Why Sugar is Toxic to the Body and in particular the BRAIN.
Part 5 Conclusion.
SUGAR AND MENTAL HEALTH
In the Dark Ages, troubled souls were rarely locked up for going off
their rocker. Such confinement began in the Age of Enlightenment, after
sugar made the transition from apothecary's prescription to candymaker's
confection. "The great confinement of the insane", as one historian
calls it,10 began in the late 17th century, after sugar consumption in
Britain had zoomed in 200 years from a pinch or two in a barrel of beer,
here and there, to more than two million pounds per year. By that time,
physicians in London had begun to observe and record terminal physical
signs and symptoms of the "sugar blues".
Meanwhile, when sugar
eaters did not manifest obvious terminal physical symptoms and the
physicians were professionally bewildered, patients were no longer
pronounced bewitched, but mad, insane, emotionally disturbed. Laziness,
fatigue, debauchery, parental displeasure-any one problem was sufficient
cause for people under twenty-five to be locked up in the first
Parisian mental hospitals. All it took to be incarcerated was a
complaint from parents, relatives or the omnipotent parish priest. Wet
nurses with their babies, pregnant youngsters, retarded or defective
children, senior citizens, paralytics, epileptics, prostitutes or raving
lunatics-anyone wanted off the streets and out of sight was put away.
The mental hospital succeeded witch-hunting and heresy-hounding as a
more enlightened and humane method of social control. The physician and
priest handled the dirty work of street sweeping in return for royal
favors.
Initially, when the General Hospital was established in
Paris by royal decree, one per cent of the city's population was locked
up. From that time until the 20 century, as the consumption of sugar
went up and up-especially in the cities-so did the number of people who
were put away in the General Hospital. Three hundred years later, the
"emotionally disturbed" can be turned into walking automatons, their
brains controlled with psychoactive drugs. Today, pioneers of
orthomolecular psychiatry, such as Dr. Abram Hoffer, Dr. Allan Cott, Dr.
A. Cherkin as well as Dr. Linus Pauling, have confirmed that mental
illness is a myth and that emotional disturbance can be merely the first
symptom of the obvious inability of the human system to handle the
stress of sugar dependency. In Orthomolecular Psychiatry, Dr. Pauling
writes: "The functioning of the brain and nervous tissue is more
sensitively dependent on the rate of chemical reactions than the
functioning of other organs and tissues. I believe that mental disease
is for the most part caused by abnormal reaction rates, as determined by
genetic constitution and diet, and by abnormal molecular concentrations
of essential substances. Selection of food (and drugs) in a world that
is undergoing rapid scientific and technological change may often be far
from the best."11
In Megavitamin B3 Therapy for Schizophrenia,
Dr. Abram Hoffer notes: "Patients are also advised to follow a good
nutritional program with restriction of sucrose and sucrose-rich
foods."12 Clinical research with hyperactive and psychotic children, as
well as those with brain injuries and learning disabilities, has shown:
"An abnormally high family history of diabetes-that is, parents and
grandparents who cannot handle sugar; an abnormally high incidence of
low blood glucose, or functional hypoglycemia in the children
themselves, which indicates that their systems cannot handle sugar;
dependence on a high level of sugar in the diets of the very children
who cannot handle it. "Inquiry into the dietary history of patients
diagnosed as schizophrenic reveals the diet of their choice is rich in
sweets, candy, cakes, coffee, caffeinated beverages, and foods prepared
with sugar. These foods, which stimulate the adrenals, should be
eliminated or severely restricted."13
The avant-garde of modern
medicine has rediscovered what the lowly sorceress learned long ago
through painstaking study of nature. "In more than twenty years of
psychiatric work," writes DR Thomas Szasz, "I have never known a
clinical psychologist to report, on the basis of a projective test, that
the subject is a normal, mentally healthy person. While some witches
may have survived dunking, no 'madman' survives psychological
testing...there is no behavior or person that a modern psychiatrist
cannot plausibly diagnose as abnormal or ill."14 So it was in the 17th
century. Once the doctor or the exorcist had been called in, he was
under pressure to do something. When he tried and failed, the poor
patient had to be put away. It is often said that surgeons bury their
mistakes. Physicians and psychiatrists put them away; lock 'em up.
In the 1940s, DR John Tintera rediscovered the vital importance of the
endocrine system, especially the adrenal glands, in "pathological
mentation"-or "brain boggling". In 200 cases under treatment for
hypoadrenocorticism (the lack of adequate adrenal cortical hormone
production or imbalance among these hormones), he discovered that the
chief complaints of his patients were often similar to those found in
persons whose systems were unable to handle sugar: fatigue, nervousness,
depression, apprehension, craving for sweets, inability to handle
alcohol, inability to concentrate, allergies, low blood pressure. Sugar
blues!
DR Tintera finally insisted that all his patients submit
to a four-hour glucose tolerance test (GTT) to find out whether or not
they could handle sugar. The results were so startling that the
laboratories double-checked their techniques, then apologized for what
they believed to be incorrect readings. What mystified them was the low,
flat curves derived from disturbed, early adolescents. This laboratory
procedure had been previously carried out only for patients with
physical findings presumptive of diabetes. Dorland's definition of
schizophrenia (Bleuler's dementia praecox) includes the phrase, "often
recognized during or shortly after adolescence", and further, in
reference to hebephrenia and catatonia, "coming on soon after the onset
of puberty". These conditions might seem to arise or become aggravated
at puberty, but probing into the patient's past will frequently reveal
indications which were present at birth, during the first year of life,
and through the preschool and grammar school years. Each of these
periods has its own characteristic clinical picture.
This
picture becomes more marked at pubescence and often causes school
officials to complain of juvenile delinquency or underachievement. A
glucose tolerance test at any of these periods could alert parents and
physicians and could save innumerable hours and small fortunes spent in
looking into the child's psyche and home environment for maladjustments
of questionable significance in the emotional development of the average
child. The negativism, hyperactivity and obstinate resentment of
discipline are absolute indications for at least the minimum laboratory
tests: urinalysis, complete bloodcount, PBI determination, and the
five-hour glucose tolerance test. A GTT can be performed on a young
child by the micro-method without undue trauma to the patient. As a
matter of fact, I have been urging that these four tests be routine for
all patients, even before a history or physical examination is
undertaken. In almost all discussions on drug addiction, alcoholism and
schizophrenia, it is claimed that there is no definite constitutional
type that falls prey to these afflictions.
Almost universally,
the statement is made that all of these individuals are emotionally
immature. It has long been our goal to persuade every physician, whether
oriented toward psychiatry, genetics or physiology, to recognize that
one type of endocrine individual is involved in the majority of these
cases: the hypoadrenocortic.15 Tintera published several epochal medical
papers. Over and over, he emphasized that improvement, alleviation,
palliation or cure was "dependent upon the restoration of the normal
function of the total organism". His first prescribed item of treatment
was diet. Over and over again, he said that "the importance of diet
cannot be overemphasized". He laid out a sweeping permanent injunction
against sugar in all forms and guises.
While Egas Moniz of
Portugal was receiving a Nobel Prize for devising the lobotomy operation
for the treatment of schizophrenia, Tintera's reward was to be
harassment and hounding by the pundits of organized medicine. While
Tintera's sweeping implication of sugar as a cause of what was called
"schizophrenia" could be confined to medical journals, he was let alone,
ignored. He could be tolerated-if he stayed in his assigned territory,
endocrinology. Even when he suggested that alcoholism was related to
adrenals that had been whipped by sugar abuse, they let him alone;
because the medicos had decided there was nothing in alcoholism for them
except aggravation, they were satisfied to abandon it to Alcoholics
Anonymous.
However, when Tintera dared to suggest in a magazine
of general circulation that "it is ridiculous to talk of kinds of
allergies when there is only one kind, which is adrenal glands
impaired...by sugar", he could no longer be ignored. The allergists had a
great racket going for themselves. Allergic souls had been entertaining
each other for years with tall tales of exotic allergies-everything
from horse feathers to lobster tails. Along comes someone who says none
of this matters: take them off sugar and keep them off it.
Perhaps Tintera's untimely death in 1969 at the age of fifty-seven made
it easier for the medical profession to accept discoveries that had once
seemed as far out as the simple oriental medical thesis of genetics and
diet, yin and yang. Today, doctors all over the world are repeating
what Tintera announced years ago: nobody, but nobody, should ever be
allowed to begin what is called "psychiatric treatment", anyplace,
anywhere, unless and until they have had a glucose tolerance test to
discover if they can handle sugar. So-called preventive medicine goes
further and suggests that since we only think we can handle sugar
because we initially have strong adrenals, why wait until they give us
signs and signals that they're worn out? Take the load off now by
eliminating sugar in all forms and guises, starting with that soda pop
you have in your hand. The mind truly boggles when one glances over what
passes for medical history. Through the centuries, troubled souls have
been barbecued for bewitchment, exorcised for possession, locked up for
insanity, tortured for masturbatory madness, psychiatrised for
psychosis, lobotomised for schizophrenia. How many patients would have
listened if the local healer had told them that the only thing ailing
them was sugar blues?
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