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Efficient Digestion

By Dr. Herbert M. Shelton

Reprinted from Dr. Shelton's Hygienic Review

A view frequently expressed by medical authors and apparently held by the whole

profession, is that if two foods may be digested separately, they may be

digested together. They extend this principle to cover the whole menu: if each

article of food in a bill-of-fare is separately digestible, then they are

digestible if eaten. in a twenty-one course dinner, with the diner partaking of

everything from soup to nuts.

Conventional diet causes digestive problems

In a limited way, this view is true, else would conventional eaters die from

lack of food. Instead of dying, they thrive after a fashion, many of them even

growing fat on the conventional diet with its haphazard mixtures. That

digestion is not very efficient, is shown, however, by gas, sour eructations,

discomforts, foul stools and the presence of large quantities of undigested

food in the stools. At least half of the food eaten by most people is passed

out undigested.

It is commonly held that foods may be taken into the digestive tract in the

most indiscriminate and haphazard manner, in any possible combination, and in

whatever amount the eater may desire will be well and efficiently digested.

This view is not based upon physiology, but upon the determination of the

profession that the customary practices of the people shall not be distrubed.

Every student of physiology is well aware that the digestive enzymes have

certain well-defined limitations and that different digestive juices are

secreted for use in digesting different kinds of food substances. These

limitations should be respected in our eating habits.

Proper food combining does not cause digestive problems

The inhibiting effect upon protein digestion of acids, sweets and fats makes it

important to avoid combining these three types of foods. Good digestion depends

upon a number of factors, but simplicity of meals with combin ations of foods

that do not overstep the known enzymic limitations is one of the most important

of these factors.

Vinegar retards digestion

Experiments have shown that as small a portion of vinegar as one in 5,000

sppreciab1y diminishes the digestion of starch by its inhibiting or destructive

effect upon the salivary amylase. One part in 1,000 renders starch digestion

very slow and twice this quantity arrests it altogether. From these facts it

becomes evident that vinegar, pickles (saturated with vinegar), salads on which

vinegar has been sprinkled and salad dressings containing vinegir, are

unwholesome substances to take into the human digestive tract, especially when

taken with starchy foods such as cereals, bread, legumes, potatoes and the

like.

Vinegar is not an evil merely because its highly toxic acetic acid content

destroys ptylain (salivary amylase), but it also contains alcohol, which

precipitates the pepsin of the gastric juice and retards or prevents gastric

digestion of proteins. What wonder then that pickles and vinegar have been

found useful in reducing weight. They cripple the first two stages of

digestion. My readers should know that apple cider vinegar, which is so much

lauded today as a "wonder drug" in folk medicine con tains both acetic acid and

alcohol and is unfit for use, not alone because it impairs digestion, but also

because it contains these two virulent poisons.

Acids destroy digestive enzymes

All acids destroy salivary amylase, the starch-splitting enzyme in the saliva,

and thus arrest starch digestion in the mouth and stomach. Even those acids

that are valuable as food, such as the acids of pineapples, grapefruit,

oranges, tangerines, lemons, limes, tomatoes, apples, grapes, peaches,

cherries, etc., destroy the amylase of the saliva and arrest the digestion of

starch. For this reason, such foods should not be eaten at the same meal with

starches-potatoes, bread, cereals, le gumes (beans and peas), Jerusalem

artichokes, carrots, cauliflower, parsnips and similar foods.

Acids inhibit the secretion of gastric juice, hence they suspend or retard

protein digestion in the stomach. These fruits should not be eaten with protein

foods-such as eggs, flesh, cheese, nuts, etc. They make a better combination

with nuts and cheese than with flesh and eggs for the reason that the cream in

cheese and the oil in nuts also inhibit gastric secretion, and the taking of

acid foods with these foods does not inhibit the secretion of gastric juice

more than does the fat. Nuts and cheese still combine better with green

vegetables.

Alcohol and cooking ingredients interfere with digestion

I have mentioned above that by precipitating the pepsin of the gastric juice,

the enzyme that initiates protein digestion, alcohol impairs protein digestion.

There are many other substances that destroy pepsin. Extensive tests have shown

that the residues left in bread by baking powders retard the digestion of

protein. Although most of these tests were made with cream of tartar powders,

no powder seems to be exempt from this effect. Baking soda also destroys pepsin

and retards gastric digestion. Many drugs both acids and alkalies, have been

used with which to reduce weight because they retard digestion.

Anything that either inhibits the secretion of the digestive juices or that

alters their chemistry, or that destroys their enzymes, will retard or suspend

the process of digestion. It is important, therefore, that we take nothing with

our foods that either alters the acid-alkaline reactions of the digestive

fluids, inhibits their secretion or destroys their enzymes. It is also

important that we refrain from taking foods at the same meal that either

directly or indirectly interfere with the digestion of each other.

Tea, coffee and condiments cause indigestion

Tea and coffee, not alone because of the toxic substances which they contain,

but also because of the sugar that is commonly taken with them, inhibit the

digestion of foods in-the stomach. They are common causes of indigestion.

Condiments of all kinds also, because of the irritation of the stomach which

they occasion, inhibit stomach digestion. As they are indigestible and occasion

irritation throughout the whole length of the digestive tract, it is likely

that they also inhibit intestinal digestion. Salt inhibits stomach digestion,

also. There are a number of products widely so1d in health food stores, that

consist of powdered vegetables, some of them containing highly salty sea weeds,

others with salt added. They are used with which to make broths and they are

sprinkled on salads and other foods as seasonings and supplements. They inhibit

stomach digestion, sometimes for hours.

Onion family causes digestive problems

There is no reason to doubt that all the members of the onion family-onions,

garlic, leeks, shallots, chives, etc. -as well as radishes and all other foods

containing appreciable amounts of mustard oil, because they occassion

irritation of the stomach and intestines as they occasion irritation of the

mouth and throat, inhibit digestion. Horseradish and mustard are especially

strong in occasioning irritation, but ordinary white and red radishes occasion

considerable irritation. There seems to be no good reason why we should eat

such items.

It seems that it is the part of wisdom to refrain from eating practices that

retard, inhibit and impair digestion, rather than to eat in the indiscriminate

and haphazard manner that is common and then resort to drugs to pal liate the

resulting discomfort. To avoid discomfort by avoiding its cause is certainly

preferable to deliberately inviting trouble and then seeking to palliate it

with drugs that are worse in their damaging effects than the foods, food

additives and combinations that are responsible for the initial trouble.

Nature does not mix foods

The eating of complex mixtures of foods is not seen in nature. Animals not only

stay strictly with the foods to which they are constitutionally adapted (those

to which their digestive secretions and processes are specially adapted) but

they refrain from mixing these indiscrimin ately.

Man mixes foods from all sources. He will combine in one meal the diet of the

tiger (carnivore), that of the pig (omnivore), that of the sheep (herbivore),

that of the bird (graminivore) and that of the primate (frugivore), and expect

such a combination of foods to be as speedily and as efficiently digested in

his stomach as the tiger's diet is digested in the tiger's stomach and the

sheep's diet is digested in the stomach of the sheep. On the face of it, it

would seem that however great is the adaptive capacity of the human digestive

tube, it would not be capable of adjusting its digestive secretions to so many

different types of diet at one and the same time.

Why should we expect the human digestive tract to be able to efficiently digest

such meals? It is often asserted that "normal (human) digestive tracts have

been coping with such combinations for centuries without a whim per," but such

a statement is based, not on fact, but on ignorance of the history of mankind's

eating practices as well as upon an ignoring of the facts of contemporary human

suffering. Present-day eating practices are not centuries old. The meals of

man, until very recent times, have been very simple and have consisted of but

two or three articles of food. With several notable exceptions, even the meals

of the wealthy classes have been very simple when compared to the eating

practices of today.

Mono meals ideal

That the human digestive tract copes with such combin ations today without a

whimper is simply not true. Indeed, the whimpering assumes the proportion of a

loud national groan. Viewing the eating practices of the lower animals, we

observe the utmost simplicity. "Every animal keeps to one dish-herbs are the

food of this species-fish of that- and flesh of a third," wrote an early

Hygienist, who advised: "Be content with one dish at a meal, in the choice of

that consult your palate."

Certainly the human digestive tract, like that of the lower animals, can make a

far more complete and efficient adjustment of its secretions to the character

of the food eaten if but one food is eaten at the meal. It may turn out in the

long run that all of our efforts to work out compatible food mixtures is an

effort to stray away from the simple path of nature without suffering.