What
Are Systemic Enzymes and What Do
They Do?
By: Dr. William Wong ND, PhD
The
word “systemic” means body
wide. Systemic enzymes are those that
operate not just for digestion but throughout
your body in every system and organ.
But let’s take first things first,
what is an enzyme?
An enzyme
is a biocatalyst - something that makes
something else work or work faster. Chemical
reactions are generally slow things,
enzymes speed them up. Without enzymes
the chemical reactions that make up our
life would be too slow for life as we
know it. (As slow as sap running down
a tree in winter). For life to manifest
as we know it, enzymes are essential
to speed up the reactions. We have roughly
some 3000 enzymes in our bodies and that
results in over 7000 enzymic reactions.
Most of these enzymes are derived or
created from what we think of as the
protein digesting enzymes. But while
digestion is an important part of what
enzymes do, it's almost the absolute
last function. First and foremost these
body wide proteolytic (protein eating)
enzymes have the following actions:
Natural Anti-Inflammatory.
They
are the first line of defense against
inflammation. (1,2,3). Inflammation is
a reaction by the immune system to an
irritation. Let’s say you have
an injured right knee. The immune system
sensing the irritation the knee is undergoing
creates a protein chain called a Circulating
Immune Complex (CIC for short), tagged
specifically for that right knee. (The
Nobel Prize in biology was won in 1999
by a scientist who discovered this tagging
mechanism). This CIC floats down to the
right knee and causes pain, redness and
swelling are the classic earmarks for
inflammation. This at first is a beneficial
reaction; it warns us that a part of
ourselves is hurt and needs attention.
But, inflammation is self-perpetuating,
itself creating an irritation that the
body makes CIC’s to in response!
Aspirin,
Ibuprofen, Celebrex, Vioxx and the rest
of the Non Steroidal Anti Inflammatory
Drugs all work by keeping the body from
making all CIC's. This ignores the fact
that some CIC’s are vital to life,
like those that maintain the lining of
the intestine and those that keep the
kidneys functioning! Not to mention the
fact that the NSAID’s, along with
acetaminophen, are highly toxic to the
liver. Every year 20,000 Americans die
from these over the counter drugs and
another 100,000 will wind up in the hospital
with liver damage, kidney damage or bleeding
intestines from the side effects of these
drugs. (4,5).
Systemic
enzymes on the other hand are perfectly
safe and free of dangerous side effects.
They have no LD-50, or toxic dose. (6).
Best of all systemic enzymes can tell
the difference between the good CIC’s
and the bad ones because hydrolytic enzymes
are lock and key mechanisms and their "teeth" will
only fit over the bad CIC’s. So
instead of preventing the creation of
all CIC’s, systemic enzymes just “eat” the
bad ones and in so doing lower inflammation
everywhere. With that, pain is lowered
also.
Anti Fibrosis.
Enzymes
eat scar tissue and fibrosis. (7). Fibrosis
is scar tissue and most doctors learn
in anatomy that it is fibrosis that eventually
kills us all. Let me explain. As we age,
which starts at 27, we have a diminishing
of the bodies’ output of enzymes.
This is because we make a finite amount
of enzymes in a lifetime and we use up
a good deal of them by the time we are
27. At that point the body knows that
if it keeps up that rate of consumption
we’ll run out of enzymes and be
dead by the time we reach our 40’s.
(Cystic Fibrosis patients who have virtually
no enzyme production to speak of, even
as children usually don’t make
it past their 20’s before they
die of the restriction and shrinkage
in the lungs from the formation of fibrosis
or scar tissue).
So our
body in it's wisdom begins to dole out
our enzymes with an eyedropper instead
of with a tablespoon; as a result the
repair mechanism of the body goes out
of balance and has nothing to reduce
the over abundance of fibrin it deposits
in nearly every thing from simple cuts,
to the inside of our internal organs
and blood vessels. This is when most
women begin to develop things like fibrocystic
breast disease, uterine fibroids, endometriosis,
and we all grow arterial sclerotic (meaning
scar tissue) plaque, and have fibrin
beginning to spider web its way inside
of our internal organs reducing their
size and function over time. This is
why as we age our wounds heal with thicker,
less pliable, weaker and very visible
scars.
If we
replace the lost enzymes we can control
and reduce the amount of scar tissue
and fibrosis our bodies have. As physicians
in the US are now discovering, even old
scar tissue can be “eaten away” from
surgical wounds, pulmonary fibrosis,
kidney fibrosis and even keloids years
after their formation. Medical doctors
in Europe and Asia have known this and
have used orally administered enzymes
for these situations for over 40 years!
Blood
Cleansing.
The
blood is not only the river of life,
it is also the river through which the
cells and organs dispose of their garbage
and dead material. Enzymes improve circulation
by eating the excess fibrin that causes
blood to sometimes get as thick as catsup
or yogurt, creating the perfect environment
for the formation of clots. All of this
material is supposed to be cleared by
the liver on its "first pass",
or the first time it goes through but
given the sluggish and near toxic or
toxic states of everyone's liver these
days that seldom happens. So the sludge
remains in the blood waiting for the
liver to have enough free working space
and enough enzymes to clean the trash
out of the blood. This can take days,
and in some cases, weeks! (8).
When systemic enzymes
are taken, they stand ready in the blood
and take the strain off of the liver
by:
- Cleaning excess fibrin from the
blood and reducing the stickiness
of blood cells. These two actions
minimize the leading causes of stroke
and heart attack causing blood clots.
(8).
- Breaking dead material down small
enough that it can immediately pass
into the bowel. (8).
- Cleanse the FC receptors on the white
blood cells improving their function
and availability to fight off infection.
(9).
And here
we come to the only warning we have to
give concerning the use of systemic enzymes
- don't use the product if you are a
hemophiliac or are on prescription blood
thinners like Coumadin, Heparin and Plavix,
without direct medical supervision. The
enzymes cause the drugs to work better
so there is the possibility of thinning
the blood too much.
Immune System
Modulating.
Enzymes
are adaptogenic seeking to restore a
steady state to the body. (9). When the
immune system is running low we become
susceptible to infectious disease, when
it’s cranked up too high then the
system creates antibodies that attack
it's own tissues as are seen in the auto
immune diseases of MS, Rheumatoid Arthritis,
and Lupus. Here the enzymes will tone
down immune function and eat away at
the antibodies the immune system is making
to attack its bodies own tissue.
Virus Fighting.
Viruses harm us by replicating in our
bodies. To do this a virus must bond
itself to the DNA in our cells through
the medium of its exterior protein cell
wall. Anything that disrupts that cell
wall inhibits the ability of viral replication
by rendering individual viruses inert.
(10,11). Systemic enzymes can tell the
difference between the proteins that
are supposed to be in your body and those
that are foreign or not supposed to be
there, (again the enzyme lock and key
mechanism).
One note:
many in the States have learned in school
that enzymes are too big a protein to
be absorbed through the gut. The pioneering
research done in the US by Dr. Max Wolf
(MD & PhD x7) at Columbia University
in the 40’s through the 70’s
has not made it to the awareness of most
doctors. There are currently over 200
peer reviewed research articles dealing
with the absorption, utilization and
therapeutic action of orally administered
systemic enzymes. A search through Pub
Med using the key words: serrapeptase,
papain, bromelain, trypsin, chymo trypsin,
nattokinase and systemic enzyme will
yield some of the extensive work. Systemic
enzymes now have a 4 decade plus history
of widespread medical use in central
Europe and Japan.
References:
1) Carroll A., R.: Clinical
examination of an enzymatic anti-inflammatory
agent in emergency surgery. Arztl. Praxis
24 (1972), 2307.
2) Mazzone A, et al.: Evaluation of Serratia
peptidase in acute or chronic
inflammation of otorhinolaryngology pathology:
a multicentre, double blind,
randomized trial versus placebo. J Int
Med Res. 1990; 18(5):379-88.
3) Kee W., H. Tan S, L., Lee V. Salmon
Y. M.: The treatment of breast engorgement
with Serrapeptase: a randomized double
blind controlled trial. Singapore Med
J. 1989:30(l):48-54.
4) Celebrex article Wall Street Journal
19 April 1999.
5) No author listed: Regular Use of Pain
Relievers Can Have Dangerous Results.
Kaleidoscope Interactive News, American
Medical Association media briefing. July
24, 1997.
6) Enzymes ñ A Drug of the Future,
Prof. Heinrich Wrba MD and Otto Pecher
MD. Published 1993 Eco Med.
7) Kakinumu A. et al.: Regression of
fibrinolysis in scalded rats by administration
of serrapeptase. Biochem. Pharmacol.
31:2861-2866,1982.
8) Ernst E., Matrai A.: Oral Therapy
with proteolytic enzymes for modifying
blood rheology. Klin Wschr. 65 (1987),
994.
9) Kunze R., Ransberger K., et at: Humoral
immunomodulatory capasity of proteases
in immune complex decomposition and formation.
First International symposium on combination
therapies, Washington, DC, 1991.
10) Jager H.: Hydrolytic Enzymes in the
therapy of HIV disease. Zeitschr. Allgemeinmed.,
19 (1990), 160.
11) Bartsch W.: The treatment of herpes
zoster using proteolytic enzymes. Der
Informierte Arzt. 2 (1974), 424-429.
|