Beware Mainstream Media Hype on Alpha, Beta Carotenes

• Truth is, many supplement manufacturers are more interested in profits than providing you the products and information you need.

By James Spounias —

So-called health experts often confuse the public, possibly by accident, but most likely on purpose. You know how it is. One day you see a headline that tells you some new food or fad diet is the best thing since sliced bread. And then, a week later, a new headline pops up claiming what you read last week is completely wrong and could shorten your life expectancy. The problem is, most Americans simply don’t have the time or expertise to do the exhaustive research on specific health topics to find out what the truth really is. Thus the general public is often swayed by the last sensational mainstream health news they read or hear about.

We in the alternative health field cringe when the mainstream media starts to hype a new health product. For instance, beta carotene was once heralded as a miracle cure, especially to help prevent a variety of ravenous cancers. A happy public gobbled this new beta carotene by the bottle. But honest and far-sighted health researchers took pause because the miracle cure touted was a synthetic, petroleum-based product, pushed by a major pharmaceutical company, which was, no doubt, behind the hype. There were other problems with this new “miracle cure,” one of them being that it was isolated from other key carotenoids.




It didn’t take long for unwitting users to become aware that this synthetic beta carotene was useless at best—and dangerous at worst. Eventually, synthetic beta carotene was blasted in the New England Journal of Medicine, where the use of synthetic beta carotene was the subject of the largest series of health studies ever conducted, involving 66,000 human subjects. The study was prematurely terminated when an increase in mortality from lung cancer was noticed in groups supplemented with synthetic beta carotene. Other studies showed synthetic beta carotene to have no beneficial effect at all.

Finally the truth emerged, and negative headlines killed beta carotene as a supplement. Many people were left completely confused.

The problem was, the media reports didn’t distinguish between natural and synthetic beta carotene, let alone explain the importance of beta carotene complexes versus isolated substances. Regrettably, the importance of carotenoids was then ignored for a decade.

There are more than 600 carotenoids in nature, and six are known to be common in the diet of North Americans. They are alpha carotene, beta carotene, beta-cryptoxanthin, lutein, zeaxanthin and lycopene. Carotenoids are yellow, orange and red pigments synthesized by plants. You see them in tomatoes, carrots, peppers and other brightly colored vegetables.

Even though there is twice the amount of beta carotene as there is alpha carotene in many health-giving foods—such as carrots and palm oil—alpha carotene may have more biological activity than beta carotene. However, there likely is a synergistic effect received when ingesting a variety of carotenoids together.

Alpha carotene caught the interest of Scientific American contributing editor Katherine Harmon Courage, who wrote: “A large U.S. study has found that adults with higher concentrations of serum alpha carotene in their blood were likely to live longer than those who had lower levels. . . . The team found an especially strong correlation between higher alpha carotene levels and lower risk of death from diabetes, upper respiratory tract and upper digestive tract cancers, as well as lower respiratory disease.”

Ms. Courage further noted: “Alpha carotene is not often found in multivitamins or other common dietary supplements, which suggests that most of the quantities found in people’s blood come from food (primarily yellow, orange and dark green vegetables, including broccoli, carrots, collards, green beans, lettuce, peas, pumpkin, spinach, sweet potatoes and winter squash). And a previous case control study found that eating more of these sorts of alpha-carotene-rich veggies led to a decreased risk of lung cancer.”

So there you have it. Careful study reveals that carotenoids may in fact be a natural miracle for some people after all.

But were you to listen to the mainstream medical establishment, you’d either be taking synthetic beta carotene or ignoring alpha and beta carotene completely. Either way, you wouldn’t be doing your body much good—and possibly some harm.

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James Spounias is the president of Carotec Inc., originally founded by renowned radio show host and alternative health expert Tom Valentine and his wife, Carole. To receive a free issue of Carotec Health Report—a monthly newsletter loaded with well-researched and reliable alternative health information—please write Carotec, P.O. Box 9919, Naples, FL 34101 or call 1-800-522-4279. Also included will be a list of the high-quality health supplements Carotec recommends.




 
 
 

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Nature’s Best Kept ‘Superfood’ Secret

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