ALONG WITH A FISH OIL CAPSULE A DAY YOU MIGHT WANT TO ADD BRAZIL NUTS TO YOUR LIST! READ THIS!
Brazil Nuts Can Help Your Dog Live Longer
By Steve Brown and Beth Taylor
Human nutrition and lifestyle studies prove there are ways to improve the odds
that we will live long, healthy lives. It's simple: Eat a variety of fresh,
minimally-processed foods, especially fruits and vegetables; stay lean; exercise
often; and avoid toxins. Good nutrition is key. Dietary habits may be
instrumental in about 60% of cancers in women and about 40% in men.1
Good diets are just as important for dogs. Unfortunately, many of our dogs are
eating diets composed exclusively of highly processed, grain-based foods with
synthetic vitamins and minerals. Even the best of the "healthy" dry foods fall
into this category. No wonder one in three dogs will die of cancer!
In our book, See Spot Live Longer, we discuss many easy things you can do to
help your dog live longer. One easy step we can take is to add crushed Brazil
nuts, a source of natural forms of selenium, to our dogs' food.
Selenium is an essential trace mineral of fundamental importance to human and
canine health. Adequate selenium is necessary for the normal functioning of the
immune system and thyroid gland. Selenium is receiving considerable attention
for its possible role as an effective naturally occurring anti-carcinogenic
agent.
Recently, the American Association for Cancer Research reported than high
selenium consumption may protect humans from bladder cancer.2 Animal studies
have shown a beneficial effect of high selenium levels in the prevention of
cancer.3 The form of the selenium is important: Natural, food-derived forms of
selenium may have beneficial effects not shared by human-synthesized selenium
compounds.4
Dogs evolved consuming two organic forms of selenium: selenomethionine (an
essential amino acid found primarily in plants) and selenocysteine (an amino
acid found mostly in organ meats). Most dry and canned dog foods today use an
inorganic type of selenium, sodium selenite or sodium selenate. These forms of
selenium are considered toxic by the National Toxicology Program of the US
Department of Health and Human Services.5
The body reacts differently to the selenium in food as compared to food
supplemented with sodium selenite. A 2003 study in The Journal of Nutrition
stated that "the absorption, distribution, and excretion of selenium in food
were ... distinctly different from sodium selenite."6 Natural forms of selenium
are superior to human synthesized forms. Dr. John W Finley, supervisor of the
Trace Element Absorption and Bioavailability Laboratory and the Grand Forks
Human Nutrition Research Center, and one of the leading researchers on selenium
stated:
"Something in the whole foods must boost selenium's anticancer property," and
"These results are further evidence that broccoli may be an especially good
source of selenium, and nutrition professionals may be wise to take this info
into account when giving nutritional advice."7
Is selenium deficiency a contributing factor to
canine hip dysplasia?
Insufficient selenium intake can cause serious health problems, including Kashin-Beck
disease, which is characterized by the degeneration of the articular cartilage
between joints8, thyroid disease and a variety of cancers. We've read
unpublished, yet well researched, reports linking selenium deficiency with hip
dysplasia.9 There is a wealth of data about farm animals which shows organic
forms of selenium (selenomethionine) outperform sodium selenite. One of the
reasons for this is that natural forms of selenium can be stored in the body for
later use, while selenite cannot.10
Perhaps some dogs are not able to sufficiently use the inorganic forms of
selenium found in most dry dog foods. Therefore if a bitch were unable to fully
utilize sodium selenite, her puppies would be more likely to have joint
problems. Pottenger's classic study with cats shows that problems due to
nutrient deficiency get worse with each generation.11 Is the source of the
selenium used in most dry dog foods one of the reasons many dogs, purebred and
mixed-breed, have hip problems? It may be one of the nutritional causes.
It's easy to correct this situation. Whether you're feeding dry, canned, or the
best frozen raw diets, you can easily ensure that your dog is getting enough
selenium by adding Brazil nuts. The selenium in broccoli and other vegetables
will vary according to the amount of selenium in the soils. Brazil nuts, on the
other hand, are a reliable source of selenium. Of course, the fresher the nut,
the better. In our home tests with our dogs, freshly shelled Brazil nuts won
over shelled nuts bought at natural food markets, in both flavor and fragrance.
We recommend that people add one-half of a crushed Brazil nut per day for every
50 pounds your dog weighs. Since natural forms of selenium are stored in the
body, you can easily add one crushed nut every other day, or, for toy dogs, ten
pounds or less, one crushed nut per week is great! Please remember, feed all
foods in moderation. A meal of just Brazil nuts is not healthy for any dog or
any human.
May your Spot live a long, healthy life.
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References
Milner, John A. "Nonnutritive Components in Foods as Modifiers on of the Cancer
Process" Preventive Nutrition: The Comprehensive Guide for Health Professionals,
2nd edition, p 131. 2001.
Mary E. Reid, Anna J. Duffield-Lillico, Linda Garland, Bruce W. Turnbull, Larry
C. Clark, and James R. Marshall, "Selenium Supplementation and Lung Cancer
Incidence: An Update of the Nutritional Prevention of Cancer Trial," Cancer
Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention. November 2002; 11.
Patrick, Lyn, Selenium Biochemistry and Cancer; A Review of the Literature,"
Alternative Medicine Review, Volume 9, Number 3, 2004. 239 -- 258.
Schrauzer, G.N. "Selenomethionine: A Review of its Nutritional Significance,
Metabolism and Toxicity," Journal of Nutrition, 130, 2000. 1653-1656
National Toxicology Program, http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov/ htdocs/ST-studies/TOX038.html
Hawkes, Alkan, and Oehler "Absorption, Distribution and Excretion of Selenium
from Beef and Rice in Healthy North American Men," Jounral of Nutrition,
November 2003. 3434.
Finley, J.W., Ip, C., Lisk, D.J., Davis, C.D., Hintze, K.J. and Whanger,
"Cancer-protective properties of high-selenium broccoli" J Agricultural and Food
Chemistry, Vol. 49, #5, 2679-2683, 2001.
Burk, R.F. & Levander, O.A. "Selenium," in Shils, M. et al. Eds. Nutrition in
Health and Disease, 9th Edition. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1999. 265-276.
Parker, Jay, "Hip Dysplasia in Dogs: Why Seleniuim Deficiency Will Cause It."
Unpublished manuscript.
Schrauzer, G.N. "Selenomethionine: A Review of its Nutritional Significance,
Metabolism and Toxicity," Journal of Nutrition, 130, 2000. 1653-1656.
Pottenger, Francis. Pottenger's Cats A Study in Nutrition 1983. Dr. Pottenger
compared four generations of cats fed cooked and four generations of cats fed
the same diet, except raw. With the cooked diet, Dr. Pottenger found that each
generation developed health problems at earlier ages than the preceding
generation. The raw fed cats remained healthy. We now know that the cooked diets
were deficient in taurine and thiamin.