The Burnout,
Hypoglycemia, Obesity Connection
By Dr. Paul C. Eck
and
Dr. Larry Wilson

2225 W. Alice Avenue - Phoenix, Arizona 85021 USA 1-602-995-1580
This material is for educational purposes only
The preceding statements have not been evaluated by the
Food and Drug Administration
This information is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any
disease.
Copyright © 1987 - The Eck Institute of Applied Nutrition and
Bioenergetics, Ltd.
Important definitions
Definition of Adrenal Insufficiency
Adrenal insufficiency is defined as a reduced ability to
mobilize the body's defenses against stress. The body is still able to adapt
to stress, but with a limited response.
Definition of Adrenal Burnout
Adrenal burnout is defined as a total inability to mobilize
the body's defenses against stress. The body is no longer able to adapt to
stress.
The Three Seasons of Burnout
Let's face it. When the going gets tough, we can always
retreat to our warm, safe beds. Sleep will temporarily relieve us of all pain
and pressure. No wonder everyone is sleeping more these days, why it is almost
as much fun as going on vacation! We can escape reality, when reality is not
what we want to be!
We are masters of escape, yet we never go anywhere. We are an
intellectual society, yet we sometimes feed ourselves without realizing that we
are participating in the ancient and primitive art of eating. Ten thousand years
ago, men and women ate with ecstasy around a ceremonial fire and savored their
meal long afterwards. Today we eat because we feel weak, lightheaded, or we just
crave something that we become obsessed with having, such as ice cream. Who
doesn't crave something now and then, be it a drink, candy, lobster, coffee or a
pickle. We are creatures of habit — creatures who are controlled by
habit. Why do we partake in these habits such as smoking, or munching in front
of the television set? This connection begins with burnout and often ends in
obesity; with many distressing symptoms in between, which have been classified
as hypoglycemia.
We live in a tired, tired world. Americans eat junk food,
drink, and smoke, not because they have nothing better to do, but because these
habits make them feel good temporarily. In a tired, stressed-out world, you will
have people who desperately search for sources of stimulation. Remember the
California Gold Rush? People went just for the excitement of it. We are evolving
into a generation of burnouts. Think about it, how many people have you met who
were so full of life and energy that they left you feeling as though you were
struck by a bolt of lightening. Most of us barely have enough energy to generate
the lighting of a match; let alone the generation of a lightning bolt. There are
also those who can barely generate body heat. There are more people in this last
category then you can imagine. They are the burnouts. Are you one of them?
Famous Burnouts
Elvis Presley
Elvis Presley was an energetic person who came across to the
public like a so-called lightning bolt. Elvis also went into burnout, probably
about the time he came out of the service. He appeared to lack confidence and
his uncertainty of many things caused him considerable inner turmoil. His nature
was warm and friendly but the constant hounding by photographers and the press
forced him to be defensive and cool. He was forced to go against his nature as a
human being to give the public what they wanted. His manager drove him at a
level that few, if anyone, could maintain without major consequences. A person
can only handle so much at one time. The entire world couldn't help noticing the
sadness in Elvis's eyes, despite his feed-your-heart smiles. Elvis became so
burned-out that he became dependent on stimulants to keep him going at the level
expected of him. He had to take pills to sleep, stay awake, unwind, wind-up,
decrease or increase his appetite, go to the bathroom, and to stop headaches. He
became totally supported by drugs. Elvis became agoraphobic (Abnormal fear of
open spaces.) Agoraphobics fear leaving their homes and tend to be hermit-like;
which more often then not, accompanies burnout. He retreated to his bedroom and
would sleep for periods of up to a week at a time, but never could defeat his
overwhelming fatigue. Burnout cannot be cured with rest. Because of his
weight gain, we can assume he ate a great deal of food as well. Elvis fought to
keep going with drugs, excessive amounts of food and long periods of self
destructive retreat; because without such crutches, he would have been
overwhelmed with fatigue, symptoms of withdrawal and hypoglycemia. The drugs and
obesity served as adaptation mechanisms, which kept him functioning, but his
life didn't consist of the kind of energy, optimism, and happiness that comes
with vibrant health. Elvis is a perfect example of the tragic outcome that often
occurs when one becomes victim to the burnout-hypoglycemia-obesity connection.
Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe also suffered from the
burnout-hypoglycemia-obesity connection. The degree of burnout Marilyn suffered
from, was severe and lifelong. Her burnout began in childhood and mounted until
the time of her death. She suffered from extreme bouts of depression, which
always accompanies burnout. She too, became agoraphobic, often locking herself
in her apartment and going without a bath for days at a time. Although she
carried her weight better than most, she still became overweight. Marilyn
insisted on having a case of Dom Perignon champagne served during filming or
photo sessions, not to mention social occasions. She needed bubbles to
make her feel happy. She also needed drugs to help her feel alive. Burnout
victims need many stimulants of all kinds to feel alive. Marilyn may or may not
have died of a drug overdose, but we do know that she was institutionalized for
manic depression. Burnout, together with drug or alcohol abuse, often results in
uncontrollable depression.
Obesity is only one side of the coin; the other is anorexia.
Burnout, when brought on by copper toxicity, can also be responsible for the
shutting down of the hunger appestat, which is located in the brain. Karen
Carpenter, the famous singer, also suffered from burnout.
Howard Hughes
Howard Hughes is another perfect example of burnout. He
suffered severe burnout and had to retreat from stress altogether. He weighed
approximately 80 pounds when he died. He was found with needle marks up and down
his arms. He was agoraphobic and afraid of germs. He needed drugs to help him
stay alive. All hypoglycemics need stimulants to maintain any level of energy.
Unrelenting stress literally killed him. How many more will be destroyed because
of their inability to adequately cope with stress.
Because we live in a society that perpetuates unrelenting
stress, most of us will face burnout or adrenal insufficiency eventually
in our lifetime. This paper will probe two major problems that are intimately
associated with burnout; hypoglycemia, and obesity. Alcoholism and anorexia will
also be touched upon. We will explore and explain the real causes of America's
most common and deadly trio of health problems.
Burnout: An Adaptation To Stress
Burnout represents an adaptation to stress. When a job, or a
marriage, or life itself, becomes too much to cope with, our body rebels against
our brain by becoming mentally or physically ill. Illness serves as an
adaptation to stress and serves as a signal that warns us to slow down. However,
when life in general becomes too much to bear, and drains us of every last drop
of energy, a temporary bout of flu will not offer us the leave of absence we
need, so our entire system must shut down. By shutting down, our bodies
refuse to function under existing conditions. When one goes into burnout, major
changes in one's lifestyle must occur if one hopes to recover. If major changes
in one's lifestyle do not occur and the burned out individuals are left
open to the stresses that caused them to become exhausted in the first place,
additional diseases will occur. The burned-out individual, without intervention,
will face a fast downhill slide of health and possibly death.
Stages Preceding Burnout
Our society inflicts multitudinous stresses, both external
and internal, upon its populace.
"A person's physical health as well as his emotional health
is adversely affected by stress. Since we live in times that are extremely
stressful, we must learn how to guard our bodies and our minds against the
harmful effects of stress. To reduce an individual's vulnerability to stress,
the physical and psychic defenses against letting down must be worked
through and released..."(1)
Different Stages Of Stress
Energy Must Be Mobilized From The Body's Reserves
As Hans Selye has pointed out, "...continued stress has a
deleterious effect on the body. It matters little what the stress is; the body
reacts to all with a general adaptation syndrome." This syndrome consists of
three phases.
Phase 1 is called the
alarm reaction. The body reacts to an acute stress by an outpouring of
adrenal medullary hormones, which mobilize the body's energy to meet it. When
the stress is a physical insult to the body, the alarm reaction takes the form
of an inflammatory process. If this reaction is successful in overcoming the
injury and removing the stress, the body quiets down and returns to its natural
homeostatic condition. Should the stress continue however, Phase 2 begins.
Phase 2 is the stage
of adaptation. In this phase, the body attempts to adapt to the stress. This
involves the adrenalocortical steroid hormones, which are anti inflammatory in
their action. However; the process of adaptation also takes energy which
must be mobilized from the body's reserves. Phase 2 is like a cold war, in that
the body tries to contain the stressful agent, since it cannot eliminate it.
Phase 2 can go on for a long time, but eventually the body weakens.
Phase 3 is called the
stage of exhaustion. The body no longer has the energy to contain the stress
and begins to break down."(2)
This is translated as fatigue or chronic tiredness, which is
probably the most universal complaint in our culture. I interpret it as a sign
that many people are on the verge of exhaustion as a result of the continuous
stresses to which they are subjected by their chronic muscular tensions."(3)
Stress is Countered by Mobilizing Energy
"Stress results from the imposition of a force or pressure on
an organism which it counters by mobilizing its energy..."(4)
Ability to Mobilize Stress is Not Unlimited
This ability to mobilize energy is not unlimited; it is
limited. Our endocrine glands become overworked and eventually fail in their
attempt to keep up our energy levels. We then turn to over-eating in a
subconscious attempt to keep our energy levels up, to counteract the stresses
being imposed upon us. Obesity then results and we try to exercise off the
excess weight, which results in an ever diminished reserve of energy.
Burdens are Countered With Energy
"...Burdens weigh on us,...We counter these pressures with
our energy..."(5)
Loss of Energy and Collapse
"...When we become tired or lack energy, it becomes
difficult, if not impossible, to stand up. Soldiers who are forced to stand
immobile for long periods have collapsed when their energy became exhausted.
Collapse also occurs when a person receives a shock, either psychological or
physical, that results in the withdrawal of energy from the periphery of the
body."(6)
Fatigue Gives Birth to Negative and Damaging
Emotions
We not only become exhausted physically: we also become
exhausted psychologically. We find ourselves unable to stand up for our rights,
we become apathetic, submissive, angry, hostile, resentful, frustrated, turned
inward on ourselves; in short we are unable to love and be loved. We are
fighting for our very survival. Without adequate energy levels, we finally enter
into a stage of give-up.
So Little Satisfactions in Life as a Result of
Fatigue
"Since chronic fatigue is probably the most common medical
complaint today, it is little wonder that there is so little real satisfaction.
Many persons are unaware of the low energetic state of their bodies. They
move between states of elation and depression, unconscious of the relation of
these psychic states to the underlying condition of chronic fatigue. The vital
person has a well balanced and stable psychic equilibrium."(7)
An individual is technically in burnout when their adrenal
gland function becomes so impaired that they have lost their ability to cope
with stress. Individuals in burnout, among other things, cannot assimilate their
food, or nutrients properly, or draw adequately on glycogen (sugar) reserves in
their liver. Therefore they suffer from constant cravings for high energy foods
and/or alcohol and from the suffocation of perpetual fatigue.
Burnout Doesn't Happen Overnight
The body, when in a stage of resistance, discloses symptoms
to alert us that our health is faltering. Symptoms are actually limits that
should prevent us from overexertion or from engaging in a destructive lifestyle,
which could result in chronic illness. Burnout occurs as a conglomeration of
symptoms; but as a whole, total burnout represents itself as total
exhaustion, in which the entire body goes into collapse. Burnout, as we have
stated previously, is the result of chronic stress and reflects, and in many
cases finalizes, one's inability to cope with stress. When one is burned-out
they are unable to get out of bed unless they have something extremely important
to do. Burnout victims find it very difficult to function in a world that
requires discipline and systematic responsibilities. A burned out individual
finds it absolutely impossible to orchestrate his life into anything meaningful
or worthwhile.
Burnout is not a mere descriptive term that came off the top
of someone's head, but a valid, scientifically recognized health problem, that
accurately reflects the health status of an individual whose body chemistry has
been severely imbalanced by life stresses.
The Birth Of Burnout
Burnout has been with us since the beginning of history.
Entire nations, such as Greece and Rome, went into burnout and have never fully
recovered their former vitality. The modern concern with burnout represents a
new awareness and way of handling an age old problem.
The Physiology Of Stress
The Zinc/Copper Conflict:
Zinc is the first nutrient to be lost during stress. Even as
we drive to work in rush hour traffic, our zinc reserves become temporarily
diminished. Zinc reserves are not easy to replenish, once depleted. Once zinc
depletion occurs, the door is opened wide for other antagonistic minerals to
slip-in and steal the show, thus creating havoc with various vital homeostatic
mechanisms. Once antagonistic minerals, such as copper, are allowed to
accumulate, zinc reserves cannot be fully replenished until the antagonistic
minerals are substantially lowered. Copper, when accumulated in toxic amounts,
can be as harmful to one's health as the toxic metals lead or mercury. Copper,
in excess, when combined with a stress-induced zinc deficiency, is notorious for
diminishing vital tissue potassium reserves. Potassium requires zinc to be
utilized and retained in the body, and when copper is present in excessive
amounts, utilization and retention of zinc or potassium is correspondingly
diminished.
Who Is Getting Burned Out?
Business executives were first noted to suffer from burnout,
for which doctors routinely prescribed rest and relaxation. However, rest and
relaxation have little beneficial effects on rejuvenating burned-out adrenal
glands. Adrenal glands are not muscles that can be revived by not using them.
They are glands that rely on a variety of nutritional factors to sustain
or restore their health and function. Well-planned nutritional therapy must be
followed by the burned-out individual, along with a total change in lifestyle,
if one ever hopes to recover. We have long heard that stress kills and
now we are seeing the staggering metamorphosis that slowly changes a stressful
person into a burned-out person.
Hypoglycemia: An Early Warning Sign of Adrenal
Insufficiency
The modern belief holds that hypoglycemia occurs when
one eats too much sugar and the pancreas becomes over sensitized, producing too
much insulin, which lowers the blood sugar drastically. This belief has held
sway for years. The modern approach to correcting hypoglycemia is the advocation
of a high protein diet to be eaten every two hours. In addition, one is advised
to refrain from eating sugar and simple carbohydrates for the rest of one's
life. How is it that an individual who has always consumed a high protein diet
and rarely eats sugar and simple carbohydrates can also be severely afflicted
with hypoglycemia?
Diminished Adrenal Activity Results in
Diminished Sodium and Potassium Levels
The adrenal glands supply energy and vital assertiveness
necessary for any achievement, large or small. Two minerals, which are regulated
by the adrenal glands and which play vital roles in energy production, are
sodium and potassium. As a result of burnout, the adrenal glands lose their
ability to retain adequate amounts of sodium and potassium in the tissues.
The Man in the Jacuzzi Who Didn't Take Warning: A
Case History
A young man who was very athletic, exposed himself constantly
to stress during football practices. In time, he came to believe that the eating
of meat (excessive fat) led to heart disease, and he had heard of football
players dropping dead on the field from heart failure. This young man was very
misinformed. Because of his physically stressful lifestyle, he should have made
a priority of eating lean red meat on a regular basis. Instead, he eliminated
all red meat from his diet and as a result became zinc deficient. Red meats are
the richest food source of zinc. Consequently his copper level increased, which
in turn caused his potassium level to drop precipitously. This young man also
refrained from eating table salt (sodium) because he was influenced by the media
regarding the dangers of sodium intake with regard to high blood pressure and
heart disorders. Normal adrenal gland function is necessary to retain sodium in
optimal amounts. Because many of us restrict our sodium intake and because of
burnout, we have evolved into a race that has smaller adrenal glands than our
more energetic and aggressive ancestors who helped build our civilization as we
know it.
This young man sought out a hair analysis because he was
troubled by unrelenting fatigue, which was adversely affecting his athletic
performance. His hair analysis report indicated extremely low sodium and
potassium levels. He was advised to avoid any physically or mentally exhausting
activities that would cause him to lose additional sodium and potassium. He was
warned to stay away from hot showers or a jacuzzi because excessive sweating
would promote excessive potassium and sodium losses. Heart failure frequently
occurs when sodium and potassium levels are extremely low or extremely high. He
continued to participate in football practices and unwind in the hot jacuzzi,
which unfortunately cost him his life. He died of heart failure in a hot water
jacuzzi. Adrenal burnout or low sodium and potassium levels are not to be taken
lightly.
Adrenal Insufficiency, Burnout and Mental
Disorders
When one is in burnout, the resulting zinc loss in the brain
results in the takeover of one's primitive brain (emotions) from one's rational
(thinking) brain. A diminished ability to think rationally, combined with
total burnout can also result in an emotional and/or mental breakdown. Dr.
Jack Ward acknowledged that about half of the people he counsels for psychiatric
problems suffer from abnormal blood sugar metabolism (hypoglycemia or diabetes),
which is quite common in individuals suffering from adrenal burnout. He has
found that approximately 60 percent of his schizophrenic patients, 80 percent of
his manic-depressive patients, and 70 percent of his neurotic patients suffer
from hypoglycemic symptoms. Increasing zinc levels, lowering toxic copper
levels, and replenishing sodium and potassium levels, by enhancing adrenal
function, is highly successful in restoring rational thinking, confidence,
energy, and overall well-being in these people.
Adrenal Insufficiency, Burnout and
Hypoglycemia
Individuals in adrenal burnout lack effective back-up systems
to regenerate their energy. As a result, they rely heavily on both simple and
complex carbohydrates, sugary foods and beverages and all too frequently,
alcohol, to generate temporary energy. Any source of glucose acts as a temporary
support system for adrenal burnout victims. However, soon after eating, they
again feel the fatigue, dizziness and numerous other symptoms associated with
both adrenal burnout and hypoglycemia, so they are compelled to eat again.
Often, individuals are misdiagnosed as suffering from primary hypoglycemia.
Hypoglycemia is a catchall term for a wide variety of both
physical and emotional symptoms. It is important to note that hypoglycemia
doesn't exist as one major problem. Adrenal burnout is the major cause of
many symptoms, which have been lumped under the term hypoglycemia.
Hypoglycemia is a syndrome resulting from an adrenal insufficiency as explained
below. Regardless of what one chooses to call it, an adrenal insufficiency is
the major cause of many of the dysfunctions associated with hypoglycemia,
including, obesity, alcoholism, and many other seemingly unrelated addictions.
Adrenal Glands vs the Pancreas
An over sensitive pancreas has long been blamed for
over-secreting insulin, which results in hypoglycemia. The finger of blame is
pointed in the wrong direction. An exhausted adrenal gland is the principal
reason behind excessive insulin secretion, or what has been termed
hyperinsulinism.
The adrenal glands and pancreas are physiologically
antagonistic to one another. When the adrenal glands are underactive, (low
sodium and potassium levels) the pancreas, in an effort to (compensate) maintain
energy levels, over-secretes insulin. In other words, the pancreas serves
as a back-up system for diminished adrenal activity, but not without serious
consequences. An over secretion of insulin results in a bewildering array of
symptoms that are commonly lumped under the term hypoglycemia. When the adrenal
glands are overactive (high sodium and potassium levels), the pancreas cannot
keep-up with the demand for insulin. The end result is a syndrome known as
diabetes. The solution to correcting both of these prevalent problems is to
restore the adrenal glands to optimal functioning, thus normalizing the insulin
output of the pancreas.
Fast Oxidation Hypoglycemia
The fast oxidizing hypoglycemic has overactive adrenal
glands and an underactive pancreatic secretion. This type of hypoglycemic is
very susceptible to eventually developing diabetes. The reason hypoglycemia
develops in the fast oxidizer is because they are under acute stress to such a
great extent, due to their volatile lifestyle, that they convert glycogen
(stored sugar in the liver) too quickly into glucose. They always have a limited
supply of glycogen readily available for emergencies; therefore they are often
plagued with feelings of hunger. We refer to a deficiency of glycogen in the
liver as acute hypoglycemia because when the fast oxidizer is faced with
an emergency without adequate sugar reserves, he is faced with an acute
emergency.
Slow Oxidation Hypoglycemia
The slow oxidizing hypoglycemic suffers from various
degrees of adrenal burnout as indicated by their low tissue sodium and potassium
levels. A slow oxidizer has adequate levels of glycogen stored in their liver,
but they cannot adequately convert glycogen to glucose. Slow oxidizers cannot
mobilize their glycogen from the liver principally because they have weak
adrenal glands. As a result, they suffer from chronic hypoglycemia
symptoms.
Glucose Deprivation
Approximately 85 percent of the population suffer from slow
oxidation or relative degrees of adrenal insufficiency. Slow oxidizers tend to
be somewhat overweight because they have to eat constantly to supply themselves
with immediate glucose since they have difficulty mobilizing glycogen from the
reservoirs in their liver. A slow oxidizer can only escape the life sentence of
fatigue when their blood sugar (glucose) level is temporarily normal, which is
only after they eat a high sugar and carbohydrate meal. The health and
functioning of every cell in the body depends upon adequate supplies of blood
sugar to a greater or lesser extent.
The brain and central nervous system depend on blood sugar
for energy to function normally. Brain cells are continually drawing on the
supply of glucose (sugar) in the fluid surrounding them. A continuous flow of
blood must move past these cells, and the glucose (sugar) must be replaced as
the cells burn it up. If the brain is deprived of sugar, it will program you for
intense depression and cause you pain and suffering until you surrender to a
candy bar.
The brain and central nervous system are extremely vulnerable
to even a temporary deficit in the blood sugar supply. When the brain is
deprived of energy, one's mental and emotional processes are detrimentally
affected. One may feel weak and shaky, and miscalculations may occur causing one
to bump into a wall or cause a traffic accident. Miscalculations most often
occur when one is in a sodium/potassium inversion, or when one's sodium level is
low relative to his potassium level.
White Outs
Many individuals who have an adrenal insufficiency problem,
together with a copper toxicity problem, suffer from white-outs. A
white-out is much like an energy crisis. When an individual experiences a
white-out, their vision will be wiped-out temporarily with what appears to be a
sudden or gradual burst of blinding white light. A white-out is frequently
misinterpreted as a religious experience. One's hearing will usually be
temporarily affected, and they will either hear one sound that seems to be
amplified or they will hear nothing but the rush of blood or the sound of their
heart beat. They usually must sit or lay down immediately until the spell
passes.
White-out spells usually occur when the brain is severely
deprived of sugar. In such an emergency state, the adrenal glands are forced to
kick in and secrete the hormone (adrenalin), which is necessary to
convert liver glycogen to glucose. If glucose isn't available in adequate
quantities, then the glycogen reserves in the muscles are converted to glucose
(sugar) resulting in mild to severe muscle weakness. The sudden surge of
adrenalin necessary to increase blood sugar can result in a cold sweat during a
white out. The blood leaves the skin to participate in supplying the brain with
glucose; therefore, the individual is left extremely pale. Blood supply is
removed from all secondary functions to assist in the hypoglycemic emergency.
Vision is considered a secondary function during such an emergency and the blood
supply to the eyes is diminished, allowing for only the brightness of light to
be interpreted. White outs will cease occurring when one's adrenal function is
improved.
Burnout and Alcoholism
Highly energetic individuals seldom feel the need to drink
alcoholic beverages. They already function at a high energy level and they can
be confident and witty without the boost supplied by an alcoholic
beverage. Individuals with adrenal insufficiency depend on a fast source of
energy, whether it is from glucose-rich foods, or alcohol or drugs, in order to
adequately function. Dr. Robert Meier found that 95 percent of the alcoholics he
treated, suffered from hypoglycemic symptoms. Alcohol raises the blood sugar
level faster than any source of sugar. There is an element of desperation when
the alcoholic senses that his blood sugar is falling and many alcoholics become
very violent when deprived of alcohol. You may have heard of alcoholics who lose
their key to the liquor cabinet and break the doors down rather than wait for a
locksmith. Low blood sugar has been blamed for being "the root of much of the
antisocial and aggressive personal behavior in our own country."(8) Without
alcohol, the adrenal burnout victim must face the feeling of being close to
death; a feeling, which goes hand in hand with burnout. In the words of one
alcoholic, "Forget who stole my little red wagon when I was three, I need help
now!"
Withdrawal-the Severity of Glucose Deprivation
Adrenal burnouts who rely on sugar and simple carbohydrates
for their primary source of energy also experience frightful symptoms of
hypoglycemia or withdrawal when deprived of sugar. Withdrawal from sugar,
alcohol, and even caffeine can be just as severe as withdrawal from heroin or
any other recreational drug. The many symptoms associated with drug withdrawal
are remarkably similar to those associated with a hypoglycemic reaction. When
one is deprived of their artificial source of energy, and glucose is not being
adequately supplied to the brain (withdrawal symptoms), then one feels as
panicky as one who is trapped under water and cannot breathe. Glucose
deprivation, if severe, can result in death, and the hypoglycemia individual
goes into a panic when the deprivation becomes severe.
Adrenal Burnout and Anorexia
Adrenal burnout victims, or slow oxidizers, as we have
mentioned earlier, are frequently deficient in zinc relative to copper. In other
words they are relatively copper-toxic. There is an appestat mechanism in the
brain that regulates appetite. This food appestat is principally regulated by a
balance between the minerals zinc and copper. When one comes under severe
stress, such as before a major event or in the case of many teenagers trying to
survive the divorce of their parents, they lose zinc, which in turn, frequently
results in a loss of appetite. Although one's appetite may be suppressed, they
still require a source of glucose in order to function, and they may often
choose alcohol, which is rich in acetates, rather than food to supply a source
of energy and confidence. Anorectics frequently choose exercise over food or
alcohol as a source of stimulation and energy.
Individuals who eat excessive amounts of food while under
stress, do so because that is how they choose to fill their energy needs and
they eat regardless of their lack of appetite.
Over-eaters Anonymous
Individuals at an Over-Eaters Anonymous meeting mentioned
that they would spend up to half an hour standing in the candy aisle of
supermarkets trying to decide what goodies their last binge would
consist of. They would sometimes go to two or more supermarkets to avoid the
embarrassment of buying too much junk food at one time. However, they always
managed to bypass their embarrassment with the firm conviction that tomorrow
they would start their diet. These individuals suffered from extreme cravings
for sugar and if they did not allow themselves to eat sugary foods, they claimed
to experience extreme fatigue, nausea, dizziness, and often they feared they
might faint. All of these symptoms quickly vanished when sugar was eaten and the
brain was supplied with glucose. These individuals all feared they would become
more ill if they were deprived of sugar. They all unknowingly but accurately
described typical hypoglycemia symptoms.
What is Your Sugar Limit?
We are going to use a simple candy bar to illustrate what
occurs when one ingests an excessive amount of glucose. After eating a candy
bar, a percentage of sugar contained in that candy bar passes directly into the
blood serum and supplies quick energy. The body, however, is very conservative,
and will take a percentage of the sugar contained in the candy bar and store it
in the liver in the form of small units of glycogen. Muscle and fat cells will
also hoard a percentage of glucose from the candy bar; however, glucose is very
difficult to retrieve from fat cells once it is stored, principally due to
adrenal burnout.
Retrieving Glucose Supplies From the Liver
The fight or flight hormone epinephrine or adrenalin,
which is produced by the adrenal glands, is required to rapidly retrieve stored
glucose from the liver cells.
Epinephrine is produced during stress, insuring that all body
cells have adequate amounts of energy fuel. Adequate epinephrine cannot be
produced nor can glucose be adequately retrieved from the liver cells in those
individuals suffering from an adrenal insufficiency.
If there is an extraordinary need for blood glucose and liver
glycogen reserves cannot be adequately mobilized, muscle glycogen can be broken
down to a form called lactate, which will then enter the blood. However, muscle
cells need their reserves of glucose for muscle action. In the event lactate is
withdrawn from the muscles, severe muscle weakness may occur possibly resulting
in a white out or a black out.
What do Obese People and a Camel's Hump Have
in Common?
No, this is not a joke. The camel stores fat in his hump as
an emergency source of energy. Obesity can be interpreted as an emergency
storage of energy as well. Obese people who suffer from adrenal insufficiency
(approximately 85 percent of the population) cannot fully utilize glucose
that is stored. After a meal, a certain amount of glucose is stored in the
liver. If it is not called upon, such as in the case of individuals suffering
from an adrenal insufficiency, glucose is converted into fat and stored in fat
cells or adipose tissue. In the slow oxidizer, there is a continual excessive
conversion of glucose into fat, which slowly results in obesity. The body
naturally stores excess glucose until it can be called upon, such as with the
fat in the camel's hump. If the camel does not cross any deserts, he will not
utilize his fat reserves. If adrenal burnout victims do not improve their
adrenal gland function, they cannot mobilize their fat reserves either.
The Danger Of Recommending High Protein Diets
If one has an adrenal insufficiency, they cannot manufacture
sufficient amounts of hydrochloric acid necessary for adequate digestion of
proteins. Yet, doctors and nutritionalists are recommending that individuals who
suffer from symptoms of hypoglycemia eat high protein diets. Protein and fats
supply a longer lasting source of energy than either sugar or carbohydrates.
However, when an individual with an adrenal insufficiency cannot produce
adequate levels of hydrochloric acid, they will develop a distaste for meat
protein, especially red meat protein. This dislike for meat is a biological
necessity and often leads to vegetarianism, which all to often results in
further weakening of the adrenal glands. Endo Met Labs offers a product (Betaine
HCL and Pepsin) that is extremely beneficial in stimulating hydrochloric acid
production, which aids in the digestion of protein.
That Indispensable Craving for Sugar!
Individuals suffering from adrenal insufficiency cannot
adequately digest proteins, cannot adequately metabolize fats, which leaves only
one food item they can handle - carbohydrates. They usually eat so many
carbohydrates that there is little room or appetite left for protein or fat
consumption. The excessive intake of carbohydrates actually keeps the individual
suffering from adrenal insufficiency functional until normal adrenal function
can hopefully be reestablished. High carbohydrate diet, in predisposed
individuals, although eventually leading to obesity, actually temporarily serves
as an adaptation to a serious energy depletion problem.
Burnout, The Last Adaptation
It is important to realize that adrenal burnout represents an
adaptation to a serious problem; a total inability to adequately cope with
stress. Burnout effectively pulls one out of the mainstream of life, when stress
can no longer be safely tolerated. In other words, burnout saves a person
from exposure to further stress. Obesity, odd as it may seem, protects an
individual suffering from the inability to convert glycogen to glucose by
converting unused glucose energy to fat energy.
Fat provides 2½ times the amount of energy as carbohydrates.
Burnout and obesity are symptoms and adaptations to stress and inadequate and
improper nutrition. You cannot successfully treat burnout without alleviating
much of the stress which caused burnout in the first place, nor can you
successfully treat obesity without enhancing adrenal gland function. It is an
adrenal insufficiency which is the major cause of obesity in the first place.
Treating obesity as a symptom, all to often, results in failure because the body
is attempting to adapt to an energy deficiency problem by producing fat,
which provides 2½ times the amount of food energy as either carbohydrates or
proteins. If one refrains from eating foods high in sugar while suffering from
adrenal insufficiency, they are denying themselves of a source of back-up energy
even though it is an excellent source of immediate energy, which keeps them
functional.
By improving adrenal function, sugar metabolism will be
improved, and one will lose their craving for sugar or other immediate sources
of energy. Individuals with healthy adrenal function actually develop a distaste
for sugar. Individuals with an adrenal insufficiency actually become
anesthetized or accustomed to the negative effects of eating sugary foods. A
child who has normal sugar metabolism and healthy adrenal glands as indicated by
his output of energy, often becomes hyperactive after eating anything sweet.
Decrease the amount of stress you are exposed to by increasing your adrenal
function and you are well on your way to normal sugar metabolism and increased
energy levels.
'Cold Turkey' From Sugar
Who hasn't tried to stop eating sugary foods, who was at one
time, or still is, addicted to sugar? Individuals suffering from adrenal
insufficiency cannot immediately deprive themselves of the only energy
source they can adequately utilize. No sooner does one decide to stop eating
foods high in glucose, be it from fruits, junk food or alcohol, they are back
inhaling them again. We call these patterns yo-yo dieting. We are not promoting
sugar, but we are suggesting that one continue to eat glucose-rich foods
(complex carbohydrates) in reduced amounts until their adrenal glands improve
and they no longer crave glucose as the mainstay of their diet.
Other Consequences Of Adrenal Burnout
Diabetes - When the
adrenal glands shutdown or close shop, a severe shutdown of the entire body
results. When the adrenal glands are weak, the pancreas runs a mile a minute
because the adrenal braking system has been lost. Obviously, the pancreas will
become exhausted due to overuse, just like the adrenal glands, and when the
islet cell of the pancreas go into exhaustion, diabetes occurs.
Organ Damage And Diminished Hormone Output
When one cannot adequately metabolize fats or proteins, due
to exhausted adrenal glands, they cannot adequately synthesize sufficient
protein necessary for organ health and optimal hormone production. Protein
supplies within the body cannot be adequately replenished and a loss of muscle
tone occurs. Zinc is necessary for good muscle tone, but the adrenal burnout
victim is deficient in zinc for numerous reasons (copper toxicity, deficiency of
glucocorticoid hormones). Muscle protein is broken down and converted to sugar
since the weakened adrenal glands cannot adequately convert glycogen to glucose.
When excessive protein breakdown occurs in order to supply glucose, protein
tissue or muscle is replaced with fat. Burnout victims experience fat buildup in
the areas where protein is actively being lost. Since protein is often lost from
the liver, fatty degeneration of the liver often occurs. The protein structure
of the heart can also be catabolized with resulting fatty degeneration, which
makes it all the more important for an individual who is in burnout to start
adequate nutritional therapy immediately.
| References | |
| 1. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics, pp 239. |
| 2. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics, pp 231. |
| 3. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics, pp 231. |
| 4. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics, pp 231. |
| 5. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics, pp 226. |
| 6. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics, pp 226. |
| 7. | Alexander Lowen, M.D., Bioenergetics. |
| 8. | Carl C. Pfeiffer, Ph.D., M.D., Mental and Other Micro-Nutrients |

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