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The Dire Effects
of Estrogen
Pollution
By Ray Peat, PhD.
Pollution of the environment and food supply by
estrogenic chemicals is getting increased attention. Early in
the study of estrogens, it was noticed that soot, containing
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, was both estrogenic and
carcinogenic. Since then, it has been found that phenolics and
chlorinated hydrocarbons are significantly estrogenic, and that many
estrogenic herbicides, pesticides, and industrial by-products
persist in the environment, causing infertility, deformed
reproductive organs, tumors, and other biological defects, including
immunodeficiency.
In the Columbia River, a recent study found that
about 25 percent of the otters and muskrats were anatomically
deformed. Estrogenic pollution kills birds, panthers,
alligators, old men, young women, fish, seals, babies, and
ecosystems. Some of these chemicals are sprayed on forests by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, where they enter lakes,
underwater aquifers, rivers, and oceans. Private businesses
spray them on farms and orchards, or put them into the air as smoke
or vapors, or dump them directly into rivers. Homeowners put
them on their lawns and gardens.
(NaturoDoc Note: Many Home Depot stores run
free videos extolling the safety of these xenoestrogens for your
visiting relatives, kids and pets!)
Natural estrogens, from human urine, enter the
rivers from sewage. Many tons of synthetic and pharmaceutical
estrogens, administered to menopausal women in quantities much
larger than their bodies ever produced metabolically, are being
added to the rivers.
In the same way that weak estrogens in the
environment may become hundreds of times more estrogenic by
synergistic interactions (J.A. McLachlan et al., Science, June 7,
1996), combinations of natural, medical, dietary, and environmental
estrogens are almost certain to have unexpected results. The
concept of a "protective estrogen" is very similar to the idea of
"protective mutagens" or "protective carcinogens," though in the
case of estrogens, their promoters don't even know what the normal,
natural functions of estrogen are.
In November 1995, an international conference was
held to study the problem of "Environmental endocrine-disrupting
chemicals," and to devise strategies for increasing public awareness
of the seriousness of the problem. Their "Statement from the
work session" says "New evidence is especially worrisome, because it
underscores the exquisite sensitivity of the developing nervous
system to chemical perturbations that result in functional
abnormalities."
This work session was convened because of the
growing concern that failure to confront the problem could have
major economic and societal implications. "We are certain of
the following: Endocrine-disrupting chemicals can undermine
neurological and behavioral development and subsequent potential of
individuals...." Because the endocrine system is sensitive to
perturbation, it is a likely target for disturbance.
Man-made endocrine-disrupting chemicals range across
all continents and oceans. They are found in native
populations from the Arctic to the tropics, and, because of their
persistence in the body, can be passed from generation to
generation. Many endocrine-disrupting contaminants, even if
less potent than the natural products, are present in living tissue
at concentrations millions of times higher than the natural
hormones. The developing brain exhibits specific and often
narrow windows during which exposure to endocrine disruptors can
produce permanent changes in its structure and function.
In spite of this increased exposure to estrogens,
there is a new wave of advertising of estrogenic substances, based
on the idea that weak estrogens will provide protection against
strong estrogens. The environmental background of estrogenic
pollution already provides a continuous estrogenic exposure.
In the 1940s, Alexander Lipshuts demonstrated that a continuous,
weak estrogenic stimulus was immensely effective in producing, first
fibromas, then cancer, in one organ after another, and the effect
was not limited to the reproductive system.
How is it possible that the idea of "protection"
from a weak estrogen seems convincing to so many? Isn't this
the same process that we saw when the nuclear industry promoted
Luckey's doctrine of "radiation hormesis," literally the claim that
"a little radiation is positively good for us"?
DES (diethyl stilbestrol) is one of the most
notorious estrogens, because studies in humans revealed that its use
during pregnancy not only caused cancer, miscarriages, blood clots,
etc., in the women who used it, but also caused cancer, infertility,
and deformities in their children, and even in their grandchildren.
(But those transgenerational effects are not unique to it.)
Besides the absurd use of DES to prevent
miscarriages, around 1950 it was also used to treat vulvovaginitis
in little girls, for menstrual irregularity at puberty, to treat
sterility, dysfunctional bleeding, endometriosis, amenorrhea,
oligomenorrhea, dysmenorrhea, migraine headaches, nausea and
vomiting, and painful breast engorgement or severe bleeding after
childbirth.
NaturoDoc Note: Many boomer children of these
women are sterile or "fertility challenged" because of this exposure
in utero.
DES is a "weak" estrogen, in the sense that it
doesn't compete with natural estrogens for the "estrogen receptors."
(Estriol binds more strongly to receptors than DES does: " Cytosolic
and nuclear estrogen receptors in the genital tract of the rhesus
monkey," J. Steroid Bioch. 8(2), 151-155, 1977.) Pills
formerly contained from 5 to 250 mg. of DES. The 1984 PDR
lists doses for hypogonadism and ovarian failure as 0.2 to 0.5 mg.
daily. In general, dosage of estrogens decreased by a factor
of 100 after the 1960s.
An aggressively stupid editorial by Alvin H.
Follingstad, from the Jan. 2, 1978, issue of JAMA, pages 29-30,
"Estriol, the forgotten estrogen?" is being circulated to promote
the use of estriol, or the phytoestrogens. It argues that
women who secrete larger amounts of estriol are resistant to cancer.
By some tests, estriol is a "weak estrogen" ;
by others, it is a powerful estrogen. When estriol was placed
in the uterus of a rabbit, only 1.25 mcg. was sufficient to prevent
implantation and destroy the blastocyst. (Dmowski et al.,
1977) Since the effect was local, the body weight of the
animal doesn't make much difference, when thinking about the
probable effect of a similar local concentration of the hormone on
human tissues. The anti-progestational activity of estriol and
estradiol are approximately the same. (Tamotsu and Pincus,
1958)
When 5 mg. of estriol was given to women
intravaginally, this very large dose suppressed LH within 2 hours,
and suppressed FSH in 5 hours. Given orally, 8 mg. had similar
effects on LH and FSH after 30 days, and also had an estrogenic
effect on the vaginal epithelium. These quick systemic effects
of a "weak estrogen" are essentially those of a strong estrogen,
except for the size of the dose. (Schiff et al., 1978)
When administered subcutaneously, estriol induced
abortions and stillbirths (Velardo et al.)
Another indication of the strength of an estrogen is
its ability to cause the uterus to enlarge. Estriol is
slightly weaker, in terms of milligrams required to cause a certain
rate of uterine enlargement, than estradiol. (Clark et al.,
1979) But isn't the important question whether or not the weak
estrogen imitates all of the effects of estradiol, including
carcinogenesis and blood clotting, in addition to any special
harmful effects it might have?
When added to long-term culture of human breast
cancer cells, estriol stimulated their growth, and overcame the
antiestrogenic effects of tamoxifen, even at concentrations hundreds
of times lower than that of tamoxifen. "The data do not
support an antiestrogenic role for estriol in human breast cancer."
(Lippman et al., 1977)
Studies of the urinary output of estriol/estradiol
in women with or without breast cancer do not reliably show the
claimed association between low estriol/estradiol and cancer, and
the stimulating effect of estriol on the growth of cancer cells
suggests that any alteration of the estrogen ratio is likely to be a
consequence of the disease, rather than a cause. The
conversion of estradiol to other estrogens occurs mainly in the
liver, in the non-pregnant woman, as does the further metabolism of
the estrogens into glucuronides and sulfates.
The hormonal conditions leading to and associated
with breast cancer all affect the liver and its metabolic systems.
The hydroxylating enzymes are also affected by toxins.
Hypothyroidism (low T3), low progesterone, pregnenolone, DHEA,
etiocholanolone, and high prolactin, growth hormone, and cortisol
are associated with the chronic high estrogen and breast cancer
physiologies, and modify the liver's regulatory ability.
The decreased output of hormones when the
fetal-placental system is dying is a natural consequence, since the
placenta produces hormones, and during pregnancy converts estradiol
to estriol. Since estradiol in excess kills the fetus, its
conversion by the placenta to estriol is in accord with the evidence
showing that estriol is the more quickly excreted form. (G.S.
Rao, 1973) The conversion of 16-hydroxy androstenedione and
16-hydroxy-DHEA into estriol by the placenta (Vega Ramos, 1973)
would also cause fetal exhaustion or death to result in lower
estriol production.
But a recent observation that a surge of estriol
production precedes the onset of labor, and that its premature
occurrence can identify women at risk of premature delivery
(McGregor et al., 1995) suggests that the estriol surge might
reflect the mother's increased production of adrenal androgens
during stress. (This would be analogous to the situation in
the polycystic ovary syndrome, in which excessive estradiol drives
the adrenals to produce androgens.)
Estetrol, which has one more hydroxyl group than
estriol, is a "more sensitive and reliable indicator of fetal
morbidity than estriol during toxemic pregnancies," because it
starts to decrease earlier, or decreases more, than estriol.
(Kundu et al., 1978) This seems to make it even clearer that
the decline of estriol is a consequence, not a cause, of fetal
sickness or death.
A 1994 publication (B. Zumoff, "Hormonal profiles in
women with breast cancer," Obstet. Gynecol. Clin. North. Am. (U.S.)
21(4), 751-772) reported that there are four hormonal features in
women with breast cancer: diminished androgen production,
luteal inadequacy, increased 16-hydroxylation of estradiol, and
increased prolactin. The 16-hydroxylation converts estradiol
into estriol.
A new technique for radiographically locating a
hormone-dependent breast cancer is based on the fact that
estriol-sulfate is a major metabolite of estradiol. The
technique showed the tumor to have about a six times higher
concentration of estriol-sulfate than liver or muscle. (N.
Shimura et al., "Specific imaging of hormone-dependent mammary
carcinoma in nude mice with [131I]-anti-estriol 3-sulfate antibody,"
Nucl. Med. Biol. (England) 22(5), 547-553, 1995)
Another association of elevated conversion of
estradiol to estriol with disease was found to occur in men who had
a myocardial infarction, compared to controls who hadn't. (W.
S. Bauld et al., 1957)
The estrogens in clover have been known for several
decades to have a contraceptive action in sheep, and other
phytoestrogens are known to cause deformities in the genitals,
feminization of men, and anatomical changes in the brain as well as
functional masculinization of the female brain. (Register et
al., 1995; Levy et al., 1995; Clarkson et al., 1995; Gavaler et al.,
1995) The effects of the phytoestrogens are very complex,
because they modify the sensitivity of cells to natural estrogens,
and also modify the metabolism of estrogens, with the result that
the effects on a given tissue can be either pro-estrogenic and
anti-estrogenic.
For example, the flavonoids, naringenin, quercetin
and kaempherol (kaempherol is an antioxidant, a phytoestrogen, and a
mutagen) modify the metabolism of estradiol, causing increased
bioavailability of both estrone and estradiol. (W. Schubert et
al., "Inhibition of 17-beta-estradiol metabolism by grapefruit juice
in ovariectomized women," Maturitas (Ireland) 30(2-3), 155-163,
1994)
Why do plants make phytoestrogens? There is
some information indicating that these compounds evolved to regulate
the plants' interactions with other organisms -- to attract
bacteria, or to repel insects, for example, rather than just as
pigment-forming materials. (Baker, 1995) The fact that some of
them bind to our "estrogen receptors" is probably misleading,
because of their many other effects, including inhibiting enzyme
functions involved in the regulation of steroids and prostaglandins.
Their biochemistry in animals is much more complicated than that of
natural estrogens, which is itself so complicated that we can only
guess what the consequences might be when we change the
concentration and the ratio of substances in that complex system.
(See the quotation in the Notes below from
Velardo et al.)
These "natural" effects in sheep were forerunners of
the observed estrogenic effects in wild animals, caused by
pollutants. Twenty-five years ago I reviewed many of the
issues of estrogen's toxicity, and the ubiquity of estrogenic
substances, and since then have regularly spoken about it, but I
haven't concentrated much attention on the phytoestrogens, because
we can usually just choose foods that are relatively free of them.
They are so often associated with other food toxins -- antithyroid
factors, inhibitors of digestive enzymes, immunosuppressants, etc.
-- that the avoidance of certain foods is desirable.
Recently an advocate of soybeans said, "If they
inhibit the thyroid, why isn't there an epidemic of hypothyroidism
in Asia?" I happened to hear this right after seeing newspaper
articles about China's problem with 100,000,000 cretins. Yes,
Asia has endemic hypothyroidism, and beans are widely associated
with hypothyroidism.
When I first heard about clover-induced miscarriages
in sheep, I began reading about the subject, because it was relevant
to the work I was doing at that time on reproductive aging.
Sheep which are adapted to living at high altitude, where all
animals have reduced fertility, have an adaptive type of hemoglobin,
with a greater affinity for oxygen. Fetal hemoglobin, in
animals at sea-level, has a great affinity for oxygen, making it
possible for the fetus to get enough oxygen, despite its insulation
from the mother's direct blood supply. The
high-altitude-tolerant sheep have hemoglobin which is able to
deliver sufficient oxygen to the uterus to meet the needs of the
embryo/fetus, even during relative oxygen-deprivation. These
sheep are able to sustain pregnancy while grazing on clover.
It seemed evident that estrogen and high altitude had something in
common, namely, oxygen deprivation, and it also seemed evident that
these sheep provided the explanation for estrogen's abortifacient
effects.
Estrogen's effects, ranging from shock to cancer,
all seem to relate to an interference with the use of oxygen.
Different estrogens have different affinities for various tissues,
and a given substance is likely to have effects other than
estrogenicity, and the presence of other substances will modify the
way a tissue responds, but the stressful shift away from oxidative
production of energy is the factor that all estrogens have in
common. Otherwise, how could suffocation and X-irradiation
have estrogenic effects?
Pharmaceutical misrepresentations regarding the
estrogens rank, in terms of human consequences, with the radiation
damage from fallout from bomb tests and reactor leaks, with
industrial pollution, with degradation of the food supply -- with
genocide, in fact.
Advertising gets a bad name when it can't be
distinguished from mass murder. At a certain point, we can't
afford to waste our time making subtle distinctions between
ignorance and malevolence. If we begin pointing out the lethal
consequences of "stupid" or quasi-stupid commercial / governmental
policies, the offenders will have the burden of proving that their
actions are the result of irresponsible ignorance, rather than
criminal duplicity. From the tobacco senators to the chemical
/ pharmaceutical / food / energy industries and their agents in the
governmental agencies, those who do great harm must be held
responsible.
The idea of corporate welfare, in which public funds
are given in massive subsidies to rich corporations, is now
generally recognized. Next, we have to increase our
consciousness of corporate responsibility, and that ordinary
criminal law, especially RICO, can be directly applied to
corporations. It remains to be seen whether a government can
be made to stop giving public funds to corporations, and instead, to
begin enforcing the law against them -- and against those in the
agencies who participated in their crimes.
In the U.S., the death penalty is sometimes reserved
for "aggravated homicide." If those who kill hundreds of
thousands for the sake of billions of dollars in profits are not
committing aggravated homicide, then it must be that no law written
in the English language can be objectively interpreted, and the
legal system is an Alice-in-Wonderland convenience for the corporate
state.
Copyright Raymond Peat, PhD, 1997
P.O. Box 5764
Eugene, OR 97405
Website:
www.efn.org/~raypeat
Related products:
References
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Dr. Bernard Weiss, Dept. of Environmental
Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester,
NY. and 17 others, work session on environmental
endocrine-disrupting chemicals, Nov. 5-10, 1995. Isaac
Schiff et al., "Effects of estriol administration on the
hypogonadal woman," Fertil. Steril. 30(3), 278-282,
1978. N.P.J. Kundu et al., "Sequential determination of
serum human placental lactogen, estriol, and estetrol for
assessment of fetal morbidity," Obstet. Gynecol. 52(5), 513-520,
1978.
-
M. E. Lieberman et al., "Estrogen control of
prolactin synthesis in vitro," P.N.A.S. (USA) 75(12),
5946-5949, 1978. Marc Lippman et al., "Effects of estrone,
estradiol and estriol on hormone-responsive human breast cancer in
long term tissue culture," Cancer Res. 37(6), 1901-1907,
1977.
-
W.P. Dmowski et al., "Effect of intrauterine
estriol on reproductive function in the rabbit," Fertil.
Steril.28(3), 262-8, 1977. W. S. Bauld, et al, "Abnormality
of estrogen metabolism in human subjects with myocardial
infarction," Canadian Jour. Biochem. and Physiol. 35(12),
1277-1288, 1957. (The conversion of estradiol to estriol was
higher in men with previous myocardial infarction than in
controls.) R. A. Edgren and D. W. Calhoun, "Interaction of
estrogens on the vaginal smear of spayed rats," Am. J. Physiol.
189(2), 355-357, 1957. "Employing the vaginal smear as an
index of effect, combinations of various estrogenic substances
were tested for interaction. Studies were concentrated at
the approximate 50 percent response level." "These data are
interpreted as indicating simple additive relationships among the
compounds tested." "Curiously then, estrogens that showed
inhibitory interrelationships when tested on uterine growth had
simple additive interactions when tested on the vaginal smears."
-
"... it seems reasonable to postulate that a given
hormone combination may evoke differing levels of response in
different target organs, and particularly, that increase of one
component may increase response at one site while decreasing it at
another. Many steroids ... are present in the mammalian
circulation during various phases of the sex cycle and are known
to modify the effects of any given estrogen. This hormonal
multiplicity apparently constitutes an estrogen-buffering system
and supports the hypothesis that sexual responses depend '...upon
a rather precise hormonal homeostasis.'"
-
R. C. Merrill, "Estriol: A review," Physiol. Revs.
38(3), 463-480, 1958. "...estriol itself is a potent
estrogen, contrary to the usual conception of its being just a
metabolite of the more potent estrone and estradiol.
Although ordinarily less effective than estrone and estradiol in
promoting vaginal cornification, estriol, under optimum
conditions, approaches their effectiveness for this purpose.
Estriol is more potent than estrone or estradiol in causing
establishment and opening of the vaginal orifice, in promoting
imbibition of uterine fluid, in increasing lactic dehydrogenase
activity in the uterus, and in stimulating mitotic activity in the
epidermis of the mouse ear. The activity of estriol is of
the same order of magnitude as that of estrone and estradiol in
other estrogenic actions, such as to promote uterine growth at low
concentrations (although less effective at high doses), to
increase beta-glucuronidase and reduced diphosphopyridine
nucleotide oxidase activity in the uterus, to reduce motility of
the uterus in vivo, and to stimulate ovarian growth, body weight,
phagocytosis of carbon by reticuloendothelial cells, ciliary
movements of the buccopharyngeal mucose of the frog, and new bone
formation. The fibromatogenic activity of estriol in the
guinea pig is much less than that of estrone or estradiol.
Recent experiments suggest and partly verify the hypothesis that
estriol stimulates the cervix, vagina and vulva more effectively
than estrone or estradiol, whereas the latter are much more
effective on the corpus uteri." T. Miyake and G. Pincus,
"Anti-progestational activity of estrogens in rabbit endometrium,"
Proc. Soc. Exptl. Biol. and Med. 99(2) 478-482, 1958. "The
anti-progestational activity of 4 estrogens -- estrone, estradiol,
estriol, and stilbestrol -- administered subcutaneously with
progesterone into Clauberg rabbits has been demonstrated...."
"The anti-progestational activities of these estrogens are
approximately the same." "...estrogen may depress reactivity
of the endometrium to progesterone rather than neutralize or
inactivate progesterone in the body." J. T.
Velardo et al., "Effect of various steroids
on gestation and litter size in rats," Fertility and Sterility
7(4), 301-311, 1956. "...certain metabolites of estrogenic
and progestative substances that were previously considered to be
'weak' or inert may well play a role in the reproductive process."
"We have been impressed with the probability that any endocrine
receptor-organ response is not accomplished by the independent
action of one hormone alone. It appears more likely that
such response is the physiological expression of the sum total of
the biologic hormones and their metabolites in concert on the
receptor organs." "The effect of estriol on the birth rate
of these rats was more dramatic." "...when estriol was used
before mating, it reduced the litter size to 66 per cent of the
controls." "However, when the same dose was employed from
the day of mating and daily thereafter beyond the time of usual
implantation, 6 days later, a reduction of live births to 33
percent of the controls was produced. In this experiment the
medication was withheld until after ovulation had presumably
occurred. The presence of placental scars and an increased
incidence of abortions and stillbirths argues against the
possibility that the fertile ova have been 'locked' by the
estrogen in the tubes." "...the incidence of placental
scars, abortions, and stillbirths further bears witness to the
possibility that the steroids employed interfered with the optimum
differentiation of progestational endometrial changes, rather than
affecting any suppression of ovulatory mechanisms." B.
Register et al., "Effect of neonatal exposure to
diethylstilbestrol, coumestrol, and beta-sitosterol on pituitary
responsiveness and sexually dimorphic nucleus volume," P.S.E.B.M.
208, 72, 1995. J. R. Levy et al., "Effect of prenatal
exposure to the phytoestrogen genistein on sexual differentiation
in rats," P.S.E.B.M. 208, 60, 1995. B.D. Lyn-Cook et al.,
"Methylation profile and amplification of proto-oncogenes in rat
pancreas induced with phytoestrogens," PSEBM 208, 116, 1995.
-
J. S. Gavaler et al., "Phytoestrogen congeners of
alcoholic beverages: Current status,: PSEBM 208, 98, 1995.
-
A. I. Nwannenna et al., "Clinical changes in
ovariectomized ewes exposed to phytoestrogens and 17beta-estradiol
implants," PSEBM 208, 92, 1995. P. L. Whitten et al.,
"Influence of phytoestrogen diets on estradiol action in the rat
uterus," Steroids 59, 443-449, 1994. "Coumestrol did not
antagonize the uterotrophic action of estradiol when administered
either prior to, or jointly with, E2 treatment, or when
administered orally or parenterally." "These findings
contradict the assumption that all phytoestrogens are necessarily
antiproliferative agents...." M. E. Baker, "Endocrine
activity of plant-derived compounds: An evolutionary perspective,"
PSEBM 208, 131, 1995. I. Palmlund, "To cell from
environment," Chapter 19 in Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of
Hormonal Carcinogenesis, published by Wiley-Liss. J. H.
Clark et al., "Nuclear binding of the estrogen receptor:
Heterogeneity of sites and uterotropic response," Steroid Hormone
Receptor Systems, page 17, 1979.
-
P. Vega Ramos et al., "Formation of oestriol from
C19, 16-oxygenated steroids by microsomal preparations of human
placenta," Res. on Steroids, vol. V, page 79, Proc. of the Fifth
Meeting of the International Study Group for Steroid Hormones,
edited by M. Finkelstein et al., 1973. G. S. Rao, "Enzymes
in steroid metabolism," Res. on Steroids, Vol. V, page 175, 1973.
-
L. H. Carter and C. B. Harrington, Administrative
Law and Politics HarperCollins, 1991. "Capture occurs when
agencies informally promote the very interests they are officially
responsible for regulating." In 1925, Coolidge's appointment
of "anti-public" W. E. Humphrey to the FTC led some of its former
supporters to call for the abolition of the FTC. "If nearly
a century of regulatory history tells us anything, it is that the
rules-making agencies of government are almost invariably captured
by the industries which they are established to control."
Robert Heilbroner, In the Name of Profit, 1972, p. 239.
"Federal economic regulation was generally designed by the
regulated interest to meet its own end, and not those of the
public or the commonweal." Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of
Conservatism: A Reinterpretation of American History,
1900-1916, 1963. "It is a given in the modern doctrine of
most tort laws that the existence of potential liability if
anything encourages citizens to use greater thoughtfulness and
care in their daily actions, and no obvious reasons suggest the
same dynamic should not affect public officials." Adm. Law. &
Pols., p. 404. "That Congress decided, after the passage of
the Fourteenth Amendment, to enact legislation specifically
requiring state officials to respond in federal court for their
failures to observe the constitutional limitations on their powers
is hardly a reason for excusing their federal counterparts for the
identical constitutional transgressions." "In situations of
abuse, an action for damages against the responsible official can
be an important means of vindicating constitutional
guarantees...." Justice White, Butz v. Economou, p. 409, Adm. Law
& Pols.
Notes:
-
As the result of industrial promotion, including
product advertising and grants for research, "weak estrogens" and
"antioxidants" derived from soy are being discussed as means to
prevent breast and prostate cancer, heart disease, stress and
aging. Another so-called weak estrogen, estriol, is being
promoted by drug companies for the "alternative medical" market,
with the circulation of an editorial from JAMA, recommending it
for preventing breast cancer.
-
Japanese women used to be very free of breast
cancer, and when their children grew up in the U.S., their
incidence of the disease was like that of Americans. How odd
that the soybean should be singled out for responsibility.
Japanese breast cancer incidence has risen sharply in recent
years. Did they stop eating tofu? Did their
traditional use of seaweed as food have nothing to do with their
health? Did the traditional home-bound isolation of Japanese
women, their avoidance of smoking and drinking, have no effect on
hormones and cancer? Their calorie intake? Iodine and
trace minerals? What types of protein and fat, in what
quantities, did they use?
NaturoDoc Note:
Thanks, Dr. Peat, for the acute inquiry into the scientific
disinformation that affects us all so directly.
To jump to our recommendations for alternative
treatments to achieve safe, natural hormone balancing, click
here.
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