SOME THINGS TO THINK ABOUT
HEALTH - HEALING - WELLNESS
PAGE 541
NATURAL PROSTATE
HEALTH
NATURAL PROSTATE HEALTH
Affecting not just elderly men, prostate disorders are much more common than
would be expected in middle-aged individuals. For example, over half of 40-59
year-old men have enlarged prostates, and, although most will not develop
clinically significant disease, one fourth of 50-year olds have some cancerous
cells in their prostate.
Due to the problem’s magnitude, this article’s purpose is to highlight various
prostate-enhancing nutritional, herbal, or alternative medicine approaches that
may help one avert more serious pharmaceutical and surgical therapies. Using
these preventive approaches should not, however, lull one into foregoing regular
prostate-screening exams.
The prostate, located below the bladder, is a walnut-size gland that produces
seminal fluid. Because the gland surrounds the urethra that drains the bladder,
prostate disorders often affect urination. The three most common disorders are
1) an inflammatory infection called prostatitis; 2) benign prostatic hyperplasia
(BPH), a prevalent non-cancerous enlargement of the prostate; and 3) cancer, the
most frequent male malignancy.
Prostate disorders are associated with age-related changes in steroid sex
hormones. After age 40, testosterone declines, and a testosterone variant called
dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and the female-associated hormone estrogen increase.
DHT stimulates cell growth and, in turn, prostate enlargement. By inhibiting DHT
elimination, estrogen has the same effect.
Food and Nutrient Supplements:
Prostate dysfunction has been called a nutritional disease. It is much more
common in developed Western countries that emphasize animal-derived foods, such
as red meat, dairy products, and eggs, all foods that tend to accumulate
environmental toxins. In contrast, fruit- and vegetable-rich diets exert a
protective effect.
Scientific studies are challenging some entrenched views on what we have
traditionally considered nutritionally wholesome foods. For example, growing
evidence suggests that milk may be bad for the prostate. Overall, countries that
consume the most milk have the highest incidence of prostate cancer. The culprit
appears to be milk’s calcium. Excessive calcium intake, regardless of source,
apparently suppresses the synthesis of a form of vitamin D that inhibits
prostate cancer.
In contrast, men who consume tomatoes, tomato-based foods (e.g., ketchup, pasta,
etc.), guavas, watermelon, and pink grapefruit are reportedly less likely to get
prostate cancer. These foods contain a powerful antioxidant agent called
lycopene (see www.lycopene.org) that gives them their characteristic red color.
Available as a nutritional supplement, lycopene not only prevents prostate
cancer but also may reduce existing tumor size.
Another prostate-protecting food is fructose, the sugar in fruit that is used to
sweeten many foods. Overall, its consumption is associated with a reduced
prostate-cancer risk. Unlike calcium, fructose stimulates the production of a
vitamin D form that inhibits tumors.
Several trace nutrients that are often deficient in our diet also enhance
prostate health. For example, a lack of zinc especially affects the prostate
because this gland uses it much more than any other body part. By altering
steroid hormone metabolism, zinc supplementation can reduce prostate
enlargement. Interestingly, pumpkin seeds, a traditional folk remedy promoting
male reproductive and prostate health, are rich in zinc.
Selenium is another often-deficient trace nutrient that is essential for
prostate health. Increasing selenium intake, whether through supplements or
selenium-rich foods (e.g., Brazil nuts), has been shown to reduce
prostate-cancer risk.
Other nutritional factors that may inhibit prostate cancer include vitamin D;
vitamin E, an antioxidant that inhibits cancer growth; soy-based foods, which
contain the cancer-inhibiting agent genistein; and garlic, which possess
cancer-fighting, sulfur-containing compounds.
Herbal Remedies:
In Europe, herbal remedies are widely used to treat prostate disorders. In
America, however, a regulatory charade makes these remedies available by
pretending that they are merely dietary supplements (insert link). Because of
the extensive scientific base that often supports their use, they are much more
than folk remedies.
Foremost among these herbs is saw palmetto, isolated from the berries of a small
palm tree common to the U.S.’s southeastern coastal region. A traditional Native
American remedy, saw palmetto reduces prostate enlargement by inhibiting the
synthesis of growth-stimulating DHT and promoting DHT elimination by lowering
estrogen levels.
Many clinical studies demonstrate saw palmetto’s effectiveness. In fact, the
herb works better in treating prostate enlargement than the frequently
prescribed drug Proscar. Specifically, saw palmetto was shown to be effective in
nearly 90% of patients after 4-6 weeks, while Proscar works in fewer than a half
the patients after a year. And since the drug is less effective, much more
expensive, and its major side effect is erectile dysfunction, choosing saw
palmetto seems self-evident.
Often administered with saw palmetto, another herbal heavyweight is pygeum. An
indigenous African remedy obtained from tree bark, studies indicate that pygeum
can treat BPH and prostatitis. The herb also contains chemicals that inhibit DHT-associated
prostate enlargement.
A third herbal remedy is Cernilton, a popular European product prepared from the
extract of mainly rye pollen. Numerous studies document Cernilton’s ability to
treat BPH and prostatitis (see www.cernitinamerica.com).
Finally, stinging nettle is a traditional herbal folk remedy for many ailments,
including prostate disorders. Clinical studies indicate that the herb (marketed
as Bazoton in Europe) also can relieve BPH symptoms.
Homeopathy:
Homeopathy is a popular alternative healing tradition that offers several
remedies for prostate disorders. Although often confused with herbal and
nutritional therapies that bear similar names, homeopathy is based on
fundamentally different principles. With homeopathy’s like-cures-like
philosophy, substances that cause symptoms of illness in healthy people can be
used in exceedingly low doses to cure similar symptoms from illness. According
to the “Consumer Guide to Homeopathy” (Dana Ullman, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1995),
homeopathic remedies for prostate disorders include Chimaphilla umbellata,
Pulsatilla, Clematis, Apis, Staphysagria, Selenium, Baryta carb, Kali bic, and
Causticum.
Magnetic Fields:
Evidence suggests that cancers can be treated with magnetic fields. As such, it
has been suggested that prostate tumor growth can be inhibited by sitting for
several hours a day on a magnet (e.g., magnetic pad). Because the
north-pole-associated field - the side that attracts the north-pole-seeking end
of a compass needle - slows down biological growth while the south-pole field
stimulates growth, cancers should be treated with only the magnet’s north-pole
field.
Conclusion:
One way or another, economic factors pervasively influence our health. For
example, the dairy industry relentlessly promotes milk’s benefits to adults in
spite of much evidence to the contrary, and ketchup producers now portray the
condiment as a health food. It is hard to know who to listen to. Physicians,
upon whom we rely on for advice, listen mostly to profit-motivated drug
companies when it concerns our medicines and have had little training in
nutritional, herbal, or alternative healing approaches.
Even though 1) safer, less expensive, and more effective options are often
available, 2) a blue-ribbon federal health advisory committee concluded that
way too many prostate surgeries are being performed, and 3) everyone complains
about soaring medical costs, American men still spend billions of dollars
annually on surgical and pharmaceutical treatments, often possessing serious
side effects. Knowledge is power. If we don’t want economic factors influencing
our health, we need to reclaim more responsibility for it and further educate
ourselves on healing options.
Laurance Johnston, Ph.D.
Thanks
to the many sources and the teachers for this knowledge
and wisdom that is helping us on our journey.
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