This process is a great example of our bodies' natural balancing act, affecting not only prostate cancer, but breast cancer, colon cancer, osteoporosis and autoimmune diseases like Type
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affected by sunlight, it is also affected by the food that we eat The for-mation of the most active form of vitamin D is a process that is closely monitored and controlled by our bodies This process is a great example
of our bodies' natural balancing act, affecting not only prostate cancer, but breast cancer, colon cancer, osteoporosis and autoimmune diseases like Type 1 diabetes Because of its importance for multiple diseases, and because of the complexity involved in explaining how it all works,
I have provided in Appendix C an abbreviated scheme, just enough to illustrate my point This web of reactions illustrates many similar and highly integrated reaction networks showing how food controls health The main component of this process is an active form of vitamin D produced in the body from the vitamin D that we get from food or sun-shine This active or "supercharged" D produces many benefits through-out the body, including the prevention of cancer, autoimmune diseases and diseases like osteoporosis This all-important supercharged D is not something that you get from food or from a drug A drug composed of isolated supercharged D would be far too powerful and far too danger-ous for medical use Your body uses a carefully composed series of con-trols and sensors to produce just the right amount of supercharged D for each task at exactly the right time
As it turns out, our diet can determine how much of this super-charged D is produced and how it works once it is produced Animal protein that we consume has the tendency to block the production of supercharged D, leaving the body with low levels of this vitamin D in the blood If these low levels persist, prostate cancer can result Also, persistently high intakes of calcium create an environment where super-charged D declines, thus adding to the problem
So what food substance has both animal protein and large amounts
of calcium? Milk and other dairy foods This fits in perfectly with the
evidence that links dairy consumption with prostate cancer This infor-mation provides what we call biological plausibility and shows how the observational data fit together To review the mechanisms:
• Animal protein causes the body to produce more IGF-l, which in turn throws cell growth and removal out of whack, stimulating cancer development
• Animal protein suppresses the production of "supercharged" D
• Excessive calcium, as found in milk, also suppresses the produc-tion of "supercharged" D
Trang 2• "Supercharged" D is responsible for creating a wide variety of health benefits in the body Persistently low levels of supercharged
D create an inviting environment for different cancers,
The important story here is how the effects of food-both good and bad-operate through a symphony of coordinated reactions to prevent diseases like prostate cancer In discovering the existence of these net-works, we sometimes wonder which specific function comes first and which comes next We tend to think of these reactions within the net-work as independent But this surely misses the point What impresses
me is the multitude of reactions working together in so many ways to produce the same effect: in this case, to prevent disease
dis-eases such as cancer Indeed, it would be foolish to even think along these lines But what I do know is this: the totality and breadth of the evidence, operating through highly coordinated networks, supports the conclusions that consuming dairy and meat are serious risk factors for prostate cancer
BRINGING IT TOGETHER
Roughly half a million Americans this year will go to the doctor's office and be told that they have cancer of the breast, prostate or large bowel People who get one of these cancers represent 40% of all new cancer patients These three cancers devastate the lives of not only the victims
When my mother-in-law died of colon cancer at the age of fifty-one, none of us knew that much about nutrition or what it meant for health
It wasn't that we didn't care about the health of our loved ones-of
later, not much has changed Of the people you know who have cancer,
or are at risk of haVing cancer, how many of them have considered the possibility of adopting a whole foods, plant-based diet to improve their chances? I'm guessing very few of them have done so Probably they, too, don't have the information
Our institutions and infonnation providers are failing us Even cancer organizations, at both the national and local level, are reluctant to discuss
or even believe this evidence Food as a key to health represents a power-ful challenge to conventional medicine, which is fundamentally built on
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drugs and surgery (see Part IV) The widespread communities of nutri-tion professionals, researchers and doctors are, as a whole, either unaware
of this evidence or reluctant to share it Because of these failings, Ameri-cans are being cheated out of information that could save their lives There is enough evidence now that doctors should be discussing the option of pursuing dietary change as a potential path to cancer prevention and treatment There is enough evidence now that the U.S government should be discussing the idea that the toxicity of our diet
is the single biggest cause of cancer There is enough evidence now that local breast cancer alliances, and prostate and colon cancer institu-tions, should be discussing the possibility of providing information to Americans everywhere on how a whole foods, plant-based diet may be
an incredibly effective anti-cancer medicine
If these discussions were to happen, it is possible that, next year, fewer than 500,000 people would go to the doctor's office and be told they have cancer of the breast, prostate or large bowel The year after that, even fewer friends, coworkers and family members would be given the most dreaded of all diagnoses And the following year, even fewer The possibility that this future could be our reality is real, and as long
as this future holds such promise for the health of people everywhere, it
is a future worth working for
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Autoimmune Diseases
No GROUP OF DISEASES is more insidious than autoimmune diseases They are difficult to treat, and progressive loss of physical and mental func-tion is a common outcome Unlike heart disease, cancer, obesity and Type 2 diabetes, with autoimmune diseases the body systematically at· tacks itself The afflicted patient is almost guaranteed to lose
every thirty-one people) have an autoimmune disease, a staggering total
are multiple sclerosis (MS), rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Type 1 diabetes
diseases that have been studied in reference to diet
Others not listed in Chart 9.1 include inflammatory bowel disease,4
Each disease name may sound very different, but as one recent
occur in the same person and they are often found in the same
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CHART 9.1: COMMON AUTOIMMUNE DISEASES
(FROM 'MOST COMMON TO LEAST COMMON)
Graves' disease (Hyperthyroidism) 10 Sjogren's disease
Systemic lupus erythematosus
ethnic and geographic distribution."8 Autoimmune diseases in general become more common the greater the distance from the equator This phenomenon has been known since 1922.9 MS, for example, is over a hundred times more prevalent in the far north than at the equator 10
Because of some of these common features, it is not too far-fetched
to think of the autoimmune diseases as one grand disease living in dif-ferent places in the body and taking on difdif-ferent names We refer in this way to cancer, which is specifically named depending on what part of the body it resides in
All autoimmune diseases are the result of one group of mechanisms gone awry, much like cancer In this case, the mechanism is the immune system mistakenly attacking cells in its own body Whether it is the pan-creas as in Type 1 diabetes, the myelin sheath as in MS or joint tissues
as in arthritis, all autoimmune diseases involve an immune system that has revolted It is an internal mutiny of the worst kind, one in which our body becomes its own worst enemy
IMMUNITY FROM INVADERS
The immune system is astonishingly complex I often hear people speaking about this system as if it were an identifiable organ like a lung Nothing could be further from the truth It is a system, not an organ
In essence, our immune system is like a military network designed to de-fend against foreign invaders The "soldiers" of this network are the white blood cells, which are comprised of many different sub-groups, each having its own mission These sub-groups are analogous to a navy, army, air force and marines, with each group of specialists doing highly specialized work