|   Nutritional 
        Research Update -- RA, Asthma, Kidney Stones, Diarrhea, and Vitamin C 
      G. 
        Douglas Andersen, DC, DACBSP, CCN 
         
      Volume 
        12, number 26, 12/16/94, page 17 
        RA and fish oil, sodium and asthma, cola and kidney stones, diarrhea and 
        homeopathy. 
         
        Today we will review some information that both the nutritional expert 
        and novice can pass along to their patients. I would like to emphasize 
        that each topic is based on one study, and whether positive or negative, 
        should not be taken as an absolute until it can be independently confirmed. 
         
         
        Two on RA 
         
        Any of you who have had patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) know how 
        frustrating this disease is for both patient and doctor. One treatment 
        that has been widely studied and found successful is the use of large 
        amounts of fish oil (EPA and DHA). Fish oil does help rheumatoid arthritics. 
        Unfortunately, many patients have a difficult time consuming large doses 
        of fish oil. Last November, a double blind study with patients supplemented 
        with 1400 mg of GLA from borage oil for six months reported a 30-45 percent 
        reduction in joint pain and swelling. It is much easier to have patients 
        consume GLA than fish oil, and I hope the study can be reproduced.1 
         
         
        In a noncontrolled study, clinicians reported that consumption of ginger 
        in capsule form, at doses ranging from 1500 to 4000 mg per day, significantly 
        reduced pain in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, and 
        fibromyalgia.2  
         
        Asthma and Sodium 
         
        In a 10-week controlled study in which 27 male asthmatics had two five-week 
        diets (low sodium and high sodium), when the asthmatics consumed a high 
        sodium diet, their symptoms and the need for medication both significantly 
        increased.3  
         
        Kidney Stones 
         
        When researchers looked at the diet of kidney stone formers, they found 
        that many patients consumed cola beverages on a regular basis. When they 
        studied the urine of subjects who had consumed the equivalent of one extra 
        large convenience store cola, and compared the results to urine without 
        cola consumption, they concluded that cola consumption at the level studied 
        (48 ounce) promoted stone formation.4  
         
        Diarrhea 
         
        I have had a hard time accepting homeopathic medicine because of the lack 
        of good studies, and when a positive study is published, it seems that 
        neutral investigators are unable to reproduce it. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled 
        study on 81 children, ages six months to five years, who suffered from 
        diarrhea, they received either a placebo or a homeopathic remedy for their 
        diarrhea. After two days, those who received homeopathic medicine had 
        a statistically significant reduction in diarrhea. If this research can 
        be reproduced, I predict a sharp increase in studies on homeopathy. The 
        remedies used in this study were arsenicum aldum, chamomilla, mercurius 
        vivus, podophyllum, and sulfur.5 
         
        Vitamin C 
         
        A very interesting vitamin C absorption study was released last summer. 
        Nine people were involved in a double blind study in which they took 500 
        mg of the ascorbic acid form of vitamin C, 500 mg of ester-C, 500 mg of 
        ascorbic acid with bioflavonoids, or a placebo. The authors concluded 
        after comparing plasma levels, urinary excretion rates, and vitamin C 
        retention that there was no difference between these supplements. The 
        authors recommended the utilization of ascorbic acid vitamin C because 
        it was much less expensive than vitamin C with bioflavonoids or ester-C.6 
         
         
        I would like to again emphasize that this is just one small study. There 
        has been evidence that ester-C is, at least in some individuals, better 
        absorbed. My personal feeling is that vitamin C is so inexpensive and 
        so well tolerated in most people that if I feel a patient is not absorbing 
        enough vitamin C, I simply increase their dose. As for vitamin C with 
        bioflavonoids, I know of no researcher who states bioflavonoids enhance 
        vitamin C absorption. There are studies that show when vitamin C and bioflavonoids 
        are taken together, their individual effects are enhanced. I always recommend 
        that my patients look for vitamin C formulas with bioflavonoids. I use 
        the orange analogy. If you drink the juice, you get vitamin C. If you 
        eat the entire orange, you get vitamin C and bioflavonoids -- as nature 
        intended.  
         
        References 
        1. Levanthal et al. Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis with gamma linolenic 
        acid. Annals of Internal Medicine. 119:867-873. 1993.  
         
        2. Srivastava et al. Ginger in rheumatism and musculoskeletal disorders. 
        Medical Hypothesis. 39:342-348. 1992.  
         
        3. Carey et al. Effects of alterations of dietary sodium on the severity 
        of asthma and men. Thorax. 48:714-718. 1993.  
         
        4. Weiss et al. Changes in urinary magnesium citrate and oxalate levels 
        due to cola consumption. Urology. 3:331-333. 1992.  
         
        5. Jacobs et al. Treatment of acute childhood diarrhea with homeopathic 
        medicine. A randomized clinical trial in Nicaragua. Pediatrics. May 1994. 
        93(5): 719-725.  
         
        6. Johnston et al. Comparison of the absorption and excretion of three 
        commercially available sources of vitamin C. Journal of the American Dietetic 
        Association. 94(7:779-782). July 1994.  
        Resources  
         
        7. Clinical Pearls News, 1994. ITServices, 3301 Alta Arden, #3, Sacramento, 
        CA 95825.  
         
        8. American Journal of Natural Medicine, 1994. ImpaKt Communications. 
        P.O. Box 12496, Green Bay, WI 54307)2496.  
         
         
        
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        2004, G. Douglas Andersen, DC, DACBSP, CCN, 916 E. Imperial Hwy, Brea, 
        CA 92821, (714) 990-0824  
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