Young Living
WHAT ARE FOOD ENZYMES?
(peptic enzymes, catheptic enzymes, digestive enzymes,
metabolic enzymes, free enzymes)
The following article was written by Dr. Edward
Howell late in his life in an attempt to make clear his revolutionary
food enzyme concept. He is noted for his life time study of digestive
enzymes and metabolic enzymes.
Is Your Body Demanding Food Enzymes?
By Dr. Edward Howell
In spite of all I have written about food enzymes
since 1936, common misconceptions persist and distort their significance
in nutrition. Let me restate that all animal and vegetable foods
in their natural state contain non-caloric elements in addition
to proteins, carbohydrates and fats. In the order of their discovery
and recognition as indispensable food elements, they are minerals,
vitamins, and enzymes. It is obvious that merely discovering that
foods are endowed by nature with any particular non-caloric food
material should constitute all the proof needed to establish this
substance as a protector of the health and well-being of living
organisms, including the human race, during the whole life span.
This is because constituents of unprocessed natural foods have had
countless eons of time to mold and shape the form and function of
living organisms and have created a dependence to fill a need. Therefore,
to remove any part of natural food from the normal diet could not
be sanctioned because of the possibility of harm to the health and
well-being.
This has been shown by the history of nutrition. Not
very long ago, the only elements considered necessary for wholesome
nutrition were protein, carbohydrates and fats. Minerals were considered
unimportant and ignobly characterized by chemists as "ash"
because they were all that remained after food was burned in the
laboratory. Vitamins and enzymes in foods were unknown. The fiber
of foods was removed and discarded because fiber was believed to
be too coarse for the human digestive tract. Many people formerly
believed that vegetables were fit food only for rabbits and cows
- not humans. The immigrants flooding here from Europe during the
early years of this century, foolishly embraced white bread with
open arms. In the backward, unindustrialized countries, only the
wealthy ate white bread, the common people having to be satisfied
with whole-grain bread, of whose health value they were ignorant.
The bran of wheat, which we now value as necessary food fiber, along
with the valuable wheat embryo or germ, were removed and found their
way into rations for cattle and hogs, proving to serve as excellent
nutrition for these animals.
For over a hundred years, enzymes had a reputation
as being important in the digestion of food, and that was all. Their
area of operation was believed to be limited to the stomach and
intestines. It was not realized until recently that the work enzymes
do in the digestive tract is only a minor part of their complete
duties in the bodies of animals and human beings. Enzymes are the
active agents in metabolism - in anabolism and catabolism. Enzymes
are the actors behind the scenes in the immunity processes. They
power your thinking, breathing, sexual activity - your very life.
Thousands of different enzymes metabolic enzymes - are involved
in every thing going on in the heart, lungs, liver, arteries, blood,
muscles - in all organs and tissues. Your body is expected to make
all of these digestive and metabolic enzymes.
But while the body is required to produce less than
a dozen essential digestive enzymes, functioning only in the food
canal, it must furnish thousands of metabolic enzymes to service
the multitudinous activities of the entire organism. Metabolic enzymes
do work, they are workers. They take absorbed food products with
their minerals and vitamins, and build them into tissues. They repair
the body and aim to keep the organs healthy. Further-more, through
substrate action, metabolic enzymes remove worn-out material from
the cells, keeping everything in repair. It can be recognized that
this is a far bigger job for enzymes than merely digesting food
in the food canal, part of which should be done by food enzymes,
or if need be, by other erogenous enzymes, meaning supplemental
enzymes. So which are more important in the body, digestive enzymes
or metabolic enzymes? Let us beware about permitting a metabolic
enzyme labor shortage to form, which can induce our problem diseases.
If metabolic enzymes are more important, then why
must they play second fiddle, and have second call, in the allocation
of the body's resources? Why are digestive enzymes kept rich by
having first call on the limited enzyme potential of the organism,
while the more important metabolic enzymes must be satisfied with
what is left? I must emphasize that the reader of this treatise
is an owner of the serviceable and precious metabolic enzymes. Smart
owners will not force their digestive enzymes to do work meant for
food enzymes if this extra burden on the digestive enzymes requires
the body to put a strain on producing their multi-functional metabolic
enzymes and not have enough of them to carry on their important
functions. If you were a biological engineer, responsible for efficient
operation and health of human organisms, is it not logical that
you would see to it that the digestive enzymes be given less work
by allowing food enzymes, or supplemental enzymes, if need be, to
do more digesting& as evolution, or the God of nature's laws,
ordained?
Each plant, animal and human being can make the enzymes
needed to do that which needs to be done in the organism. Any high
school student knows that the human digestive glands can make the
enzymes needed to digest our foods. Some well-informed students
also know that human saliva and pancreatic juice are fabulously
rich in enzymes, far stronger than in any wild animal living under
the laws of nature. The uninitiated and perplexed reader may reasonably
ask why we need the enzymes in food when our digestive enzymes,
in the prime of life, can do the job so well. "Are not food
enzymes superfluous and nonessential," some people may ask.
Even those in high places have been beset by difficulties in discerning
the hidden facts. To clarify an otherwise muddled situation, is
precisely why I wrote this narrative. But before proceeding, it
is urgent to call attention to yet another important pillar in the
Food Enzyme Concept.
Let me repeat again the vast difference between vitamins
and enzymes in food, and the unique quality that separates enzymes
from all other food factors and establishes food enzymes as very
special food ingredients. I refer to their extreme vulnerability
to destruction by heat. Whereas most food factors, including vitamins,
suffer only minor or no demonstrable harm from heat preparation
in the kitchen or factory, enzymes are completely destroyed by
manufacturing or operations. Enzymes can withstand no cooking, boiling,
frying, roasting, stewing, broiling or pasteurizing. Cookery destroys
them to the extent of - not 99%, but 100%.
Now, permit me to return to the matter of why food
enzymes are so important and indispensable to the reader's present
and future health - possibly even more so where the digestive juices
are overflowing with personal enzymes. In the first place all of
nature's creatures welcome and receive food enzymes, in every morsel
of food, in addition to the enzymes they produce. Fish are surrounded
by enzymes as they swim in the ocean water. Plants are dependent
on free enzymes in the soil to help make plant food, and suffer
increased susceptibility to disease when they must subsidize deficient
soil enzymes with their own metabolic enzymes. When you eat a raw
food, the enzymes within it are immediately released and begin to
digest it in the mouth, even before being swallowed, and before
your own enzymes are even secreted.
The same happens with animals living on raw food.
When birds, like the chicken, swallow intact wheat or corn seeds,
they go into the crop. There the seeds swell with moisture and the
food enzymes inside the seeds begin to digest the starch, protein
and fat before the seeds reach the stomach of the bird. Snakes and
many other creatures eat their food by swallowing it entire without
chewing. Small snakes swallow live rats, frogs, and such. large
snakes, such as the python, engulf live pigs. The body of the hapless
victim shows up as a large bolus in the midriff, causing an enormous
distention of the stomach of the snake, which allows no room for
the snake's enzymes or acid to enter. Only after the digestive enzymes
and catheptic enzymes of the prey, which now belong to the snake,
and have become its food enzymes, have performed the ritual of predigestion,
and liquefier the body of the prey, can the snake's enzymes find
room in its own stomach, to proceed with digestion.
Millions of fish swallow entire smaller fish every
day as their normal diet, while millions of birds gulp down entire
fish or other organisms to constitute their complete food intake.
And thus the ritual of predigestion by food enzymes is carried on
in the entire animal kingdom. A lion has teeth adapted only to tear
away large chunks of meat from the body of prey. He may tear off
thirty pounds of chunks and then walk away dragging a full belly
to a sanctuary to rest, while the pressure from the enormous distention
of his stomach by the meat forms a coalescent bolus which crowds
out everything, giving no room for the lion's acid and enzymes to
enter. The lion's peptic enzymes and acid can find room to get into
its stomach only after the catheptic enzymes within the meat itself
have performed their role of predigestion and reduced the bolus
to a plastic or liquid consistency. Only then can the lion's enzymes
carry on the digestive process from where the cathepsin stopped.
It is indeed a law of nature, tested and proven by millions of years
that enzymes within the food have been ordained by evolution, or
evolution's God, to predigest food, and that your private enzymes
were never intended to do the job alone.
Must we pay a penalty when we alone, of the hundreds
of thousands of species of living treasures on this earth, force
our unaided, personal (endogenous) digestive enzymes to digest food,
instead of letting exogenous (outside) enzymes do part of the job
by predigestion, according to nature's law? There is a penalty which
is inescapable and cumulative. It is deceptively unnoticeable when
we are young, but when our bodies are permanently called upon to
make too many enzymes for digestion, the stress of competition for
enzymes, forces our organism to produce less of the other kinds
of enzymes needed to keep all organs and tissues in proper repair
and health.
In other words, if the body has very rich digestive
enzymes, it must be satisfied with poor metabolic enzymes. The organism
cannot at the same time make very rich digestive enzymes, and very
rich metabolic enzymes, but a hypersecretion of one kind can be
attained only at the expense of a hyposecretion of the other kind.
The old saying that the man with an "iron stomach" is
the prime candidate for an early heart attack, is unfortunately
quite true. When we flirt with the integrity of metabolic enzymes,
and abuse the enzymes' potential, we are inviting the most serious
types of intractable diseases to come in and establish house-keeping.
We are notifying cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, etc.,
to make themselves at home in our bodies. Food-enzyme deficiency
and its aftermath must be recognized as the most serious and profound
oversight and omission in nutrition.
Since wild animals do not cook, what is there to prevent
ingested food enzymes from predigesting the food of wild animals?
This leaves the human race in the unenviable and isolated position
of being the only living creatures forcing their digestive enzymes
to suffer the burden of unaided digestion of food, which in turn
is reflected in compromising the potency of metabolic enzymes. Anything
lowering the efficiency of metabolic enzymes, impairs their ability
to keep the organ systems healthy enough to ward off disease. The
fact that the health of people and their domesticated animals does
not measure up to the high standards of wild animals, offers support
to indications that the relative potency of metabolic enzymes plays
a key role in the health discrepancy. Professional experience has
shown that those domesticated and laboratory animals eating a human-type
diet, are plagued with a variety of human-type serious diseases
after they pass the middle of the life span. On the contrary, wild
animals are immune to our problem diseases, unless they are exposed
to toxic influences, or fed at our garbage dumps. The animals of
the deep jungle are singularly free of degenerative and problem
diseases which affect people and their pets and farm animals.
It is sometimes said that food enzymes or supplemental
enzymes swallowed with food cannot do any work because the acid
in the stomach prevents their activity. This is true if the enzymes
and very strong add are mixed together in a test tube in a laboratory
demonstration. But it is untrue when enzymes are taken into a living
body. The stomach normally allows salivary enzymes, food and supplementary
enzymes to digest food for up to an hour. When they have finished
their job of performing predigestion, food enzymes and proper supplemental
enzymes, functioning at a lower PH, continue digestion of protein,
carbohydrate and fat for a longer time than salivary or pancreatic
enzymes; salivary digestion being restricted to starch. As the stomach
acid level becomes higher, the special acid enzyme, pepsin, can
continue the digestion of protein where the others left off. These
facts have been elicited after the stomach and upper intestinal
contents were pumped out and examined at various intervals following
meals.
I have been able to show the dire consequences following
use of the enzyme-deficient diet by discovering that the pancreas
must enlarge to produce the vast quantities of enzymes necessary
when the body is forced to digest all of the food without outside
aid. This does not harm the pancreas at all, anymore than it harms
a muscle when it must enlarge to do more work. Similarly, when a
government agency must enlarge to give away more money to foreign
governments, the only harmed parties are the taxpayers. An enlarged
pancreas can give out and waste more precious enzymes than a normal
organ, but this generous dispensation is not good for the body as
a whole because it strains the enzyme potential of the whole body
in its effort to produce a normal quota of metabolic enzymes to
keep all organs and tissues healthy and disease-free.
Those who theorize that food enzymes do not digest
food in the human stomach, thereby confess ignorance of the fact
that physiologists have fed test meals to human subjects, along
with the food enzyme, barley amylase. Other physiologists fed test
meals and waited for the salivary enzyme, ptyalin, to work on them.
Later, the contents of the duodenum and stomach were pumped out
and it was learned that marked digestion of the food consumed occurred
in both instances. And a large portion of the enzymes fed with the
food, were recovered, proving that they were not permanently inactivated,
and proving furthermore, that theoretical prognostication can be
dangerous.
There are those who surreptitiously proclaim that
food enzymes cannot do any work in the stomach because all enzymes
are proteins, and food enzymes are digested as are other proteins.
But this argument very conveniently overlooks, or perhaps tries
to hide the fact, that ff the enzyme complex had no special and
specific immunity against being digested because it contains protein,
what is to prevent one portion of the enzyme pepsin from being digested
by an adjoining and contiguous portion of the same enzyme while
pepsin functions in the stomach? Why do pancreatic proteolytic enzymes
not digest each other while they are at work reducing food proteins
to amino acids in the small intestine?
Further evidence that food enzymes have been ordained
by nature over countless millions of years to help digest the food
of all creatures, including human beings, is supplied by special
organs with no function except to serve as food-enzyme stomachs.
Food enzymes are made up of proteolytic food enzymes to digest protein,
amylolytic food enzymes to digest carbohydrates, and lipolytic food
enzymes to digest fats. The so-called killer whale, a member of
Cetacea, has a food enzyme stomach larger than any land creature.
The food-enzyme stomach of this whale has been found to contain
more than a dozen porpoises and seals. In one instance this enormous
food enzyme stomach, which is the first of the whale's three stomachs,
and much larger than the others, was found to house the bodies of
32 entire seals undergoing digestion by the seal enzymes, which
now belong to the whale, and are the whale's food enzymes. The remarkable
fact elicited by physiologists is that the first stomach (forestomach)
has no enzymes or acid of its own at all. Its membranes have no
glands to produce these agents for digestion. The first stomach
is simply a large reservoir which provides space for the enzymes
within the bodies of swallowed animals to digest their own bodies
to a sufficiently plastic or liquid consistency which enables the
food material to pass through a small opening connecting the first
stomach to the second stomach, which makes enzymes to continue the
digestion.
For hundreds of years human beings felt quite sure
they had only a single stomach to digest food. But scientists have
found this is not strictly true, and that humans have a digestive
organ functioning as two stomachs. The upper part, or cardiac end,
produces no acid or enzymes and is a food-enzyme stomach. It has
been designed as a reservoir to receive food, and permit the enzymes
in the food itself to predigest the food for further digestion by
the chain of enzymes along the digestive tract. Therefore, the human
being also owns a food-enzyme stomach. This fact, along with the
other evidence I have presented, establishes food enzymes as cardinal
digestive agents, making it impossible for anyone to lightly brush
them aside.
The foregoing avalanche of relevant information supports
the recently discovered law of the adaptive secretion of digestive
enzymes which proclaims that the body values enzymes highly and
produces no more of them than it is forced to. If more digestive
food enzymes are eaten, the body will automatically make fewer digestive
enzymes and can then produce more metabolic enzymes, should they
be needed. The body will therefore be in a better position to prevent
or deal with the problems of killer diseases.
End article.
Enzymes
from Young Living Essential Oils. Young Living has several enzyme combinations
that help to supply enzymes to people who have difficulty
digesting or assimilating food. Enzymes help digest toxic waste
and gases from everyday metabolism and retard the aging process.
Young Living
has a complete line of enzymes.