Dr. David Brownstein’s Natural Way to Health should not be construed as medical consultation or instruction. You should take no action solely on the basis of this publication’s contents. Readers are advised to consult a health professional about any issue regarding their health and well-being. Any action you take on the basis of the information provided is solely at your own risk and expense. The opinions expressed in Dr. David Brownstein’s Natural Way to Health do not necessarily reflect those of Newsmax Media, Inc. Special Report More information about dairy-free diets can be found in my book, The Guide to a Dairy-Free Diet. Another pro-inflammatory food for the prostate gland is soy. I have seen many men improve their prostate problems by eliminating soy from their diet along with following other steps I have outlined in my book, The Soy Deception. 2. Ensure Proper Hydration Maintaining optimal hydration is important for all parts of the body, including the prostate. The body is 70 percent water and the brain is 80 percent water. If there was only one thing I could recommend you do to improve your health, I would say it is to drink adequate amounts of water. Unfortunately, chronic dehydration is common, setting the stage for many chronic health problems including heart disease, arthritis, fatigue, and prostate problems. One of the best anti-inflammatory substances known to man is water. Water helps flush out injured areas and allows the body to send healing cells to injured tissue. How is the prostate gland to heal and detoxify from inflammation or cancer if it is dehydrated? It can’t. How much water should you drink? Take your weight in pounds, divide by two and the resulting number is the amount of water you should drink in ounces per day. Keep in mind that other liquid beverages don’t count. In fact, coffee, soda, and processed juices contain substances such as caffeine and sugar that actually add to dehydration. I have seen many men who suffer from prostatitis improve merely by drinking more water. Jerry, a 61-year-old executive at an automobile parts supplier, developed prostatitis six years ago. “It came on suddenly,” he told me. “I had rectal pain that really hurt. My doctor did a rectal exam and told me my prostate gland was inflamed. He put me on Cipro, which helped immediately. “For a few weeks, the pain was totally gone, then it came back. I would say that the last six years have been awful. I am always feeling something down there and I have days of severe pain.” Jerry’s prostate was mildly inflamed. When I took a dietary history, I found he was drinking a lot of coffee — as much as a pot a day — and not drinking water. Special Report He had many physical signs of dehydration including dry mucosa, very dry skin, and poor skin turgor. At the end of our first visit, I told Jerry to drink two liters of water per day and see me again in three weeks to go over the lab results. When he returned for his follow-up visit, he reported remarkable progress. “I don’t know what you did, but my prostate feels much better. All I did was drink more water,” he told me. “I could feel the inflammation settling down. I had more energy. I would say that drinking water helped my prostate symptoms by 75 percent.” Jerry’s story is not unique. Maintaining good hydration is one of the basic things that can help you achieve optimal health. 3. Get Adequate Iodine Iodine is essential for prostate health. Continued on page 5 David Brownstein, M.D., is a board-certified family physician and one of the foremost practitioners of holistic medicine. Dr. Brownstein has lectured internationally to physicians and others about his success with nutritional therapies in his practice. His books include Drugs That Don’t Work and Natural Therapies That Do!; Iodine: Why You Need It, Why You Can’t Live Without It; Salt Your Way To Health; The Miracle of Natural Hormones; Overcoming Arthritis; Overcoming Thyroid Disorders; The Guide to a Gluten-Free Diet; B12 For Health; The Guide to a Dairy-Free Diet; and The Soy Deception. He is the medical director of the Center for Holistic Medicine in West Bloomfield, Mich., where he lives with his wife, Allison, and their teenage daughters, Hailey and Jessica. For more information about Dr. Brownstein, please go to www.drbrownstein.com. Important As a subscriber to Dr. David Brownstein’s Natural Way to Health you may have opted to get this newsletter with our Convenient Automatic Renewal program. If you decide not to cancel your subscription, your credit card will be billed each year and read NMX*DR BROWNSTEIN RPRT on your credit card statement. Thank you. newsmaxhealth.com Page 3 Engineer Beats Andropause with Natural Hormones In each issue, I will share with you the story of one of my patients and how sometimes simple alternative approaches can solve major health problems. Names and some details have been changed for privacy’s sake, but the problems and their resolutions are real. — Dr. David Brownstein Michael was a 45-year-old automotive engineer who had a myriad of complaints including difficulty sleeping, irritability, anxiety, and brain fog, which he’d started noticing six months before seeing me. “I used to feel good. Now I am starting to feel old. I feel like I am losing muscle mass. At first I thought this was just normal aging, but it keeps getting worse. And I am not that old,” he said. Michael went to his family doctor, who ran basic tests and said that everything was fine. Michael wanted to hit him — everything was not fine. I had been seeing Michael’s wife for similar complaints, and treated her with a combination of bioidentical, natural hormones, as well as vitamins and minerals. After a few months of this therapy, she felt much better. When I asked Michael what prompted him to make the appointment with me, he pointed to his wife. “She feels so much better taking the stuff you prescribed. I want some of that,” he said. Usually, the first person in a family that I see is the woman, because women tend to take more notice of hormonal fluctuations. My typical female patient is around 50 years old, and her complaints are centered around fatigue, hot flashes, mood swings, irritability, mental decline, and low libido. Frequently, after I’ve helped get a woman’s hormonal system in balance, her husband will come in complaining that he can’t keep up with his wife. This was the case with Michael. “She is definitely feeling better than I am,” he said. ‘This Stuff Really Works’ Testosterone and DHEA are anabolic, adrenal, and testicular hormones. They are produced in both men and women, but men produce significantly more anabolic hormones than women. Men feel the agerelated decline of anabolic hormones around age 50. This is referred to as andropause or male menopause. Andropause in men is similar to menopause in women. Men can suffer hot flashes, fatigue, mood swings, irritability, decrease in muscle tone and mass, as well as declining mental function. But usually, Page 4 the first complaint I hear from men suffering with andropause is a lower libido. Michael’s lab tests showed low levels of testosterone (total testosterone, 228 ng/dl; normal, 400-900 ng/dL), DHEA (48 mcg/dL; normal, 150-250 mcg/dL), and pregnenolone (10 ng/dL; normal, 100-200 ng/dL). DHEA is a steroid hormone produced from the adrenal glands; it helps build muscle, burn fat, and can increase libido. DHEA is a crucial part of balancing the hormonal system. I have found DHEA supplementation very helpful for men, beginning in their 40s. Average doses range from 5 to 10 mg/day. Pregnenolone levels are the highest in the brain. Patients who complain of brain fog or mental decline are likely deficient. Pregnenolone can be taken orally; doses for men range from 25 to 50 mg/day. For men, lowered testosterone levels signify the decline of hormone production in the testes, similar to a woman’s decline in estrogen production from the ovaries. Using natural, bioidentical testosterone can reverse a man’s declining libido and muscle loss. Testosterone has been used in medicine for more than 100 years. However, conventional medicine has shunned its use due to the irrational idea that testosterone caused or worsened prostate cancer. Though there was no science backing this claim, it became the “truth.” A great deal of research has debunked this myth, and personally I have seen no correlation at all between testosterone and prostate cancer. In fact, the men who develop prostate cancer often have the lowest testosterone levels. Testosterone can be administered orally, transdermally, or by injection. Oral testosterone should be the last resort, as this method allows a “first-pass” effect to occur in the liver. That means that testosterone taken orally will be deactivated when it passes through the liver. This can be avoided by taking testosterone either transdermally or by injection. At my practice, we have testosterone specially formulated by a compounding pharmacist. This injectable form is made with natural testosterone in olive oil at 200 mg/ cc. The usual dose for men is 0.2 cc, once or twice per week, depending on the patient’s size and testosterone levels. Michael was prescribed one testosterone injection a week. At a three-month follow-up, all of his symptoms were better. “I feel like I got back 15 years. My wife was right, this stuff really works,” he exclaimed. o drbrownstein.newsmax.com Special Report Continued from page 3 Unfortunately, iodine levels have fallen more than 50 percent in the U.S. over the last 30 years, according to federal health researchers. During that time, we have seen a sharp increase in the number of men diagnosed with prostate problems. How does iodine deficiency cause prostate problems? Iodine is required by all the endocrine glands of the body, including the breast, ovaries, uterus, thyroid, and prostate. In fact, iodine concentrates in all glandular tissue. It is needed to maintain the normal structure of glandular tissue. When there is enough iodine, the glandular tissue appears normal. In early cases of iodine deficiency, the glands start to develop cysts. If iodine deficiency continues, the cysts become nodular. Eventually the cells in the glands become hyperplastic, which is a precancerous condition. The final stage of iodine deficiency is cancer. All of the above progressions of iodine deficiency can be halted, and sometimes reversed, with iodine. I have seen iodine get rid of cysts and nodules in glandular tissues — the prostate included. The most dramatic effects from iodine occur in the thyroid and the breasts. Although I have seen the same effects — cysts and nodules regressing — in the prostate, iodine therapy is more likely to stop further progression rather than reverse it. 4. Balance the Hormonal System The prostate, like all glands, secretes fluid. Seminal fluid secreted by the prostate enables sperm cells to have a chance at fertilizing an egg. Like all glands in the body, the prostate is very sensitive to the body’s hormonal status. What do I mean by that? As men age, their bodies have a tendency to turn testosterone into estrogen. This occurs due to an enzyme called aromatase, which can cause testosterone to metabolize into estradiol. Is this a bad thing? No. Aromatase is a naturally occurring enzyme, and men need both testosterone and estrogen for healthy endocrine tissue, including the prostate. There are some doctors who claim that elevated estrogen levels cause prostate problems. Special Report Other doctors believe it is testosterone that causes prostate problems. I can assure you that testosterone does not cause prostate problems. In fact, the male hormone may actually help many prostate problems. As for the estrogen, the answer is not that simple. The men who develop prostate problems generally have low testosterone levels and elevated estrogen levels. Young men produce a lot of testosterone. If testosterone were the cause of prostate problems, I would expect prostate diseases to be epidemic among young males. That is clearly not the case. I can assure you that the men with the lowest testosterone levels have much more prostate illness as compared to men with higher testosterone levels. This does not prove that low testosterone causes prostate problems, but it does give credence to the idea. Recent research has dispelled the myth that testosterone therapy may cause prostate cancer. I have observed that it is the imbalance between testosterone and estrogen that sets the stage for prostate problems. When men are young, they produce copious amounts of testosterone. As they age, aromatase becomes more active, turning testosterone into estrogen. I believe it is the imbalance between too much estrogen and testosterone that causes prostate problems. How do you rectify this imbalance? Detoxifying the liver helps the body to metabolize estrogens better. Your liver is like a human oil filter — its job is to keep the blood pure and metabolize hormones as well as toxic substances. In men, when the liver is overtaxed I see elevated estrogen levels. A proper liver cleanse which helps to rev up the liver’s detoxification enzymes can lower estrogen levels. I have created a powder called TLC (Total Liver Care), which has proven effective at detoxifying the liver. Taken with alpha lipoic acid (300 mg twice a day), this combination has been very effective at lowering high estrogen levels in men. Balancing the testosterone in a man is very gratifying. Men do not like low testosterone levels — they lead to fatigue, low libido, irritability, poor brain function, and prostate problems. newsmaxhealth.com Continued on page 7 Page 5 In the News: Reading Between the Medical Headlines Synthetic Hormones Increase Cancer Risks Beef produced in the United States is heavily contaminated with natural or synthetic sex hormones that are associated with an increased risk of reproductive and childhood cancers. According to Dr. Samuel Epstein, chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition, “Increased levels of sex hormones are linked to the escalating incidence of reproductive cancers in the United States since 1975: 60 percent for prostate, 59 percent for testis, and 10 percent for breast.” Dr. Epstein further states, “Not surprisingly — but contrary to long-standing claims by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture — residues of [estrogen and progesterone] in meat are up to 20 times higher than normal.” The amount of estradiol in two hamburgers eaten in one day by an 8-year-old boy could increase his total hormone levels by as much as 10 percent, particularly as young children have very low natural hormone levels. Not surprisingly, Dr. Epstein says, the incidence of childhood cancer has increased by 38 percent since 1975, according to an October 2009 article in World Wire. This article should be a wakeup call for all of us. As the father of two teenage girls, I can attest to the influence of hormones in the food supply. Our kids are developing earlier, and as a result more are becoming obese. There is no excuse for our government to allow these toxic hormones to end up in our food supply. What is the end result of these hormones being added to our food? Cancer. One in seven women has breast cancer, and one in three men suffers prostate cancer. These Page 6 epidemic rates are being driven, in part, by our contaminated food supply. It is vitally important to eat organic food sources free of hormones and pesticides. Unfortunately, our government is not looking out for our health. We have to take matters into our own hands with measures such as buying organic products. Problems with PSA testing I wrote about the problems with PSA testing in the December 2009 issue of Natural Way to Health. The New York Times later published an Op-Ed entitled “The Great Prostate Mistake” by Dr. Richard Ablin, who discovered the prostate-specific antigen test (PSA) in 1970. In the United States, the annual bill for PSA testing is more than $3 billion. Dr. Ablin states, “American men have a 16 percent chance of receiving a diagnosis of prostate cancer but only a 3 percent chance of dying from it.” In other words, men lucky enough to reach old age are much more likely to die with prostate cancer than die of it. Furthermore, he states, “Even then, the test is hardly more effective than a coin toss . . . Testing should absolutely not be deployed to screen the entire population of men over the age of 50, the outcome pushed by those who stand to profit. I never dreamed that my discovery four decades ago would lead to such a profit-driven public health disaster.” In this time of healthcare debate, Dr. Ablin’s thoughts should receive more attention. The PSA test should not be used as a screening test. More than 70 years of conventional treatment for prostate cancer — surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation — have never been shown to result in a lowered death rate. Why screen for prostate cancer if the majority of those with prostate cancer don’t die of it and the treatments available are relatively ineffective? The only reason to have a mass screening program is to save lives, yet the PSA screening test has never been shown to save lives. I say the money spent on covering PSA testing could be better used to educate people about the importance of diet and exercise. High-Fat Diet the Answer? Dag Poleszynski, Ph.D., who is on the faculty at the University of Oslo, talked about optimal nutrition from an evolutionary perspective. Specifically, he described the Paleolithic diet, which was rich in fat — up to 85 percent of the total food energy was from fat. He also described how the prehistoric settlements were dominated by a diet rich in meat and fat for more than 2 million years. Dr. Poleszynski presented data that showed a high fat diet prevents cancer, diabetes, heart disease, and obesity. I have found that most patients do well on a higher fat, lower carbohydrate diet. However, the fats must come from good food sources — organically raised animals free of hormones and antibiotics. should ‘notTesting be deployed to the entire population of men over the age of 50. drbrownstein.newsmax.com ’ Special Report Continued from page 5 The first patient I treated with low testosterone was my father. Now, 20 years later, I can assure you that men age more gracefully and feel much better if they have adequate testosterone levels. It is not just testosterone therapy that helps men with prostate function. Other natural hormones such as DHEA, pregnenolone, and particularly progesterone can also help prostate function if levels are low. A healthcare practitioner skilled in the use of bioidentical natural hormones can help manage this with you. 5. Don’t Rely on a PSA Test During the past 20 years, doctors urged all men 50 and older to be routinely screened for prostate cancer using the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test. They believed the test could spot prostate cancer at an early stage — and earlier diagnosis and treatment of the disease would save lives. But in October 2011, many men were left confused when a government task force declared that routine PSA screenings do not save lives. Furthermore, the government task force advised that healthy men should skip regular PSA tests. Meanwhile, some experts and prostate cancer survivors vehemently disagreed with the new recommendations and defended the value of routine screenings. So, do you need a routine PSA test? No. It’s basically worthless as a screening test, and even its inventor says it has been a disaster. PSA tests measure the levels of the PSA protein produced in the prostate gland, but it can’t show that you have cancer. It only indicates there may be an abnormality. Although rising levels can indicate prostate cancer (cancer cells produce much more PSA than normal cells), high levels can be caused by other conditions, including infections. In fact, more than two-thirds of men with high PSA levels don’t have prostate cancer. While it’s true that there’s an epidemic of prostate cancer, many men never have symptoms, and the cancer never spreads beyond the prostate. Most die from other causes, and their prostate cancer isn’t diagnosed until an autopsy is performed. Special Report There’s no evidence that shows PSA tests lower death rates from prostate cancer. They don’t screen for prostate cancer in England, yet their death rate from the disease is basically the same as ours. We’re throwing men into surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and hormone therapy, and we really don’t change the outcome of the illness. For most adult men, there is clearly no benefit for a routine PSA test. 6. Avoid Harmful Prostate Drugs Do drugs that treat BPH increase the risk of prostate cancer? Commonly prescribed BPH drugs work by poisoning the enzyme 5-alpha reductase in the prostate gland. This enzyme is responsible for converting testosterone into another hormone known as dihydrotestosterone or DHT — which can cause the prostate gland to enlarge. But it is not known if blocking DHT formation will lower the risk of prostate cancer. A seven-year study of the drug Proscar found a significantly increased risk of aggressive prostate cancer in those who took it. Similar results were observed in a four-year study with Avodart. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has required added warnings for labels of all 5-alpha reductase-blocking drugs, noting that they may increase the risk of advanced prostate cancer. I see no reason to ever take these drugs — any drug that increases your risk for getting aggressive prostate cancer should be avoided. If you have BPH, there are many safer drugs such as Hytrin. Better yet, you can clean up your diet, exercise, and optimize iodine levels, as this all helps alleviate BPH. You don’t have to suffer with prostate problems. There are many options to improving prostate health. Following the six steps outlined here will help you achieve your optimal health and help the health of your prostate. References 1. National Cancer Institute. http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/prostate. Accessed 2.15.13 2. Scandinavian Journal of Urologic Nephrology. 14 91):29-35; 1980 3. Practitioner. 2012 Apr;256(1750):13-6, 2. 4. Journal of the Nation Cancer Institute 97 (23): 1768-77, 2005 newsmaxhealth.com Page 7 Ask Dr. B Dear Readers, I will try to answer as many questions as I can. However, because of the volume of questions, I cannot answer each letter personally. Please include your full name, city, and state when submitting. If you have a question for me, please email it to: askdrdavid@newsmax.com. My employer is demanding that all employees get the flu shot. Do you recommend that I get it? — Mark H., Santa Barbara, Calif. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) claims that 3,000 to 49,000 people die from the flu yearly. I say those numbers are hogwash. Only a few hundred people die yearly from the flu, and most of those people have complicated medical conditions. Most flu vaccines are preserved with mercury. There is no excuse for injecting any living being with mercury. Furthermore, the flu vaccine is not very effective. Every vaccine that you take causes inflammation of the brain. It is better to eat a healthy diet, keep vitamin D levels optimized and supplement with vitamin C. Some employers are mandating the flu vaccine even though it has not been shown to be very effective at preventing the flu. We don’t need our employers or Big Brother mandating that we be injected with a vaccine that is ineffective for the vast majority of people. My husband takes Flomax for an enlarged prostate, and our sex life has changed dramatically since he started taking it. Is there a nutritional approach to his prostate problem? — Nancy E., Woodland Hills, Calif. The prostate gland is an endocrine gland located near the rectum and the urethra. As a man ages, the prostate can enlarge and impinge on the urethra, causing problems with urinary flow. Men with prostate problems will often complain of urinary frequency, difficulty in starting urination, and an inability to empty the bladder. Conventional medicine’s approach to these Page 8 problems are to initially prescribe drug therapies. Flomax works by binding to specific receptors in the bladder neck which causes the smooth muscle of the bladder to relax. This ultimately results in a lowered resistance to urinary flow and an increased ability to empty the bladder. As with all medications that block important receptors, there are adverse effects of Flomax including altering sexual function. What options are there beside medications? If the prostate is severely enlarged, surgery may be warranted. A TURP procedure can open up the urethra, which can improve urine flow. My experience has shown that taking the proper nutrients can improve prostate function and minimize the progression of prostatic enlargement. These nutrients include pomegranate extract, plant sterols, boswellia, pygeum africanum bark, pumpkin seed, flower pollen, and hydrangea root powder. Eating a diet free of refined food supplies the body with nutrients that support prostate function. I have also formulated a product called Prostate Revive that has been helpful for many men. You have recommended taking vitamin E with tocopherols, which contain soy. Can you please explain why? — Antonio P., Macomb, Mich. Many vitamin E supplements are derived from soy. In manufacturing vitamin E from soy, a multistep process removes soy proteins from the end product. The goitrogens (substances that cause goiter) in non-fermented soy foods (such as soy milk, cheese, formula, etc.), which I wrote about in the December 2008 issue of Natural Way to Health, are removed during the manufacturing process. Although the vitamin E product has to be labeled as derived from soy, there should be no traces of soy and no goitrogens in the final product. drbrownstein.newsmax.com To your good health, David Brownstein, M.D. Special Report
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