A Rare Steak a Day Keeps the Cardiologist Away
by
Chris Masterjohn
by Chris Masterjohn
Red meat has been maligned
for decades as an artery-clogging source of cholesterol and saturated
fat. Yet a rare-cooked slab of quality red meat may just be your
best defense against heart disease.
One of the main casualties
of what we might call the Public Health-Industrial Complex’s war
on cholesterol has been a molecule called "coenzyme Q10"
(CoQ10). Among its many benefits and functions, coenzyme Q10 is
a powerful protector of the heart and blood vessels. CoQ10 is found
primarily in red meats, especially organ meats like liver and heart,
and is heat-sensitive, destroyed by overcooking. The anti-cholesterol
campaign of the government and its associated medical cartels has
assaulted the population’s CoQ10 status first through dietary recommendations,
and now through the expanding use of CoQ10-lowering drugs, more
popularly called "cholesterol-lowering" statins.
Red Meat a Victim of
Government Guidelines
In February of 1977,
the world’s model democracy proved it could maintain the guise of
freedom while expanding its totalitarianism to new levels: the U.S.
Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs released the
"Dietary Goals for the United States." From this founding
document, limiting saturated animal fats and cholesterol-rich foods
became a permanent part of government dietary guidelines, casting
shame upon diets rich in nutritious red meats, organ meats, and
egg yolks.
In 1990, the role of
free, democratic government in dictating the contents of Americans’
dinner plates became enshrined in law. The passage of Title III
of the National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Act of
1990 (7 U.S.C. 5341) required that the Secretaries of Agriculture
and Health and Human Services jointly publish a report entitled
"Dietary Guidelines for Americans" every five years. The
Act made the report official Federal policy, and the friendly, ubiquitous
Food Guide Pyramid would present this "official policy"
on the side of cereal boxes, to be stared at over breakfast by children
everywhere, preparing to receive more benevolent Federal advice
about their eating habits at public school.
The same year, the Third
Edition of this, now mandatory, publication was released. It explicitly
discouraged the consumption of egg yolks and organ meats. This and
subsequent publications wouldn’t explicitly discourage the consumption
of red meat, but that was the natural and logical interpretation
of its disparagement of saturated fat.
The Fifth
Edition, released in 2000, provided a convenient table of saturated
fat content in foods, in both standard and recommended low-fat form,
where one could easily see that even the recommended low-fat version
of red meat contained twice as much saturated fat as its nearest
competitor—frozen yogurt.
Dispensers of health
advice everywhere have depended on these authoritative guidelines
and translated them as recommendations to avoid red meat if you
care about your heart-health. Health-conscious Americans have opted
for skinless (and tasteless) chicken and turkey, while vegetarians
have proclaimed their vindication.
It went under
the public radar that red meat happened to be the primary source
of one of the most important nutrients to the heart in existence
– coenzyme Q10.
The Wonders of Coenzyme
Q10
The functions
of coenzyme Q10 range from energy-production to anti-oxidant
activity. Coenzyme Q10 acts as an anti-oxidant itself (meaning it
protects against free radical damage—damage induced by unpaired
electrons that destroy the body’s tissues), and is also necessary
for the proper anti-oxidant function of vitamin E. CoQ10 is an essential
component of the mitochondria (the "powerhouse of the cell"),
where it is involved in the production of ATP, the body’s fundamental
unit of energy, from fats and carbohydrates, and appears to regulate
the pH of cellular compartments called "lysosomes" where
digestion of various materials takes place.
The administration of
coenzyme Q10 has been shown in controlled studies to improve congestive
heart failure, and animal experiments have shown it to reduce damage
to the heart done by heart attacks and open-heart surgery. Evidence
also shows that it may be a powerful treatment for lowering high
blood pressure.
Dr. Al Sears, MD, is
the Director of the south Florida Center for Health and Wellness,
where he’s overseen the treatment of over 15,000 patients whom he
has helped successfully reverse heart disease. His book, The
Doctor’s Heart Cure (read my
review), devotes an entire chapter to the importance of CoQ10
to the heart.
Dr. Sears has found
that over half of his patients have been able to successfully wean
themselves off from their blood pressure medications, under medical
supervision, by supplementing with coenzyme Q10.
One woman came into
his office on a statin drug and two blood pressure drugs, suffering
from constant fatigue and increasing memory loss. Since statins
interfere with CoQ10 synthesis, and have been associated with fatigue
and memory loss, Dr. Sears had her CoQ10 levels tested, and she
was found to have lower levels of this nutrient than 95% of the
population. Supplementing daily with 200 mg of coenzyme Q10 over
several months allowed her to dump her blood pressure meds, feel
"energized," and recover her memory. Her cardiologist
met the good news with an angry outburst, throwing her bottle of
CoQ10 in the trash!
Dr. Sears has found
that patients who come to his center with heart disease, or various
risk factors for heart disease, such as diabetes, high blood pressure,
or low HDL, tend to be deficient in coenzyme Q10. He finds that
supplementing with CoQ10 makes a dramatic difference in helping
these patients to recover their energy and cardiovascular health.
Dr. Sears also cites
studies showing that supplementing with CoQ10 can lower the death
rate of congestive heart failure survivors by up to 59%, can decrease
the frequency of angina pectoris attacks by 53%, and can dramatically
improve recovery from heart surgery.
Eat Red Meat
for CoQ10, And Eat it Rare
Coenzyme Q10 is
found in the highest amounts in red meat. Dr. Frederick Crane first
isolated the compound from beef heart in 1957. Beef heart and liver
are believed to be the richest sources of CoQ10.
The USDA’s food composition
database has not yet been updated to include coenzyme Q10, but this
very limited
table from the Linus Pauling Institute shows beef to have almost
twice as much coenzyme Q10 as chicken meat. While some fish have
levels approaching the level of beef muscle meat, others have much
lower levels than beef. Not shown in this table is the much higher
level of CoQ10 in the organ meats of beef, which have been
an even more direct target of government guidelines.
According to The
Doctor’s Heart Cure, the organ meats of grass-fed
ruminants (red meat animals) have up to 10 times more coenzyme Q10
than the organ meats of grain-fed animals. Grass-fed meat is hard
to find nowadays, in large part because, as discussed in "Why
the State Hates Cholesterol," most agricultural subsidies
go to large producers of grain, which drives down the cost of grain
for livestock farmers, distorting the market and making it more
economical to feed animals grain than grass.
Dr. Sears has found
that, among the hundreds of patients whose coenzyme Q10 levels he
has measured, those avoiding red meat tend to have very low levels
of CoQ10, and strict vegans have extremely low levels of CoQ10.
He recommends people in either category supplement with this nutrient.
Despite the common recommendations
to cook meat "thoroughly," coenzyme Q10 is heat-sensitive,
and is destroyed progressively as meat is cooked. A well-done steak
will have dramatically less CoQ10 than a rare steak. To obtain maximal
CoQ10 benefit, meat should be eaten as rare as is tolerable to the
diner.
However, many
who dine upon red meat may run into trouble with state laws while
trying to maintain their heart health. In my home state of Massachusetts,
for example, it has been illegal since the 1990s for a restaurant
to serve a hamburger cooked less than medium. Out of legal anxiety,
most restaurants have gone overboard, and many will serve you a
well-done burger even if you request one cooked to medium.
The New Assault of Government
Guidelines: Cholesterol-Lowering Drugs
The Public Health-Industrial
Complex reached a new level of expansion when the most recent and
most successful round of cholesterol-lowering drugs—the statins,
such as Lipitor, Mevacor, Zocor, Lescol, and Pravachol—were developed
from a compound found in a fungus, red yeast rice, that inhibits
the synthesis of cholesterol.
Actually, "cholesterol-lowering
drug" is a misnomer. Statins do not act directly on cholesterol
synthesis, but inhibit the synthesis of a compound called "mevalonate."
As you can see by viewing this
flow chart, mevalonate is the precursor of an entire class of
compounds called "isoprenes."
Isoprenes are chains
of a recurring subunit of varying lengths. One isoprene chain is
the precursor to cholesterol. A different isoprene chain makes up
part of the coenzyme Q10 molecule! Thus, so-called "cholesterol-lowering"
statins act directly to inhibit the synthesis of CoQ10 every bit
as much as they act to lower cholesterol levels. This is not a "side
effect," but a universal and inherent action of the drugs.
One study that Dr. Sears
cites found that statins can lower coenzyme Q10 levels by 40%!
It would thus be dishonest to refer to statins as "cholesterol-lowering"
without also referring to them as "coenzyme Q10-lowering."
Even though coenzyme
Q10 has had dramatic success in lowering blood pressure, reversing
congestive heart failure, and improving other measures of heart
health, government recommendations on CoQ10 have been non-existent.
The problem with CoQ10 is that it happens to be a natural substance
that isn’t patentable, and therefore has little profit value to
pharmaceutical giants. It is therefore unsurprising that the government
half of the Public Health-Industrial Complex has been silent on
the issue.
But statins are
profitable. Very profitable. It should therefore come as
no surprise that government and its medical minions have had a field
day recommending their use.
When the most recent
government guidelines were released in 2001, the NIH and the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute released a press
release expressing their intention for the guidelines to help
nearly triple the number of Americans taking statins from 13 million
to 36 million. Issue
#001 of my free newsletter (you can subscribe here)
discussed this phenomenon, referencing an article by Paul Rosch,
M.D., that described the surreptitious passage of these guidelines
that seemed to mirror the middle-of-the-night passage of the PATRIOT
Act. The guidelines were illegally published in the Journal of
the American Medical Association without being published in
the Federal Register, the meetings were closed and minutes were
not kept, public opinion was not solicited, and the scientific evidence,
if existent, was unavailable for public review.
In the same newsletter,
I reported on a recent Norwegian study published in the British
Medical Journal that found European guidelines to be classifying
nearly the entire male population of Norway as patients and candidates
for cholesterol-lowering drugs.
The Third Joint
Task Force of European and Other Societies on Cardiovascular Disease
Prevention in Clinical Practice in 2003 set guidelines for various
levels of heart disease risk. The maximum level, "high-risk,"
indicated a 5% chance of contracting heart disease in the next 10
years. Amazingly, only 8.5% of women and no men over the
age of 40 were considered "low-risk," while 22.5% of women
and a full 85.9% of men were considered "high-risk," requiring
"maximal clinical attention with no further assessment of risk."
A previous study by the same authors found that 75% of all Norwegians
over the age of 20 – the age of 20 –were classified
as requiring counseling about their cholesterol and blood pressure
levels.
Where are all these
20-year-olds and 40-year-olds who are dropping dead left and right
of heart disease? They aren’t there. The fine print reveals a little
trick that the Task Force used to expand the definition of "high-risk:"
for the "younger" age groups, the definition of "high-risk"
would be expanded from a 10-year outlook to a 60-year outlook. So
a 20-year-old’s estimation of risk is based on his likelihood to
contract heart disease by the time he is 80, and a 40-year-old’s
risk is based on his likelihood to encounter heart disease by the
time he is 100!
Thus, an entire healthy
population is made candidate for cholesterol-lowering drugs. Can
we look forward to the day when children stare at a Food Pyramid
on their cereal box that contains a new bottom layer added under
6-11 servings of grains and starches that recommends 10-15 servings
of cholesterol-lowering drugs?
Coenzyme Q10: Casualty
of the War on Cholesterol
It is the height
of irony that the war that has been waged against cholesterol over
the last half-century by the Public Health-Industrial Complex has
inadvertently waged war against one of the most potent heart-protecting
nutrients, which shows promise of therapeutic value for heart disease.
It was not enough for government to endorse dietary deprivation
of red meat and organ meats, the primary sources of this nutrient,
but the new front lines of the war on cholesterol have caused the
attrition of even the body’s own synthesis of this heart-protective
compound.
A nice, juicy,
rare-cooked slab of red meat each day may just keep the cardiologist
away. And if he’s of the pill-pushing variety, keep him away you
must, because he’ll probably come bearing statins. And you know
what they said in public school about drug dealers.
August
23, 2005
Chris
Masterjohn [send him mail]
is the editor of Cholesterol-and-Health.com,
a website devoted to extolling the benefits of cholesterol.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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