Vitamin C And Your Adrenal Glands

Posted by Nadia Javaid
2
Nov 13, 2015
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The adrenals themselves have a very high content of ascorbic acid (vitamin C). Since we know that vitamin C is used in large doses to help combat infections, the conclusion now is that this vitamin helps stimulate the adrenal glands into producing more cortin, the hormone that fights off disease. Because this pair of glands was designed by nature to pour forth adrenalin in times of physical danger, or emotional crisis, continued mental or emotional tension overworks your 'emergency glands' to the point where your nerves and vital organs are constantly kept keyed-up to fever pitch owing to too many fake 'emergency' messages from the brain, thereby sending the powerful adrenalin hormone shooting into your bloodstream when it isn't actually needed. In times of stress, the adrenal glands also release into your bloodstream a substance called cholesterol (the waxy substance now blamed for causing hardening of the arteries. See Chapter 9). For this reason, many doctors believe that arteriosclerosis, and other 'diseases of age' such as coronary thrombosis and cerebral hemorrhage, may develop as a result of this constant overstimulation of the adrenal glands by high-tension living, and day-in-day-out mental or emotional strain.

This emergency function of the adrenals to act as a powerful stimulant upon the organs of the body is a holdover from the days when man needed instantaneous physical and mental reserves to save himself from animal or human enemies. But today, when most of our emergencies are chiefly emotional or mental, this continued outpouring of the high-powered adrenalin into your bloodstream causes the heart and blood vessels to take a fearful beating. And because adrenalin is continually being squirted into the blood under the stress and strain of our highly emotional civilization, cortin is likewise constantly needed in big doses to get the body machine slowed down to normal again. Since we know that the adrenal glands use vitamin C to manufacture the cortical hormone, it's not difficult to understand that continued high-tension living (either physical, mental or emotional) uses up a lot of vitamin C and releases a lot of cholesterol into the bloodstream. The result is depleted vitamin C reserves, unless special attention is given to replacing this vitamin through the diet; an increased tendency to infection (witness how easily an epidemic of influenza knocks over its victims during times of a local or national crisis); and high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries-that surplus amount of cholesterol from the overstimulated adrenals has to land some place, and where more convenient than on the walls of your arteries where it clogs the free flowing of the blood, causing the arteries to 'harden'? If you want to feel and look younger than you are, you'd better stop setting off those mental and emotional 'false alarms' that keep your body wound up as tight as a main spring. The old proverb that 'worry kills more people than cannons' was unconsciously aimed right at the adrenal glands, since the unwise use of their powerful hormone by an emotionally unstable mind is equivalent to killing off your youth-yourself as well-by inches. A final word of advice on the care of your adrenal glands: Feed them plenty of high-grade protein; provide them with ample vitamin C (best sources are citrus fruits, melons, apricots, strawberries, green vegetables, and particularly tomatoes); make sure that foods rich in Vitamins A and B-com-plex are eaten at least twice a day; and provide them with the minerals magnesium and silicon (richest sources are citrus and other fruits, green and leafy vegetables, yellow vegetables, walnuts and egg yolk).

To impress you with the importance of this endocrine gland, I need only mention the word 'diabetes.' Although diabetes was for years blamed on the kidneys, medical science has discovered that this stealthy disease actually starts in the pancreas, that is, after the pancreas falls down on the job of secreting insulin, one of its hormones. When not enough insulin is produced, the bloodstream becomes overcharged with sugar. Insulin helps the body 'burn' its sugar, converting it into energy. When not enough insulin is produced because of a sluggish or diseased pancreas, unused sugar lies in the bloodstream like unburned coal in a stove. The quickest way to put your pancreas out of order is to stuff yourself continually with sweet and starchy foods. After you have committed this dietary crime for years on end, the pancreas becomes discouraged and gives up trying to produce enough insulin to burn all the sugar piling up in the bloodstream. Then, my friend, you have diabetes-a controllable disease, but definitely not curable, and a potential killer at any unguarded moment. As though the job of burning sugar isn't work enough, the pancreas must also pour enough enzymes (substances that speed up digestion in the body) into the upper intestine to help digest starches and sugars before they can be converted into blood sugar. 
From this you can readily appreciate what an endless task it finally becomes for the pancreas of the heavy sugar-and-starch eater: Work hard to produce enough enzymes and insulin to take care of a high-carbohydrate meal, and then be compelled to do the same thing over again in a few hours -not just today, or tomorrow, but year in and year out. Any organ or gland of the body is bound to wear out under the burden of a job greater than nature designed it to perform. If you want to show a little consideration for your hardworking pancreas, give it plenty of protein foods, since protein is necessary in the body to assure a normal production of the hormone insulin. The minerals sulphur and chlorine (found in green vegetables, all berries, fresh coconut, egg yolk, cheese-particularly Roquefort, dairy products, lean meats, salt-water fish, lobster, crabs, mussels and shrimp) are all stimulating to the pancreas.

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