The lowdown on colon care: they say death begins in the intestines. Here's some lifesaving advice that's easy to digest
Vegetarian Times, March, 1998 by Martin Zucker
Of all the polite topics of conversation, the state of one's intestines is probably at the bottom of most people's lists. Let's face it: Irritable bowel syndrome, constipation, gas, diverticulitis and colon cancer are simply not things we like to discuss.
And yet, as the old expression goes, death begins in the colon. Don't believe it? Ask any coroner. Autopsies often reveal colons that are plugged up to 80 percent with waste material.
We're generally too busy worrying about our faces or figures to ever consider our colons. When we do, it's usually because we're experiencing something unpleasant. Make no mistake: It happens to the best--and healthiest--of us. Yet experts say we can protect our colons by following a few basic lifestyle rules. And if we do develop problems along the way, some simple and effective natural remedies can provide relief
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BE KIND TO YOUR COLON
Winding its way between your mouth and your rectum is a 15-foot-long tube, more familiarly known as your digestive tract. Its work is relatively simple: Food enters, gets chewed up, then tom to shreds by enzymes, acids and bacteria; and, when all goes well, is absorbed into the bloostream. The unused and undigested parts get eliminated toward the far end of the system: in the colon, also called the large intestine.
The time it takes for food to enter at one end and exit at the other is referred to as "transit time." For a person who eats a healthy diet, free of refined, processed foods, 30 hours is an average transit time. But here, in our junk-food-eating, constipation-prone society, 48 hours and more is commonplace. The problem with delayed transit time is that the longer the end products of digestion stay in our system, the smaller they get and the more difficult they are to expel. Eventually the colon turns into a waste dump for toxins, harmful bacteria and carcinogens--a breeding ground for organ malfunction and disease.
"The principles of good colon health are so simple," says Jamey Wallace, N.D., a naturopathic physician at the Bastyr University Natural Health Clinic in Seattle. "The problem is, people just don't get them right." Yet what could be more basic than getting enough fiber in your diet, drinking plenty of water and exercising?
The top guarantor of intestinal health is dietary fiber, or roughage. Research shows you will develop major infirmities of the colon if you don't eat enough of it. Fiber (readily available in whole grains, vegetables, fruits, beans, nuts and seeds) is the portion of plant food that human digestive enzymes cannot break down. It absorbs moisture, which increases its size and gives the muscles in the intestinal walls something to grab onto, making the stool softer and helping the whole digestion-elimination process run more smoothly.
You'd think vegetarians wouldn't have to worry about getting enough fiber. "Not necessarily so," says Michael Janson, M.D., a preventive medicine and nutritional specialist in Bamstable, Mass. "Many vegetarians eat too much processed food with white flour, sugar and margarine. The foods may be vegetable in nature, but they are not healthy."
A diet low in fiber and high in processed foods can lead to diverticular disease, adds Abram Hoffer, M.D., a Canadian expert on nutrition. In diverticulitis, the most common ailment of the large intestine, small, hard stools pass with difficulty. Muscles strain and intestinal pressure increases, producing sac-like herniations in the lower colon. The sacs fill with fecal matter and over time develop swelling (distention), inflammation and pain.
Water also is essential to avoid colon trouble, says Fereydoon Batmanghelidj, M.D., of Falls Church, Va., who has studied the effects of water (or lack of it) in the human body for 25 years and is the author of Your Body's Many Cries for Water (Global Health Solutions, 1997). "Water separates the sticky feces from the mucous lining of the colon," he explains. "It also stimulates a hormone that promotes the muscular movement of your intestines that moves food and waste through and out. A lack of water contributes to inflammation, irritation, diverticulitis, constipation, hemorrhoids and colon cancer. Drinking enough water can often eliminate constipation in a matter of days."
His formula: Drink half your body weight in ounces of pure water a day--not tea, coffee, soda or alcohol, which are diuretics that increase urination and actually rob your body of water. (By using those calculations, a 128-pound person needs half a gallon of water a day.)
RUMINATE ON THIS
Because studies link a lack of exercise with an increased risk of colon cancer, physicians routinely prescribe physical exercise for patients with constipation. A recent study of lifestyle factors among 75,000 Norwegians showed that those individuals who walked or cycled at least four hours a week had a significantly decreased risk of colon cancer. And a recent Harvard study indicated that people with the highest level of physical activity had half the incidence of colon cancer than those who exercised the least.