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 What Doctors Don't Tell You: Enlarged prostate 
 
What Doctors Don't Tell You © (Volume 6, Issue 12)
Although the conventional approach to an enlarged prostate (also known as benign prostatic hyperplasia or BPH) is drugs or sometimes even surgery, there are many alternative treatments backed up by sound scientific evidence. Rectal irrigation using cold salt water, for instance, is a safe and useful procedure to help decongest the prostate, which can be carried out at home. This series of applications has been shown to greatly improve the circulation in the prostate.

Simply mix two teaspoonfuls of household tablesalt in I litre of water and chill the solution to 13-15 degrees Celsius (55-60 degrees Fahrenheit). Bedtime is the best time for carrying out the following simple procedure: Sit upright on the toilet. Introduce about 125 ml (about 4 oz) of the cold saline solution into the rectum through the rectal tip of an enema kit; retain the fluid for about 40 seconds and then expel. After one and a half minutes, repeat the procedure, and continue for about eight irrigations, which would use up the saline. Make sure that the salt water is not too cold or don't keep it too long in the rectum. Do the irrigation three times per week, reducing the frequency as you get better (QM Hoag, et al, Osteopathic Medicine, New York & London: McGraw-Hill, 1969).

For 75 years, homoeopaths have very successfully used remedies made from the herb saw palmetto, called Sabal serrulata, in low potencies, or as a mother tincture (W Boericke, Pocket Manual of Homoeopathic Materia Medica, Boericke & Runyon, 1927). In a number of studies of this remedy, quantity of urinary flow and prostate size substantially improved (Rozhl Chir, 1993, 72(2): 75-79).

Pygaeum africanum, the extract of the bark of a tropical African evergreen tree, has been widely used in herbal medicine. In an experimental double-blind study in Austria, those receiving 50 mg of this herbal extract twice daily for 60 days showed a significant improvement. Five patients had gastrointestinal side effects, causing two to discontinue treatment (Wien Klin Wochenschr, 1990, 102(22): 667-673).

Although highly useful, this herb is not as safe or as effective as saw palmetto. In one study, patients given Sabal serrulata showed a greater decrease in symptoms and a greater increase in urine volume than the group on Pygaeum africanum. Although Sabal serrulata had no side effects, Pygaeum africanum caused unpleasant gastric symptoms in 13 per cent (R Duvia et al, Advances in the Phytotherapy of Prostatic Hypertrophy, Mediz Praxis, 1983).

German herbalists often prescribe the roots of stinging nettles (Urtica dioica) for BPH - and with good reason. Testosterone levels decrease with age after 50, while 'female' hormones such as estradiol are increased. There is a potent androgen derived from testosterone called dihydrotestosterone (DHT). Both male hormones are normally metabolized through hydroxylation. But estradiol, which is now more plentiful, inhibits this process of hydroxylation and the end effect is a greater concentration of DHT in the prostate, which is thought to be the reason for prostate enlargement. Studies have found that the extract beneficially influences the binding of DHT (Fortschr Med, 1983, 101(15): 713-716).

For more than 35 years, flower pollen has been successfully used in Sweden to treat BPH. As pollen is the plant equivalent of the male fertilizing element, it is probable that the beneficial effect is due to plant hormones. Five successful studies have been reported (Br J Urol, 1990, 66(4): 398-404).

It's likely that essential fatty acid (EFA) and zinc deficiencies are associated with BPH, particularly since EFAs are the nutritional precursors to prostaglandins that, in turn, inhibit testosterone from binding to the prostate (Prostate, 1983, 4(3): 247-51). Many studies have shown that a moderate zinc supplementation can prevent or improve BPH. Other evidence shows that taking certain amino acids - L-glutamic acid, L-alanine, glycine and L-glutamic acid - can also help the condition (Hinyokika Kiyo, 1970;16(5): 231-236).

If you have BPH, it's best to follow a low-cholesterol diet. Cholesterol metabolites have been shown to accumulate in the enlarged prostate. These metabolites cause some cell degeneration, which then stimulates increased regeneration, as seen in BPH. The diet should also be free from pesticides and other adulterants, which can also adversely effect your hormone levels (E Pizzorno & MT Murray, A Textbook of Natural Medicine, Seattle, Washington: John Bastyr Univ Pub, 1985).

Cadmium levels in enlarged prostate tissue have been found to be significantly higher than those of normal prostate tissue. The cadmium level also appears to affect the level of DHT. In the test tube, cadmium stimulates the growth of human prostatic tissue (J Endocrinol, 1976, 71(1):133-14 1; Prostate, 1985; 6(2):177-183). Enamels containing cadmium compounds are still used as an internal coating for quite a large number of kitchen casseroles. When these are heated, small quantities of cadmium oxide may be formed and released into the food being cooked. Another common source of high cadmium levels is tobacco smoke.

In my own experience, men with enlarged prostates occasionally have a lower level of essential branched-chain (and other) amino acids. It could be that high cadmium levels block absorption of amino acids in the kidneys, diminishing their filtration capacity and making them less able to concentrate urine or excrete unwanted metabolites. Draining the cadmium homeopathically and supplementing with the deficient amino acids should correct that.

Lately, it's been discovered that eunuchs do not suffer from prostate disease. However, doctors seem a bit loathe to take the knife to men with the kind of surgical solutions routinely used on women to 'prevent' ovarian cancer.

Harald Gaier Harald Gaier is a registered naturopath, homeopath and osteopath.

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What Doctors Don't Tell You What Doctors Don’t Tell You is one of the few publications in the world that can justifiably claim to solve people's health problems - and even save lives. Our monthly newsletter gives you the facts you won't......more
 
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