Thursday, May 30, 2013

Are Your Hormones Causing Your Hair Loss?

Thinning hair and hair loss can be a major concern for men and women alike.  It can affect confidence and self-image.  One very common but often ignored cause can be the balance of your body's hormones.

When your hormones are in their optimal balance and you have proper nutrition healthy hair growth is promoted.  Women tend to be more susceptible to hormonal imbalances than men due to the many different stages that their bodies go through such as the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, and menopause.

As you can see from the picture, the pituitary gland controls all of the other hormone producing parts of your body, including the thyroid, the adrenal glands, and sex hormone producers.  This is important to know because each of these areas can influence the quality of your hair.

Both over-active and under-active thyroid can lead to hair loss.  Hyperthyroidism is often also associated with weight loss, increased anxiety, sweating, sensitivity to heat, and difficulty sleeping.  Hypothyroidism symptoms include fatigue, sensitivity to cold, dry skin, depression, and puffiness around the face. 

It has long been known that stress can lead to hair loss.  If the adrenal glands are overworked, due to excessive stress, the increase in cortisol can lead to hair loss, but also increased facial hair in women.  The parathyroid hormones are associated with your ability to manage stress and can lead to thinning hair, muscle cramps and alterations in skin pigmentation.  

Testosterone is often associated with balding in men, so it stands to reason that if a woman's balance between estrogen/progesterone and testosterone is off it could lead to similar symptoms.  One common such cause for this imbalance is use of birth control pills.

For further investigation of what your cause might be do not hesitate to contact us.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Beware of This "Healthy" Protein Source

This post is a warning especially for the guys out there.  In recent years well placed advertising and poor understanding of hormones has taught many that soy is a healthy choice, if not a superfood.  In reality it is leading to a feminizing of males.

In 2009 Men's Health told the story of a retired U.S. Army officer, James Price, who started developing unusual symptoms.  Always in good health and active, Price started to develop painful lumps under each nipple, loosing hair from his beard, arms, chest and legs, and other symptoms associated with an imbalance in hormones.  When tested he was found to have blood levels of estrogen (the primary female sex hormone) eight times higher than normal.  In fact they were even higher than levels found in healthy women.

The mystery though was "Where was the estrogen coming from?"  He was tested for estrogen producing tumors and found to be in the clear.  The fourth doctor that Price worked with finally started asking the right questions and dug into his diet and lifestyle.  What was discovered is that in an effort live healthy Price was consuming about 3 quarts of soy milk a day. 

"Why is this a problem, I thought soy was the new health food?" you might be saying.  The problem with soy products is that they contain phytoestrogens, which are compounds that structurally look like the female sex hormone estrogen, and can mimic the effects of estrogen.  So in men, soy has the effect of increasing estrogen levels and feminizing men.  No women are not immune to negative effects of too much soy, but I will have to address that later.

Action steps:
Avoid soy based product (weight lifters check your protein source)
If you suspect a hormone imbalance, get tested at our clinic or another functional medicine clinic

To check out the article from Men's Health follow this link:
http://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/soys-negative-effects

Thursday, May 16, 2013

The Most Dangerous Food Additive?



Do you use “sugar-free” products thinking that they will help you lose weight or in an effort to eat healthier?  If so, you may be surprised to find out that you are using one of the most dangerous food additives ever invented. 

Aspartame is a chemical that is 180 times more sweet than sugar, unfortunately it is when Aspartame starts to be digested in your body that the problem starts.  First, one of the chemicals that it is made of, Aspartic acid, is broken into two amino acids, aspartate and glutamate.  Aspartate and glutamate act as neurotransmitters in our brain, assisting in the transmission of information from one neuron to the next.  Unfortunately when we have too high a concentration of these amino acids they cause excessive calcium to go into the neurons.  This excessive calcium leads the neuron to die.  So aspartame literally kills brain cells.

Of adverse reactions to food additives reported to the FDA, Aspartame accounts for 75%.  Some of the symptoms associated with aspartame reactions: headache, nausea, depression, fatigue, insomnia, anxiety attacks, joint pain, heart palpitation, vision problems and ironically enough WEIGHT GAIN.  Many of these symptoms are a direct result of the damage done to the brain cells. 

Another component of Aspartame, phenylalanine, can build up in the brain and cause a decrease in serotonin levels.  Decreased serotonin is associated with emotional disorders like depression.   This can be especially dangerous for infants and unborn children due to the rapid development of their brains.  Some studies have even suggested that an increase in phenylalanine can cause schizophrenia and increase the likelihood of seizures.

The third of the dangerous components in Aspartame is methanol, or wood alcohol.  Methanol is broken down into formaldehyde and formic acid.  Formaldehyde is a deadly neurotoxin and carcinogen, responsible for damage to the retina of the eye and birth defects.  The toxic effects of methanol are greatly increased when it is heated above 86 degrees, this happens with improper storage or in the cooking process, think sugar-free gelatin. 

The EPA recommends limiting consumption of methanol to 7.8 mg/day.  One liter of an aspartame-sweetened beverage contains approximately 56mg of methanol.  Methanol poisoning can lead to headaches, weakness, memory loss, pain into the arms and legs and vision loss.  Many of these symptoms are similar to the symptoms that come from the damage done in multiple sclerosis.    

The Role of Vitamin D in Pregnancy

You no doubt have heard a lot of talk about the health effects of Vitamin D, but how does this vitamin relate to fertility and pregnancy?  In a way that is a bit of a trick question because Vitamin D is really not a vitamin but a hormone.

From a structural stand point it looks very similar to the sex hormones such as estrogen, testosterone, and progesterone.  Looking from a functional side, Vitamin D is used to send messages to cells and triggers a change in those cells, just like other hormones.

So what specifically does Vitamin D do?  One of its major functions is to "prime" or prepare cells for other hormones to be able to work properly.  This is where Vitamin D's role in conception comes in.  For ovulation and conception to occur, not only do your major hormones (estrogen and progesterone) need to be in proper balance, but so to the role playing hormones, such as the thyroid hormones, cortisol, DHEA, testosterone, and yes Vitamin D. 

The level of circulating Vitamin D can play a role in resolving fertility issues associated with poly cystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) and lack of ovulation.  Of course there is the other side of the fertility issue.  Low levels of Vitamin D leads to decreased sperm motility and production.  So guys should be tested for Vitamin D levels also if there are fertility problems.

What about when you are pregnant?  One study reports evidence that Vitamin D plays a role in implantation, normal placental development and prevention of eclampsia.

You can imagine, if Vitamin D is so important to hormone activity, just how important it would be to the developing baby.  Studies have demonstrated a healthy levels of maternal Vitamin D in pregnancy are associated with a decreased likelihood of asthma, respiratory infections, Type I diabetes and even multiple sclerosis. 

Knowing and monitoring your Vitamin D levels pre-conception and throughout pregnancy makes sense and is easy to do with a simple at-home finger stick test that we order through our office.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

What You Need to Know About Magnesium Deficiency

The more that magnesium is studied the more of its many roles that are discovered.  Low levels of magnesium have been associated with muscle weakness, chronic fatigue, muscle cramps, heart problems, elevated blood pressure, hypersensitivity of the nerves, mental disturbances, and depression. Why does magnesium effect so many different areas of your body?  Magnesium's role is to help your enzymes work correctly and in turn enzymes work in every cell of your body to make them function correctly.

The causes of low magnesium can be varied.  In our world of processed and modified foods many Americans are not getting the quality of food that they need.  The best foods for magnesium are green leafy vegetables, fish, meats, and fruits.  Magnesium is depleted by alcohol consumption and very high fat diets.  So, if you are concerned that you are low in magnesium, increase you fruits and vegetables and reduce your alcohol and fat, never a bad idea anyway.

Of course there are causes that are not as easily helped.  Inflammatory conditions of the small and large intestines such as irritable bowel syndrome or gluten sensitivity can lead to an inability to absorb magnesium.  Or on the other side certain conditions can cause the kidneys to excrete magnesium at a rate greater than is absorbed.  Similarly heart medications, stomach acid blockers, and antibiotics can all decrease magnesium levels.  If you suspect that this maybe the case, I can use Functional Medicine testing to determine what the real cause is.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

What is Different about Functional Medicine?


Functional Medicine Seeks to Identify Your Toxic Load

Your body was created with the inborn ability to heal itself.  Unfortunately there are "stressors" that inhibit your body's ability to perform this function.  A stressor is defined as anything that inhibits your body's ability to function normally and pushes you away from your optimal health.

Stressors can be physiological, biochemical, metabolic, emotional or structural.  Some common stressors are:
  • Environmental toxins
  • Digestive dysfunction
  • Viral, bacterial, and parasitic pathogens
  • Drug side effects
  • Mineral or vitamin deficiencies
  • Allergies or sensitivities to foods
  • Spinal subluxation
  • Emotional stress
"Total Load" is the accumulation of these stressors and the overall effect that they have on your body's ability to function optimally.  Your body is able to adapt greatly to the stressors that it encounters, but everyone has a breaking point.

For some that breaking point may look like an allergy, an auto-immune disease, arthritis, or some other chronic disease.

Functional Medicine Recognizes Biological Individuality

There are subtle differences in everyone's biochemical make up.  What that means is that different people will react to foods, chemicals, drugs, etc. in different ways.  Have you ever smelled a certain perfume and felt a headache come on, or used a particular cleaner and become sick in the next few hours?  One of the classic examples is red wine triggering a migraine in certain people.  How come this happens to some people and not others?  Every one of us is genetically unique and we have all been influenced by the environments that we have lived in up to this point.  Functional Medicine seeks to find out what your individual nutritional needs are and what you should work hard to avoid contact with.

Functional Medicine is Patient Specific

Rather than trying to match up set of symptoms with the right medication to suppress those symptoms, Functional Medicine seeks to find the underlying cause of the disease process.  I use the Functional Medicine techniques to do a thorough examination of your past medical records, perform a comprehensive history and examination, and utilize science-based Functional Diagnostic Tests to uncover those often undiscovered, real causes for your body's inability to function correctly and heal itself.

Once known I can develop an individualized, patient-specific treatment to eliminate those stressors that are preventing your body to work correctly and guide you in ways to provide what your body needs to begin the healing process.