If you are one of the estimated
40 million Americans plagued with allergies, asthma, atopic
eczema or hay fever you may need to probe the root cause of
your ailment.
Medically, these dissimilar disorders may actually be
linked to one another by what is called "atopic illness,"
brought about by a lack of certain essential blood
ingredients needed by the body to synthesize prostaglandins
(PGs).
What are prostaglandins? Cellular molecules of
unsaturated fatty acids which, over the short term, act like
hormones in helping to regulate basic body processes, such
as in controlling blood pressure or smooth muscle
contraction. PGE1, one particular prostaglandin, contributes
to dilating blood vessels, inhibiting blood clotting,
reducing inflammation and, among other significant
functions, lowering cholesterol.
Some of us have difficulty synthesizing prostaglandins
It is difficult for some of us to synthesize these
life-promoting prostaglandins inasmuch as we don't take in
enough essential fatty acids (EFAs) to supply the raw
materials. (The World Health Organization recommends that
adults take three percent of their total calories as EFAs
and that lactating women and children take in five percent
of their total calories as EFAs.)
Can we derive enough EFAs from the usual polyunsaturates,
like vegetable oils? Not always, because all polyunsaturates
are not biologically active. For example, vegetable oils are
rich in linoleic acid -- an essential raw material for
prostaglandins -- but coconut and palm oils are not.
Further, vegetable oils, as a result of the processing for
cooking fats and margarines, often lose their EFA
effectiveness.
Even with a high enough intake of EFAs and linoleic acid,
there is not always full assurance that these fatty acids
will go through the proper biochemical conversions to become
prostaglandins. Linoleic acid must first be translated into
gammalinolenic acid (GLA) and, finally, into
dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (DGLA).
Breast-feeding infants can get GLA, DGLA and certain PGs
ready-made from their mother's milk. The rest of us obtain
it through the metabolism of ingested linoleic acid. Females
convert this acid into GLA far more effectively than do
males. Therefore, men require a greater linoleic acid
intake.
Evening primrose oil supplements
can help you overcome biological complexities
Conversion was a complex problem to males, and even to
some females, until a scientific experiment revealed that it
needn't be, inasmuch as evening primrose oil contains eight
to nine percent GLA and more than 70 percent of cis-linoleic
acid, the EFA-active form. Finally, there is a food
supplement which detours a towering biochemical obstacle and
gives us the same advantage enjoyed by nursing infants:
getting prostaglandin precursors and some PGs directly.
If you wonder where evening primrose
oil has been all your life, wonder no more. It has been here
for ages, but not fully understood or appreciated by large populations
until recently.
For centuries, native Americans pressed the oil from the seeds
of the evening primrose, a beautiful, yellow wildflower which
blooms, primarily on the Eastern seaboard, and dies in a single
evening. Native Americans cured skin problems and wounds by applying
evening primrose oil and took
it by mouth to deal with asthma.
Those rugged individuals who, in the 17th century, braved
stormy seas to sail to the "new land" from England, found
evening primrose oil so healing that they shipped plants
back home, where the oil of this flower healed an
unbelievable number of ailments and, for this reason, soon
became known as "The King's Cure-All." Not content with
offsprings of the plants originally shipped to England,
Agricultural Holdings, Ltd., a British seed company,
searched world-wide from 1965 to 1987 and found more than
1,000 kinds of evening primrose, from which they developed
plants with the richest yield of the highest quality oil.
Hundreds of studies exist on EPO
Excited about the great possibilities of evening primrose
oil, biochemists produced hundreds of studies on this
subject, making millions of us aware of the tremendous
health possibilities within the tiny seeds of the evening
primrose flower.
In its unparalleled ability to provide PG precursors,
evening primrose oil has been found clinically valuable in
helping or managing a wide span of medical problems:
rheumatoid arthritis, cardiovascular conditions,
premenstrual syndrome (PMS), breast pain, obesity, brittle
nails, hair loss, skin diseases and allergies.
Arthritis. Relative to arthritis, Dr. Jill Belch,
of the Department of Rheumatology at Glasgow University
Medical School, carried out a major double-blind study of
those suffering with rheumatoid arthritis. Some of the
volunteers took only evening primrose oil, while others took
a combination of evening primrose oil and eicosapentaenoic
acid, an essential fatty acid from fish oil.
Ninety-four percent of the patients ingesting only
evening primrose oil reported the disappearance of pain and
inflammation, while 100 percent of those on evening primrose
oil and eicosapentaenoic acid were remarkably improved.
Consequently, all volunteers were able to stop taking
non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory medications. Of the
patients taking placebo capsules, 67 percent reported
feeling no better or even worse.
Blood-related diseases. Several studies involving
animals and human beings show that evening primrose oil may
lower the risk of heart attacks, inasmuch as its high
content of EFAs keeps blood platelets from sticking together
and forming circulation-blocking, eventually fatalistic,
clots. This oil also helps to lower blood pressure and
cholesterol levels.
PMS. Much research reveals that evening primrose
oil helps many women cope with premenstrual syndrome (PMS),
a disorder with many painful symptoms: abdominal bloating,
fluid retention, headaches, irritability, mood disorders,
such as depression, irritability, weeping and occasional
cases of uncontrollable rage, painful breasts, pelvic
congestion and swollen ankles.
Several American clinicians have related unusual success
in controlling PMS -- among them, Ann Nazzaro, Ph.D., a
practicing psychologist in Northampton, Mass., and Donald
Lombard, M.D., a PMS specialist.
Most of the women who reported "lives, jobs and families"
disrupted each month by PMS returned to normal existence
after evening primrose oil supplementation.
Magic? Not at all, states Nazzaro. "There's nothing
magical about evening primrose oil," she says. "It simply
corrects a chemical imbalance."
At one of the world's largest PMS clinics, St. Thomas
Hospital in London, M.G. Brush, M.D., administered evening
primrose oil to 70 women who had failed to get relief from
one to two other attempted treatments.
But two 500-mg capsules three times daily provided total
relief from PMS symptoms in 67 percent of the women treated.
Twenty-two percent gained partial relief. The researchers
were gratified that 89 percent of treatment-resistant women
experienced partial to total relief.
Obesity. Over and above its positive influence on
PMS, evening primrose oil has helped some struggling with
obesity lose weight. Among those who weighed over 10 percent
of their ideal weight, 50 percent lost weight without a
dietary change after taking this supplement, claiming they
experienced a reduced desire for food.
However, subjects who were within 10 percent of ideal
body weight showed no reduction of extra weight from taking
evening primrose oil.
Skin, hair and nail health. Essential fatty acids
in evening primrose oil are also crucial to good health and
beauty of skin, hair and nails. Individuals deficient in
EFAs -- or if the EFAs can't be translated into GLA -- often
show skin lesions, eczema, ichthyosis (fish skin) and hair
loss, as well as brittle, cracking fingernails.
A double-blind, placebo-controlled study at the
University of Bristol in England revealed that evening
primrose oil brought about modest but significant
improvement of eczema in adults and children.
Actually, the oil has proved effective in dealing with
atopic disorders mentioned at the beginning of this article
-- all of which are seemingly unrelated: allergies, asthma,
eczema and hay fever. Evening primrose oil is important to
those with atopic problems, because, with it, they can get
the vitally-needed GLA, ready-made, eliminating their
difficulty in metabolizing EFAs, says dermatologist Steven
Wright, M.D., of the British Royal Infirmary.
New studies demonstrate that evening primrose oil is
effective in additional areas of health concerns -- in
correcting retinopathy (deterioration of arteries in the
retina that often impairs or ends sight), in helping to
control alcohol addiction and in correcting hyperactivity.