|

A Website
For Doctors and Health Professionals
|
New
York Time's Best Selling Book "FAT FLUSH PLAN" explains why
Extreme health's Liver Support Formula enhances weight loss.

The following
excerpt from 'The
Fat Flush Plan'
by Ann Louise Gittleman is printed with permission and the book is available
for purchase at Amazon
Discovery: The
Liver, Your Major Fat-Burning Organ, and the Lymph, Your Major Fat-Processing
System
Over twenty-five
years ago, a health-conscious friend shared an ad with me about the
Parcells School of Scientific Nutrition in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
The ad promised "five days that would change your life." Nothing
could have been truer. After meeting Hazel Parcells, Ph.D., D.C., N.D.,
my life was changed forever. She inspired me to become a nutritionist
with a foot in both clinical and holistic nutrition. Dr. Parcells was
eighty-four years old when I met Her - and lived to the incredible age
of 106. A true pioneer in natural medicine, she was a woman ahead of
her time.
Under Dr. Parcells's
masterful tutelage, I first became acquainted with several innovative
concepts, many of which later became the foundation of my Fat Flush
Plan. The first revelation was the surprising connection between weight
loss and the liver. I recognized early on what researches are only now
beginning to understand - that not only is the liver the main organ
for detoxifying pollutants and chemicals in the body, but this vital
organ also is a hidden key to effortless weight loss.
Based on simple
biochemistry and the charts from Gray's Anatomy, I learned first hand
that one of the best kept secrets to weight loss and lasting weight
control is keeping the liver, the key organ for fat metabolism, in tip-top
shape. For example, bile, which is synthesized and secreted by the liver
and stored in the gallbladder, helps the liver break down fats. Bile
cannot do its job, however, if it is lacking certain nutrients that
make up the bile salts or if it is congested or thickened with chemicals,
toxins, excess sex hormones, drugs and/or heavy metals.
So I researched
all the "liver loving" foods and nutrients that would enable
the body to produce quality bile and aid in thinning it out. Since one
of the primary ingredients of bile is lecithin - a highly effective
emulsifier with a detergent-like ability to break up fats - I decided
to experiment with adding lecithin-rich eggs to my daily diet. Soon,
the addition of fresh lemon juice and water - a well-known bile thinner
- followed suit twice a day. Not only did my own cholesterol come down
(a good 20 points to be exact), but so did my weight.
Just to make sure
I was onto something, I enrolled thirty of my clients in a six-week
dietary exploration and instructed them to add at least two eggs daily
to their current diet regimens and to add lemon juice and water twice
a day - without changing anything else in terms of diet or exercise.
Without exception, they all lost weight, especially around the waistline.
In fact, one woman lost 21 pounds over the six-week period. I instructed
the group to avoid caffeine and medications (including over-the-counter
drugs) as much as possible because I suspected even then that these
"drugs" were especially toxic to the liver.
Today, light is
finally being shed on this vitally important organ. Many laboratories
specializing in functional medicine testing offer a liver function test
to determine how well the liver's two distinct detoxification pathways,
the cytochrome P-450 phase I and phase II detoxification enzymes, are
working. An individual ingests caffeine, Tylenol, and aspirin, and then
specimens of saliva and urine are taken and analyzed to assess how well
the liver is breaking down these substances.
The liver's two
detoxification pathways are responsible for breaking down, eliminating,
and neutralizing toxins. In this petrochemical world of ours, the sheer
number of toxins we ingest from medication, drugs, pollutants, and pesticides
can overwhelm the liver's ability to break them down and deactivate
them. In addition, the detoxification pathways can become drained of
the antioxidants, enzymes, and other nutrients necessary for detoxification
because of the overload. The resulting metabolic by-products of incomplete
detoxification are often more poisonous to the body than the original
toxins.
The April 2001 Consumer
Reports on Health provided an extremely helpful list of medications
and herbs that can harm the liver with long-term use. The list include
common medications (such as ibuporfen); cholesterol-lowering drugs (such
as Lipitor); antidiabetic drugs; triglyceride-lowering drugs; anticonvulsants;
estrogens used to treat menopausal symptoms (such as Premarin and Ogen)
and those used in birth control pills (such as Lo/Ovral and Triphasal);
and the herbs chaparral, comfrey, and pennyroyal.
The bottom line
is that with so many toxins being dumped into the bile, its storage,
concentration, production, and ability to digest fats are seriously
impaired.
Another valuable
insight I learned from Dr. Parcells was that cellulite - that dimpled
accumulation of stored fat on our thighs and buttocks - was more connected
to a sluggish lymphatic system than to poor muscle tone or weakened
connective tissues. The lymphatic system, a relatively unknown secondary
circulatory system underneath the skin, rids the body of toxic wastes,
bacteria, heavy metals, dead cells, trapped protein, and fat globules.
In essence, the lymphatic system is the garbage disposal of the body.
These concepts were
so innovative back then that Dr. Parcells was the only one talking about
them. After her ideas on the liver and the value of cleansing began
to take root, researchers (for example, Sandra Cabot, M.D. in Australia)
and American doctors (for example, Leo Galland, Kenneth Bock, and Elson
Haas) started to write about them. Parcells would have been proud to
know that in 2001 - nearly five years after her death - a well-respected
cardiologist from Philadelphia, Gerald M. Lemole, M.D. came out with
a book called The Healing Diet, which links lymphatic system health
with overall wellness.
Thanks to Dr. Parcells,
I was given a head start in learning about the importance of cleansing
both the liver and the lymphatic system for effective weight loss and
cellulite control.
Discovery: The
Role of Fat-Burning Fats
Another major piece
of the weight loss puzzle fell into place during my tenure as director
of nutrition at the Pritikin Longevity Center in Santa Monica, California.
In the early 1980s, Pritikin diet was widely credited with being the
model for the low-fat, high carbohydrate diet prescription. At the center,
as well as later in private practice, I found that many women following
this type of program were complaining about distressful premenstrual
syndrome (PMS) symptoms and other health ailments. I began to study
their diet and health histories, hoping to find some underlying patterns.
For the most part,
I found that they were loading up on unlimited fat-free complex carbohydrates
such as pasta, bread, crackers, potatoes, corn, and beans. I discovered
that the more they overate wheat-based carbohydrates (in particular,
pasta, bread, cereal, and crackers), the more they craved them - and
the more they seemed to become depressed. And these high amounts of
grains were somehow contributing to their bloating - along with all
that fat-free milk and yogurt they used with cereal. The unlimited use
of fat-free but yeast-relation seasonings such as soy sauce, tamari,
tomato sauce, and oil-free vinegar dressing s of every persuasion added
insult to injury. Of course, the reason they were overusing these kinds
of seasonings was that their zero-fat meals lacked any real flavor.
As it turned out,
these same women were the ones complaining about retaining fluid, feeling
tired and cold, and having allergies and recurring yeast infections,
in addition to severe PMS. Therefore, I recommended a highly touted
gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) - rich supplement known as evening primrose
oil, used widely by European doctors for PMS-related problems. And this
is when the unexpected happened. Besides eradicating their symptoms,
these also experienced a welcomed side benefit - weight loss.
The GLA fat-fighting
connection. Although generations have used the evening primrose plant
for its many medicinal and healing properties, the oil in the seeds
- containing the powerful GLA - was making a splash in the weight loss
arena. In fact, it was through research conducted by David Horrobin,
M.D., at the University of Montreal, and M. A. Mir, M.D., a senior researcher
and consultant physician at the Welsh National School of Medicine in
Cardiff, Great Britain, that helped me realize how the right kind of
fat stimulates the body's metabolic ability to burn fat. Their work
demonstrated that evening primrose oil was most effective for those
who were overweight by at least 10 percent. The key to this calorie-burning
mechanism appeared to be the way the GLA-rich evening primrose oil worked
via the prostaglandin pathways, a network of hormones that control virtually
all body functions at the cellular level.
The GLA found in
evening primrose oil mobilizes the metabolically active fat known as
brown adipose tissue (BAT). This special form of fat, if available in
sufficient amounts, can burn off extra calories and boost energy. BAT
is a special insulating kind of fat found deep within the body that
surrounds your vital organs such as the kidneys, heart, and adrenal
glands. It cushions your spinal column as well as the neck and major
thoracic blood vessels.
The series I prostaglandins
created from GLA are believed to regulated many aspects of metabolism.
GLA-induced prostaglandins regulate BAT by acting as a catalyst to either
turn it on to trigger calorie burning or turn it off to trigger calorie
conservation. Prostaglandins are also connected to a metabolic process
referred to as ATPase. ATPase is also known as the sodium pump, a biochemical
process necessary to keep the right amount of potassium inside cell
walls and too much sodium out. GLA-rich substances such as evening primrose
oil, by means of prostaglandin activity, control the sodium pump, which
in turn revs up metabolism.
Based on mounting
evidence the essential fatty acids are important to overall health -
from studies that started to appear in such prestigious medical journals
as the New England Journal of Medicine in the mid-1980s - I published
my first book, Beyond Pritikin. Released in 1988, the book became a
best-seller. It featured a chapter entitled "The Two-Week Fat Flush"
that, as I look back, was really the origin of today's Fat Flush Plan.
I inserted this program in my book as an antidote to the high-carbohydrate,
high-grain-based, yeast-rich, fat-free diets of the era. It contained
a one-day sample menu and touched on liver cleansing for more efficient
fat metabolism. The diet featured the GLA supplements I had worked with
in my private practice.
In 1996 I updated
Beyond Pritikin and altered the Two-Week Fat Flush by replacing the
safflower oil component with omega-3-rich flaxseed oil. Flaxseed oil
works much like GLA but helps the body burn fat even more efficiently
by increasing the production of a certain groups of prostaglandins or
eicosanoids, as they were called in the 1990s.
When Beyond Pritikin
came out, my private practice in California grew, and soon people everywhere
were resonating to my message that essential fats where absolutely necessary
for rapid weight loss, longevity, and good health.
Discovery: Excess
Insulin and Fat Storage
By the mid-1990s
it was becoming increasingly clear to me that the public finally was
ready to accept my finding that a low-fat diet isn't good for you because
of the emergence of yet another piece of the weight loss puzzle: Fat-deprived,
carbohydrate-stuffed individuals were realizing, due to the popularity
of such books as The Zone (Regan, 1995) and Dr. Atkin's New Diet Revolution
(Evans, 1992), that they were seriously jeopardizing their weight loss
attempts because of the insulin factor. A fat-free diet, low in protein
but high in carbohydrates (even the highly touted complex carbs) keeps
insulin levels elevated, which promotes fat accumulation since insulin
is a fat storage hormone.
Thankfully, insulin
awareness has ushered in a brand new era of balanced nutrition and has
legitimized the return of insulin-lowering fats and proteins to America's
dining tables. The Fat Flush formula of healthy fats, lean proteins,
and slow-acting (low-glycemic) carbohydrates is right on the low-insulin
track.
Discovery: When
Fat Is Not Fat and the Stress-Fat Hidden Factors
I learned about
the remaining weight loss stumbling blocks through my most dependable
sources - you (my readers) and clients. Time and time again I was finding
that even when some of my clients were doing everything else right,
they still couldn't lose weight. Thanks to the nutritional assessment
questionnaire and food diary record sheets I had every client fill out,
a pattern began to emerge. I discovered that many of those who were
resistant to weight loss had a history of long-tern use of birth control
pills, hormone replacement therapy (HRT), antidepressants, and other
medications as well as hidden food allergies. In Chapter 2 you will
learn that this kind of weight gain is really not fat per se but rather
severely waterlogged tissues masquerading as fat.
In addition, I noted
from my client's assessment forms that those who had the hardest time
losing weight were also those who were the most stressed out. They were
living on caffeine (from 2 to 4 cups daily), juggling home and career,
definitely not getting enough rest (four to six hours daily), feeling
"on edge" most of the time, and reporting an increase in food
cravings and fat storage, particularly in the abdominal area. I suspected
that the adrenal glands - our "fight or flight" glands that
produce hormones in response to stress - were intimately connected to
the stress-fat cycle. And I had a very strong hunch that I could disrupt
this cycle with some simple changes in lifestyle habits.
So I honed the Fat
Flush Plan to include stress-relieving protocols (such as exercise and
journal keeping) that would zap the stress trigger and accelerate weight
loss. Probably the most vigorous stress-busting dietary suggestion was
to increase protein - at least 8 ounces or more of poultry, fish or
lean meat - because the body has higher protein needs when it is under
stress. Just by adding another couple of ounces of protein to lunch
and dinner, I had elated reports form clients who were dropping two
dress sixes in two weeks - at last.
You may be asking,
"What about other hidden weight gain factors like low thyroid or
chronic dieting that throw the body into a metabolic slowdown?"
I believe that these are also valid but secondary to the five hidden
factors I have defined and outlined above.
DESTINATION:
A NEW BODY AND A NEW YOU
In Chapter 2, I
explain how hidden weight gain factors can sabotage your weight loss
goals. It has been only in the last few years that my understanding
of the scientific basis for the Fat Flush Plan has come together. For
over a decade I have been collecting the latest studies, research, and
books (which are referenced in the back of this book) that have helped
to substantiated my Fat Flush discoveries.
Finally, there is
an answer for someone like you, like me, like all of us.
FIVE HIDDEN WEIGHT
GAIN FACTORS
We learn wisdom
from failure, much more than from success; we often discover what will
do by finding what will not do and probably he who never made a mistake,
never made a discovery.
- SAMUEL SMILES
QUICK QUIZ
Your struggles with
weight are not the result of simply too much food and too little exercise.
A myriad of unsuspected elements come into play. Before wee look more
closely at these, take this Quick Quiz to put your own lifestyle in
focus.
YES/NO
Do you drink caffeinated
beverages daily? _______ _______
Are you taking antidepressants or prescription or over-
the-counter drugs? _______ _______
Do you eat margarine or foods made with hydrogenated
(solid or semisolid) fats? _______ _______
Do you take birth control pills? _______ _______
Are you on estrogen-or hormone-replacement therapy? _______ _______
Did you take antibiotics two or more times during the
past twelve months? _______ _______
Do you avoid fat at all cost (e.g. by eating fat-free
yogurt and fat-free cookies)? _______ _______
Do you often crave sweets, bread, or other high-
carbohydrate foods? _______ _______
Do you eat pasta, potatoes, bread, or other carbohydrates
two or more times daily? _______ _______
Does at least one meal a day contain processed and/or
packaged foods (e.g., frozen entrees or
luncheon meats)? _______ _______
Do you eat fewer than two servings of protein (e.g.,
meat, eggs or fish) daily? _______ _______
Do you drink fewer than eight 8-ounce glasses of
water daily? _______ _______
Do you regularly sleep fewer than 8 hours a night? _______ _______
Do you lead a high-stress life? _______ _______
Do you frequently skip a meal because you are "too
busy to eat"? _______ _______
Would you describe your lifestyle as sedentary? _______ _______
If you answered
"Yes" to even one of the these questions, read on to
learn how you may be unknowingly sabotaging your efforts at weight control
and what you can do to make a difference.
If you are like
most people, the Fat Flush Plan is not your first attempt at weight
loss. You've exercised, counted calories, and cut out fat, then protein,
and now even carbohydrates. Perhaps you lost weight; perhaps not. Chances
are you've regained most, if not all, of the pounds.
For thousands of
individuals, the Fat Flush Plan has been different. They've lost pounds
and inches and kept them off. I believe this is so because the plan,
unlike any other weight loss program, targets the five hidden factors
mentioned in Chapter I that bring on unwanted pounds:
Liver toxicity
Waterlogged tissues
Fear of eating fat
Excess insulin
Stress fat
How do these factors
really affect your weight? Over the past several years, I have followed
the research and, in some cases, the work of the nutritional pioneers
who spearheaded these breakthroughs to answer this question. If you
are like most of the Fat Flushers who have followed my work, when you
understand some of the no-nonsense reasoning and the science behind
the plan, you'll march confidently toward your ultimate success.
HIDDEN FACTOR
#1: YOUR TIRED, TOXIC LIVER
Poets and songwriters
may wax poetic about the heart, but your liver is by far the most versatile
organ in your body and one of the most important. Weighting between
2.5 and 4 pounds in adults, the liver is the largest internal organ
as well. Between 3 and 4 pints of blood flow through it every minute.
The Vital Liver
Researchers now
estimate that the liver performs nearly 400 different jobs. It is the
body's most important organ, functioning as a living filter to cleanse
the system of toxins, metabolize proteins, control hormonal balance,
and produce immune-boosting factors. Many of these functions are essential
to your overall health, for example, the liver's synthesis of fibrinogen
and other blood-clotting factors to protect you when you are injured.
However, other liver functions have a direct bearing on your weight
loss efforts, and these are the focus of the Fat Flush Plan.
A Fat-Burning Machine.
Each day your liver produces about a quart of a yellowish green liquid
called bile that emulsifies and absorbs fats in the small intestine.
Bile contains water, bile acids and pigments, cholesterol, bilirubin,
lipids, lecithin, potassium, sodium, and chloride. The liquid is stored
near the liver in the gallbladder, from where it is transported to the
intestine as needed during digestion.
Bile, as briefly
discussed in Chapter 1, is the real key to the liver's ability to digest
and assimilate fats. It can be hampered from doing its job because of
a lack of bile nutrients, congestion, or even clogged bile ducts, which
hamper bile flow and result in less bile production. If there is not
enough bile produced, fat cannot be emulsified.
If you have a roll
of fat at your waistline, you may have what is commonly called a "fatty
liver". Your liver has stopped processing fat and begun storing
it, for reasons I'll explain in a moment. Only when you bring your liver
back to full function will you lose this fat.
An Efficient Metabolizer.
The liver metabolizes not only fats but also carbohydrates and proteins
for use in your body. The organ has a triple role in carbohydrate metabolism.
First, it converts glucose, fructose, and galactose in glycogen, which
it stores. Second, when your blood sugar level drops and no new carbohydrates
are available, the liver converts stored glycogen into glucose and releases
it into your bloodstream. Third, if your diet is regularly low in carbohydrates,
the liver will convert fat or protein into glucose to maintain your
blood sugar levels.
The liver converts
amino acids from food into various proteins that may have a direct or
indirect impact on your weight. Many proteins, for example, transport
hormones through the bloodstream; as you've read, hormone balances are
crucial to avoid water retention, bloating , and cravings, as well as
other health problems. Proteins also help transport wastes, such as
damaged cholesterol and used estrogen and insulin, to the liver for
detoxification and elimination through the kidneys.
A Potent Detoxifier.
Perhaps the liver's most important function, and the one that puts it
at greatest risk for damage, is to detoxify the myriad toxins that assault
our bodies daily. A toxin is any substance that irritates or creates
harmful effects in the body. Some toxins, called endotoxins, are the
natural by-products of body processes. For example, during protein metabolism,
ammonia is formed, which the liver breaks down to urea to be excreted
through the kidneys. Other toxins you consume by choice, such as alcohol,
caffeine, and prescription drugs (more about these later). Still others
are the thousands of toxic chemicals we breathe, consume, or touch in
our environment: pesticides, car exhaust, secondhand smoke, chemical
food additives, and indoor pollutants from paint, carpets and cleaners,
among others. Under ordinary circumstances, your body handles toxins
by (1) neutralizing them, as antioxidants neutralize free radicals,
(2) transforming them, as fat-soluble chemicals are transformed to water-soluble
ones, and (3) eliminating them through urine, feces, sweat, mucus, and
breath. Working with your lungs, skin, kidneys, and intestines, a healthy
liver detoxifies many harmful substances and eliminates them without
contaminating the bloodstream.
The detoxification
process has two phases that should work in close synchronization. Phase
1 uses a group of enzymes to break apart the chemical bonds holding
the toxins together. Known as hydroxylation, phase 1 makes some toxins
more water soluble and temporarily more chemically active.
Phase 2, known as
conjugation, attaches other enzymes to the chemically altered toxins,
or intermediates. These enzymes complete the conversion of the intermediates,
producing substances that are nontoxic, water-soluble, and easily excreted.
When the Liver is
Overloaded
Your liver is a
workhorse that can even regenerate its own damaged cells. However, it
is not invincible. When it lacks essential nutrients or when it is overwhelmed
by toxins, it no longer performs as it should. Hormone imbalances may
develop. Fat may accumulate in the liver and then just under the skin
or in other organs. Toxins build up and get into your bloodstream. Among
the signs of "toxic liver" are
Weight gain, especially
around the abdomen
Cellulite
Abdominal bloating
Indigestion
High Blood pressure
Elevated cholesterol
Fatigue
Mood swings
Depression
Skin rashes
When your liver
is sluggish, every organ in your body is affected, and your weight loss
efforts are blocked. Blood vessels enlarge, and blood flow becomes restricted.
A toxic liver is unable to break down the adrenal hormone aldosterone,
which accumulates to retain sodium (and water) and suppress potassium.
This can raise your blood pressure. The liver fails to detoxify the
components of estrogen (estrone and estradiol) for excretion, so symptoms
of estrogen dominance arise. Unable to carry out its activities to control
glucose, a toxic liver can lead to hypoglycemia, which can produce sugar
cravings, weight gain, and Candida overgrowth. Fluid accumulates, and
you may develop one or more autoimmune diseases such as lupus or arthritis.
A liver overloaded with pollutants and toxins cannot efficiently burn
body fat, and thus will sabotage your weight loss efforts.
We
welcome your questions be they by phone or email.
Your health is a
vitally important and we are happy to answer your questions about oral
chelation and its advantages for you.
Please don't hesitate
to contact us at
Extended Health
info@extendedhealth.com
1-800-300-6712
Monday to Friday 9:00AM to
5:00 PM Pacific Standard Time
Fax 925-988-8013
2175 N. California
Blvd. Suite 150
Walnut Creek, CA 94596
USA
Pharmaceutical
Quality, FDA approved manufacturing plant and procedures
Back
to the top
Links
Privacy
Extended Health
takes your personal privacy seriously. Because we value our customer
relationship with you, we do not sell customer information or share
it with organizations.
Thank you for choosing Extended Health. We appreciate your business.
______________________________________________________________________
Disclaimer:
All information
on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means
is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice
provided to you by your own physician or health care provider. You should
not use any information contained in our site to self-diagnose or personally
treat any medical condition or disease or prescribe any medication.
If you have or suspect you have a medical condition you are urged to
contact your personal health care provider immediately. All health supplements
or products purchased in this site contain clearly labeled product packaging,
which must be read to ensure proper use. All information and statements
regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and
Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or
prevent any disease. It has not been conclusively established that oral
chelation is an effective treatment or cure for any disease or condition
or that it actually prevents or mitigates such harm. However, Extended
Health, Inc. believes that the use of its products is a responsible
precautionary stop for those people who are informed and concerned about
such matters.
The National Institute
of Health recently began a five-year double blind study on the effects
of intravenous chelation. Since qualified doctors have offered their
patients chelation treatments for over thirty years, we all look forward
to these results. Extened Health has a doctor's label featuring the
exact oral chelation formula that we sell directly to the public. We've
sold this to doctors for over four years!
If any customer
is not satisfied with Extended Health's Oral Chelation Formula we will
refund the purchase price upon return of the unused product and proof
of purchase to Extended Health, Inc.