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“It is no exaggeration that the development of the colonoscopy technique and polypectomy made Dr. Shinya famous throughout the world. His experience to date amounts to almost 300,000 colonoscopy procedures. [The question Dr. Sivak often asks gastroenterologists]. Of the many endoscopic procedures you will perform throughout your career, which do you think is the most important?

 

[The Answer] As we now know, removal of colon polyps prevents colorectal cancer, and colonoscopic polypectomy is the most important” achievement, because it is preventive medicine at its best.  Tell me, if you can, that there is something more important in GI endoscopy?” (-Dr. Michael Sivak, Jr., in Polypectomy: looking back,” Gastrointestinal Endoscopy 60:977, 2004)-

 

A medical history lesson.  Back in 1969, a young Japanese gastroenterology fellow at Beth Israel Hospital in New York City, Dr. Hiromi Shinya, developed the equipment & technique to endoscopically remove polyps, avoiding what before then meant major abdominal surgery.   It was an historic breakthrough in the prevention of colon cancer.

 

Dr. Shinya is now 75 years old, he’s still the Chief of Surgical Endoscopy at Beth Israel Hospital, and he’s still performing colonoscopies, in the U.S. and Japan.

 

Why should we care?

A year ago, one of my readers from New York City mentioned that her long-time gastroenterologist, Dr. Hiromi Shinya, had written a book that was wildly popular (over 2 million copies sold) in Japan, called The Enzyme Factor.  She found it interesting that Dr. Shinya was also advocating a low-fat almost vegan diet, similar to what I blog about, and what Dr. Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr. and Dr. T. Colin Campbell recommend.

 

 

Three weeks ago I finally got around to borrowing a copy of the English translation of The Enzyme Factor from my library–but I only had it for a short time–there’s a queue of others waiting to borrow it.

Shinya’s book was directed to the lay Japanese public.  It reads a little awkwardly, it’s repetitive, it contains no scientific references, no statistics, no graphs or charts.

 

It’s a compilation of his years of clinical observations, plain language explanations of how the health of the digestive system affects disease, and how certain foods & habits can seriously impair the GI system.  It can’t compare to the scholarship of The China Study or Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease, with their depth of detail.  But it does corroborate their message–and it adds to the evidence of how dairy, meat, fats, and oils can damage the digestive system, and promote disease.

Bottom line, according, to Shinya:

 

“Over the course of decades in clinical practice, examining literally hundreds of thousands of people as a gastrointestinal endoscopist, I have learned that when a person’s gastrointestinal system is clean, that peson’s body is easily able to fight off diseases of whatever type.”

 

Whether one has a genetic predisposition toward heart disease, diabetes, colon cancer, prostate cancer, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, or kidney disease—it’s  your diet and lifestyle habits that will be the switch that turns on the disease.  And the switch to turn off the disease. 

Shinya’s clinical experience with early stage colon cancer patients corroborates Dr. Campbell’s China Study experience: “The same nutrition that prevents disease in its early stages (before diagnosis) can also halt or reverse disease in its later stages (after diagnosis).and “Nutrition that is truly beneficial for one chronic disease will support health across the board.”

 

Two years after Shinya started examining stomachs & intestines with a scope he started asking his patients about their dietary history.  Their were huge differences in the intestines he saw–the healthy ones were clean, soft, pink, with transparent mucous, invisible blood vessels, and uniform folds.  The unhealthy ones were swollen, spotty, with thin stomach linings, shriveled mucosa, unequal folds, pocket-like cavities that were often ulcerated, pitted, filled with mucous, as well as stagnant stool.

 

Shinya was determined to figure out if there was some connection between diet and intestinal health. 

Shinya’s Enzyme Factor Theory:  Enzymes are the protein catalysts that are made within the cells of all living things–and they’re needed to maintain life–think transportation of nutrients, digestion, excretion, synthesis, detoxification, decomposition, and supplying energy.  There are over 5000 kinds of vital enzymes, each with specific jobs–like the digestive enzyme amylase that’s found in saliva & reacts to carbohydrates.

 

Some foods like dairy products, meat, and alcohol require a greater-than-normal amount of a particular enzyme to break them down–creating a shortage of the necessary enzymes needed for digestion & absorption.  The solution:  Avoid the kinds of foods that deplete enzymes.

 

Consume a plant-based diet and practice the habits that replenish & sustain enzymes.  Shinya clearly admits that this is a theory, but one that he has personally practiced for over forty years–and one that has worked well for his patients.

 

After Viewing 300,000 Intestines & Stomachs, Dr. Hiromi Shinya Has Something to Say about Gastrointestinal Health. “Remember what over 300,000 clinical observations have told me:  A person with poor gastrointestinal function is never healthy.  When a person’s gastrointestinal system is not clean, that person will be prone to suffer from some kind of disease.

 

In short, whether a person is healthy or not depends on what that person eats and how that person lives day to day.  What determines a person’s state of health is the daily accumulation of things such as food, water, exercise, sleep, work, and stress.”  Dr. Hiromi Shinya

Early on Shinya had his patients fill out a questionnaire detailing the foods they ate–and their lifestyle habits–things like, alcohol consumption, smoking, sleep habits, water consumption, laxative use, and bowel habits.

 

Based on his questionnaires and the conditions of the intestines he scoped, here’s what he concluded:

Shinya’s List of Ten Foods to Avoid–All are Associated with GI Disease & an Unhealthy GI Tract

1.  Excessive Animal Protein–especially red meat

2.  Dairy products such as cow’s milk, cheese, yogurt, other milk products

3.  Japanes green tea, Chinese tea, English tea (limit to 1-2 cups per day)

4.  Coffee

5.  Sweets and sugar

6.  Nicotine

7.  Chocolate

8.  Fats & oils

9.  Regular table salt (use sea salt with trace minerals)

10.  Alcohol

 

Shinya’s Keys to Good Health

1.  Eat a diet that is 85-90% plant-based foods

 

2.  10-15% animal-based proteins (no more than 3 to 4 ounces per day):

 

  1. Foods to add to your diet:

 

4.  Good Water

 

5.  Regular Elimination

 

6.  Decrease dependence on prescription drugs by modifying your diet & getting exercise when possible

 

7.  Minerals are important to health

 

8.  Moderate Exercise

 

9.  Adequate Rest – Shinya is a daily napper

 

10.  Breathing and meditation

 

11.  Joy and Love

 

Some Shinya Myth Busters

Shinya shares a lot information in his slim book.  Far too much to share in a blog post.  But, here are a few of the nuggets that caught my attention.

 

The Doctor’s Sick Babies

Dr. Shinya’s wife had difficulty breast feeding, so both of his children were put on formula made from cow’s milk.  His daughter cried a lot, and at six month’s she developed an itchy miserable rash all over her body.  At age three, his son developed chronic diarrhea & finally, rectal bleeding.   Around this time Shinya had acquired his first primitive colonoscope, so he was able to examine his son, and discovered that he had an inflamed, ulcerative colon.

 

Needing to know the cause of his daughter’s chronic rash, and his son’s colitis, Shinya started investigating.  Both of these conditions were uncommon in Japan, because at the time there was little dairy food used in Japan–but his young family were living in the U.S.  Shinya suspected a connection to cow’s milk.

 

When he took away the milk his daughter’s skin cleared up.  He realized that because his daughter was unable to digest milk, “the undigested particles that were small enough to pass from her intestines into her blood were attacked by her immune system, as if they were foreign invaders.  The same thing turned out to be true with his son.”  When they stopped the milk, the colitis disappeared–as did his daughter’s atopic dermatitis.

 

As milk consumption in Japan has increased since the 1960’s, so have the cases of atopic dermatitis.

According to Shinya, dairy foods can damage the intestinal environment, increasing the amount of bad bacteria, and destroying the balance of the beneficial intestinal flora, opening up the door to illness.

 

The Myth of Yogurt

Although yogurt is credited with improving intestinal flora, like lactobacilli, and benefiting digestion & relieving constipation, Shinya believes otherwise.  He says, lactobacilli is naturally present in a healthy human intestine, and any lactobacilli you were to ingest from outside of the body in the form of yogurt would just be destroyed by stomach acid.

 

Although yogurt might seem to “cure” constipation, what people are really experiencing is a mild case of diarrhea, because most adults lack enough of the enzyme lactase to completely break down lactose (and yogurt contains a lot of lactose).  The yogurt is not actually “curing”  constipation at all.

 

According to Shinya, “your intestine’s condition will worsen if you eat yogurt everyday.  I can say this with confidence based on my clinical observations.”

 

The Green Tea Myth

We’ve all heard about the antioxidant benefits of green tea. There are all kinds of benefits attributed to green tea.   Shinya disagrees.  Yes, it does have antioxidants, but in his clinical experience, people who drink a lot of green tea also have stomach problems.

 

Here’s why:  although it contains polyphenols that can neutralize the damage of free radicals, it also produces tannin.  When tannin is exposed to hot water or air, it turns into tannic acid which coagulates proteins, and can have a negative effect on the gastric mucosa.

 

“The fact is, when I use an endoscope to examine the stomachs of people who regularly drink tea (green tea, Chinese tea, English black tea or coffee that contains a lot of tannic acid) I usually find their gastric mucosa has thinned due to atrophic changes.  It is a well known fact that chronic atrophic changes or chronic gastritis can become stomach cancer.”

 

Bottom Line:

If not for the fact that Dr. Hiromi Shinya was a brilliant clinician and a pioneer in the field of colonoscopy, I would never have looked at this book.  For me, its style and lack of journal references gets in the way of its scientific authority.  But in spite of that, I can’t ignore Shinya’s clinical experience & his observations from over 300,000 colonoscopies.  He’s seen health and he’s seen disease–and it appears that he’s been able to figure out what contributes to that difference–whether or not you believe his “enzyme factor” theory.

 

My own experience with a plant-based diet for the past 2 1/2 years seems to agree with Shinya’s dietary observations.  I’ve ditched the dairy, the meat, and the oil.  I’ve upped the beans, greens, vegetables, and fruit, and my digestive health has never been better–“as regular as a Swiss passenger train.”

 

Shinya claims his last illness was the flu, at age 19.   As for me, my last cold was exactly a year ago.  Should I credit my healthy intestines? (http://www.happyhealthylonglife.com/happy_healthy_long_life/2010/12/shinya.html)-Aguk

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