Monday, August 2, 2010

The link between adrenal fatigue and DNA methylation

Link

The link between adrenal fatigue and DNA methylation
Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients, May, 2005 by Susan Solomon

Adrenal function is vital to life: without cortisol we die. This fact has been known since the 1930s when it was described by Banting and Best. Glucocorticoids are essential for maintaining carbohydrate, protein and fat metabolism. They also have a permissive effect which allows for glucagon and catecholamines to work. Important glucocorticoid effects include the normal functioning of the nervous system, water metabolism, vascular reactivity, regulation of circulating lymphocytes and the immune system and "resistance to stress." Complete lack of adrenal function is a disease state known as Addison's Disease. Conventional medicine only recognizes two states: you either make cortisol or you don't. Allopathic physicians are unaware of the decline in adrenal function as illness becomes chronic.

The etiology of adrenal fatigue begins with a "stressor," or in functional medicine terms, a "trigger." Triggers fall into several categories: psychosocial stress, environmental toxins (radon, mercury, mold), infectious organisms (fungal, bacterial, parasitic), food allergies (wheat, corn, sugar, milk), and other toxins (alcohol, drugs, prescription medications) to name a few. In addition, stressful events such as surgery or car accidents place a huge (usually unrecognized) load on the adrenal glands. The initial response to each of the above events is to elevate cortisol levels to help cope with the stress. However, over time, the adrenals become weakened and lose their circadian rhythm. This is due in large part to poor nutrition. All stressful events require increased amounts of several nutrients: vitamin C, pantothenic acid, B6 (pyridoxine), B12 (methylcobalamin), and folate. Interestingly, if the adrenal glands are catheterized and a "stressor" is introduced, the first chemical to leave the adrenals is not cortisol as one would suspect, but large amounts of vitamin C. These nutrients are severely lacking in the typical American diet or are not found in high enough amounts. More often than not "orthomolecular" dosing is necessary to correct the deficits.

The initial response to any stress is the hypersecretion of cortisol, but over time (approximately one year) there develops a negative feedback and a genuine "fatigue" causing reduced levels of DHEA-S and cortisol. The end result is an organism with reduced immunity, increased likelihood of autoimmune disease, heart attacks, elevated cholesterol and triglycerides, skin disorders, carbohydrate cravings, protein wasting, fatigue and depression (to name but a few). Physicians normally view these as separate events in a given organ and do not see that the symptoms represent a disease process (inflammation) that may occur in one or more organs simultaneously. Therefore everyone with any chronic disease, not just cardiovascular disease, should be screened using DHEA-S and a homocysteine level. As DHEA-S decreases, the level of homocysteine rises, with a concomitant decrease in most B-vitamins, but especially folate and B12. The currently accepted norms for these parameters are too permissive, reminiscent of glucose control in years past. All of our organs are linked and nothing that happens is random. We are all the result of our genetic interaction with our environment.

With the establishment of "disease" another pivotal biochemical event happens: abnormal methyl metabolism. Multiple reports in the recent literature link abnormal DNA methylation with the onset of cancer in laboratory animals. Undoubtedly this occurs in humans as well.

It is my clinical experience that as soon as a patient's DHEA-S falls to below 160 the ability to make methyl groups nosedives as well. These patients may then present with symptoms of depression (inability to synthesize S-adenosylmethionine), joint pain (inability to make methylsulfonylmethionine), and gastric acid reflux disease (inability to make betaine or trimethylglycine), to name a few. Not only does the ability to make methyl groups decrease, but the ability to convert to a methylated product is also compromised. For example, in chronically ill individuals the use of B12--as either the cyanocobalamin or the hydroxocobalamin form seems to do little to improve fatigue or mental functioning. The ideal compound to replenish B12 is methylcobalamin--the only active form. In each case, oral supplementation with the missing methyl-containing substrate ameliorates the symptoms. In each of the scenarios listed, the severity of the illness correlates with the level of the reduced or deficient DHEA-S and the concomitant elevated homocysteine level. The elevated homocysteine level is not only a marker for inflammation, but it is a marker for deficient B vitamins as well. The stage is now set for abnormal DNA methylation and the induction of cancer.

Efforts to repair adrenal fatigue include nutrients (in their most active form), glandular preparations, DHEA (and in severe cases cortisol itself), and lifestyle modifications with removal of triggers. Even with these measures, expect adrenal recovery to take 3 to 5 years.


Does your physician know that DHEA is an endocrine hormone, essential for life - or does he think it is a health food supplement?

Bibliography at link

Monday, July 5, 2010

A framework for assessing the performance of health systems

Theme Papers
A framework for assessing the performance of health systems
Christopher J.L. Murray1 & Julio Frenk2
Health systems vary widely in performance, and countries with similar levels of income, education and health
expenditure differ in their ability to attain key health goals. This paper proposes a framework to advance the
understanding of health system performance. A first step is to define the boundaries of the health system, based on the concept of health action. Health action is defined as any set of activities whose primary intent is to improve or maintain health. Within these boundaries, the concept of performance is centred around three fundamental goals: improving health, enhancing responsiveness to the expectations of the population, and assuring fairness of financial contribution. Improving health means both increasing the average health status and reducing health inequalities.
Responsiveness includes two major components: (a) respect for persons (including dignity, confidentiality and
autonomy of individuals and families to decide about their own health); and (b) client orientation (including prompt
attention, access to social support networks during care, quality of basic amenities and choice of provider). Fairness of financial contribution means that every household pays a fair share of the total health bill for a country (which may mean that very poor households pay nothing at all). This implies that everyone is protected from financial risks due to health care. The measurement of performance relates goal attainment to the resources available. Variation in performance is a function of the way in which the health system organizes four key functions: stewardship (a broader concept than regulation); financing (including revenue collection, fund pooling and purchasing); service provision (for personal and non-personal health services); and resource generation (including personnel, facilities and knowledge).
By investigating these four functions and how they combine, it is possible not only to understand the proximate
determinants of health system performance, but also to contemplate major policy challenges.
Keywords: outcome and process assessment, health care; health care rationing; health services accessibility; social
justice; health systems plans; financing, health

PDF

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Beyond Mediocrity: What Canadians Should Expect From Their Healthcare System

... And Why They're Not Getting It
Thought provoking and honest.

Public Presentation by Steven Lewis, U of Calgary/SFU
Dalhousie University School of Health Administration
Halifax, N.S.
Audio/slide presentation
Link

'What Would You Think If...
Your dry cleaner made you wait 3 weeks for your clothes
7% of the meals you ate in restaurants gave you food poisoning"

Part of a series - http://schoolofhealthadministration.dal.ca/Excellence%20in%20Health%20Series/

"Excellence in Health Series
Tomorrow’s Thinking ~ Today’s Care

In 2008 the School of Health Administration established a public-education program entitled, Excellence in Health Series. The Excellence in Health Series is designed to provide an open forum, equally accessible to the public and professional community. The lectures provide a ‘large-canvas’, upon which cutting-edge topics are discussed, from healthcare planning and management, healthcare funding and delivery, healthcare law and legislation, to healthcare policy. All members of the public are welcomed, as are healthcare professionals, from healthcare practitioner, policy analyst, lawyer, to healthcare administrator. To maximally engage the public, the series is held in the evenings, off campus, at a local Hotel, and no admission fee is charged.

The Excellence in Health Series will feature national and internationally lecturers, each respected for their leadership on the topic of discussion. To ensure maximum learning opportunity to the public and professional communities throughout the region, nationally and internationally, the Excellence in Health Series is digitally recorded and made available through the School of Health Administration website.

Beyond Mediocrity: What Canadians Should Expect from their Healthcare System and Why they're not Getting it.
By: Steven Lewis

Medicare and the Law: Playing with a Full(er) Deck
By: William Lahey

How to Reduce Your Risk of Experiencing a Medication Error
By: Dr. Neil MacKinnon

A Weight On Our Minds: Obesity in Nova Scotia
By: Dr. Sara Kirk

Population Aging and Health Care
By: Dr. Kenneth Rockwood

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Coronation Street star speaks out on her thyroid condition

We are grateful when awareness of thyroid health can be raised. Britain's CORONATION STREET and LOOSE WOMEN star Sherrie Hewson has done us all a great service by speaking out about living with an underactive thyroid gland. Link

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Penalty for maltreatment of patients? A Pension

From the UK's TIMES online, but we know that similar cases exist in Canada:
"In healthcare, social services and education, those responsible for shocking treatment of the public remain untouched and even flourish. The report on the scandal in Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust points to up to 1,200 unnecessary deaths, including four from one family alone within 18 months. Patients were left lying on the floor in their own filth, sobbing with humiliation. But not a single individual has been publicly blamed in this officially “elite” NHS organisation. Indeed, Martin Yeates, its former chief executive, has since left with a £1m pension pot, six months’ salary and a reported £400,000 payoff."

Link

Perhaps this is a step in the right direction
Link

This article lists the salaries of some of the highest paid hospital and medical administrators in Canada.
Take a look and see if you think they are worth all that and a bag of chips - your taxes pay for this.
Is it possible that a pathologist makes about $10k a day?

Saturday, February 20, 2010

The Patient of the Future

Doctors don't like it, but e-Patients - concerned and engaged health researchers and partners - are here, and more are coming.
And - unlike physicians of today - they haven't been educated by the pharmaceutical corporations.

There will be a lot, my friend.
More than can be counted.

How many?

Like the stars.

~ DANCES WITH WOLVES


Slideshow
e-Patients.net
e-Patients PDF

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

NYT: Holding Doctors Accountable for Medical Errors

From the article:

"Q. Has this erosion of trust had a detrimental effect on the patient-doctor relationship?

A. The chaos of everyone doing things their own way is incredibly dangerous, and it is that chaos which gets in the way of the relationship. You can make health care better, safer and less expensive while strengthening the core of the patient-doctor relationship. You can standardize certain parts of care based on clear evidence, which will free up doctors to focus on those pieces of the health care puzzle where there is no data — those issues that are uniquely human and that require judgment, expertise and empathy.

The challenge, though, is to standardize care in a way that will improve safety while retaining the parts that make medicine human. The last thing we want to do is to regiment empathy or to create something so regulated that doctors cannot do something nuanced or innovative for patients.

Q. What are the roles of patients and of doctors in the patient safety movement?

A. If I were a patient or a loved one, I would do what everyone recommends — have a loved one by your side, look for signals that a hospital is safe, check that a physician is board certified. But I am also intensely ambivalent about how responsible patients should be for safety and the prevention of error. Medical mistakes are our bad. Why should patients bear the responsibility to receive the right medication or to have the correct leg amputated? When I get on a plane, I don’t worry about safety and errors.

As for doctors, patient safety can’t happen if physicians aren’t smack in the middle of it. We can either facilitate safety or we can stand its way. We will stand in its way if we embrace our historical approach to these problems, if we instinctively engage in finger-pointing, if we aren’t willing to listen to others.

We have a huge role in creating the kind of environment where people will feel comfortable questioning anything that seems strange or out-of-place and where doctors are open to different opinions from others.

As doctors, we have to admit first that we don’t deliver care that is of the quality and safety our patients deserve. Then we have to get past our professional arrogance. We don’t have the answers to all of these issues, and we have to be open to others who may have the answers or who can approach it from different angles."

Link