|
By Sean Carson
You've joined an army of thousands committed to being all you can
be. You rise at dawn to pound the pavement, or climb the Stairmaster
to heavenly buttocks, while listening to Deepak Chopra on your Walkman.
Or, maybe you contort yourself into yoga asanas in rooms hotter
than a Korean chutney. You drink only purified water as you toss
a handful of the latest longevity pills into your mouth. You're
hungry, hungry for health, and no doubt about it, you're no stranger
to soy.
Faster than you can say "isoflavone," the humble soybean
has insinuated itself into a dominant position in the standard American
diet. And that shouldn't be a surprise. Cheap, versatile, and karma-free,
soy in the 1990s went from obscurity as vegan-and-hippie staple
to Time magazine. With mad cows lurking between whole wheat buns,
and a growing distrust of conventionally-produced dairy products,
soy seemed like the ideal choice, the perfect protein.
But like all seemingly perfect things, a shadow lurked. By the
final years of the last decade, a number of soy researchers began
to cry foul. Soy Good? Soy Bad?
As the soy industry lobbied the FDA for a cardiovascular health
claim for soy protein, two senior FDA scientists, Daniel Sheehan
and Daniel Doerge - both specialists in estrogen research - wrote
a letter vigorously opposing such a claim. In fact, they suggested
a warning might be more appropriate. Their concern? Two isoflavones
found in soy, genistein and daidzen, the same two promoted by the
industry for everything from menopause relief to cancer protection,
were said to "demonstrate toxicity in estrogen sensitive tissues
and in the thyroid." Moreover, "adverse effects in humans
occur in several tissues and, apparently, by several distinct mechanisms."
Sheehan also quoted a landmark study (Cassidy, et al. 1994), showing
that as little as 45mg of isoflavones could alter the length of
a pre-menopausal woman's menstrual cycle. The scientists were particularly
concerned about the effects of these two plant estrogens on fetuses
and young infants, because "development is recognized as the
most sensitive life stage for estrogen toxicity."
It wasn't the first time scientists found problems with soy, but
coupled with a Hawaiian study by Dr. Lon White on men, the controversy
ended up on national television. While industry scientists criticized
both the White study and the two FDA researchers (who are now disallowed
from commenting publicly on the issue), other researchers weighed
in on the anti-soy side. The tofu'd fight had begun.
What about Asia?
One of the favorite mantras of soy advocates is that the ubiquitous
bean has been used "safely by Asians for thousands of years."
With many soy "experts" (often with ties to the soy industry)
recommending more than 250 grams of soy foods - and in some cases,
more than 100mg of isoflavones each day - it's easy to get the impression
that soy plays a major role in the Asian diet. If you saw it on
TV or read it in a magazine, it must be true, right? Well, not exactly.
Sally Fallon, president of the Weston A. Price Foundation (www.westonaprice.org)
and author of Nourishing Traditions, responds that the soy industry
and media have spun a self-serving version of the traditional use
of soy in Asia. "The tradition with soy is that it was fermented
for a long time, from six months to three years and then eaten as
a condiment, not as a replacement for animal foods," she says.
Fallon states that the so-called Asian diet - far from centering
around soy - is based on meat. Approximately 65% of Japanese calorie
intake comes from fish in Japan, while in China the same percentage
comes from pork. "They're not using a lot of soy in Asia -
an average of 2 teaspoons a day in China and up to a quarter cup
in some parts of Japan, but not a huge amount."
Contrast that with modern America, home of "if a little is
good for you, more must be better." Walk into any grocery store,
especially the health-oriented variety, and you'll find the ever-present
soybean. My recent, limited survey of Marin food stores found soy
in dozens and dozens of items: granola, vegetarian chili, a vast
sundry of imitation animal foods, pasta, most protein powders and
"power" bars, and even something called "nature's
burger," which given the kind of elaborate (and often toxic)
processing that goes into making soy isolate and TVP, would make
Mother Nature wince. There's even a bread - directly marketed to
women - containing more than 80mg of soy isoflavones per serving,
which is more than the daily dose in purified isoflavone supplements.
All of this, in addition to the traditional soy fare of tempeh,
tofu, miso, and soy sauce. It's no wonder that Californians are
edamame dreaming.
So, while Asians were using limited to moderate amounts of painstakingly
prepared soy foods - the alleged benefits of which are still controversial
- Americans, especially vegetarians, are consuming more soy products
and isoflavones than any culture in human history, and as one researcher
put it, "entering a great unknown."
Oddly, nowhere in industry promotion does anyone differentiate
between traditional, painstakingly prepared "Asian" soy
foods and the modern, processed items that Fallon calls "imitation
food." And therein lies the rub. Modern soy protein foods in
no way resemble the traditional Asian soy foods, and may contain
carcinogens like nitrates, lysinoalanine, as well as a number of
anti-nutrients which are only significantly degraded by fermentation
or other traditional processing.
"People need to realize that when they're eating these soy
foods - and I'm not talking about miso or tofu - but soy "burgers,"
soy "cheese," soy "ice cream," and all of this
stuff, that they are not the real thing. They may look like the
real thing and they may taste like the real thing, but they do not
have the life supporting qualities of real foods," Fallon says.
There's No Business Like Soy Business
"The reason there's so much soy in America is because they
started to plant soy to extract the oil from it and soy oil became
a very large industry," says lipid specialist and nutritionist
Mary Enig, PhD. "Once they had as much oil as they did in the
food supply they had a lot of soy protein residue left over, and
since they can't feed it to animals, except in small amounts, they
had to find another market."
According to Enig, female pigs can only ingest it in amounts approximating
1% during their gestational phase and a few percent greater during
their lactation diet, or else face reproduction damage and developmental
problems in the piglets. "It can be used for chickens, but
it really has limitations. So, if you can't feed it to animals,
than you find gullible human beings, and you develop a health claim,
and you feed it to them."
In a co-written article, Enig and Fallon state that soybean producers
pay a mandatory assessment of ½ to 1 percent of the net market
price of soybeans to help fund programs to "strengthen the
position of soybeans in the marketplace and maintain and expand
foreign markets for uses for soybeans and soy products."
They also cite advertising figures - multi-million dollar figures
- that soy-oriented companies like Archer Daniels Midland or ADM
spend for spots on national television. Money is also used to fund
PR campaigns, favorable articles, and lobbying interests. A relaxation
of USDA rules has lead to an increase in soy use in school lunches.
Far from being the "humble" or "simple" soybean,
soy is now big business - very big business. This is not your father's
soybean.
There's been such a rush to market isoflavones that the before-mentioned
multinational corporation, ADM, in 1998, petitioned the FDA for
GRAS (generally recognized as safe) status for soy isoflavones.
For those who don't know GRAS, the designation is used for foods,
and in some case, food additives, that have been used safely for
many years by humans. For those who didn't know - like a number
of protesting scientists - that soy isoflavones had been widely
used by generations of Americans before the late 1950s, it was a
revelation indeed. Ahem.
Dr. Sheehan, in his 1998 letter to the FDA referenced earlier,
states " that soy protein foods are GRAS is in conflict with
the recent return by CFSAN to Archer Daniels Midland of a petition
for GRAS status for soy protein because of deficiencies in reporting
the adverse effects in the petition. Thus GRAS status has not been
granted." And what about those safety issues?
Requiem for a Thyroid
One of the biggest concerns about high intake of soy isoflavones
is their clearly defined toxic effect on the thyroid gland. You
don't have work too hard to convince Dr. Larrian Gillespie of that.
Dr. Gillespie, author of The Menopause Diet, in the name of scientific
empiricism, decided to run her own soy experiment - on herself.
She notes that she fits the demographic soy isoflavones are most
marketed to: borderline hypothyroid, menopausal females.
"I did it in two different ways. I tried the (isoflavone)
supplements (at 40mg), where I went into flagrant hypothryoidism
within 72 hours, and I did the 'eat lots of tofu category,' and
it did the same thing, but it took me five days with that. I knew
what I was doing but it still took me another 7-10 days to come
out of it."
In the currrent issue of the Whole Earth Review, herbalist Susan
Weed tells the story of Michael Moore - no, not that Michael Moore,
but the founder of the Southwest School of Herbal Medicine. In an
e-mail to Weed, Moore declares that "soy did me in." Weed
describes how Moore, in his own experiment, ate a large amount of
manufactured soy products - protein powders, "power" bars,
and soy drinks, over a period of three weeks. Weed writes that Moore
ended up in a cardiac care unit because the action on his thyroid
had been so pronounced.
Harvard-trained medical doctor Richard Shames, MD, a thyroid specialist
who has had a longtime practice in Marin, says that "genistein
is the most difficult for the metabolic processes of people with
low thyroid, so when you have that present in high enough concentrations,
the result is an antagonism to the function of thyroid hormone.'
Far from being an isolated problem, Shames says that recent data
tags twenty million Americans being treated for thyroid problems,
another thirteen million who ought to be treated if they would get
a TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) test, and another thirteen million
who would show up normal on a TSH test but would test positive on
another, more specific test. All in all, Shames believes that low
thyroid conditions - many due to exposure to estrogen-mimicking
chemicals like PCBs and DDT in environment - are the mother of most
modern health epidemics.
That's a lot of thyroid problems. Some estimate the number to be
as high as one in ten. Shames says that 8 of 10 thyroid sufferers
are women - often older women - like Dr. Gillespie. The same demographic
the soy industry has set its targets on.
"If you're a normal person, and one in ten are not normal,
the effect [of 50mg of soy isoflavones] may be fairly insignificant,
but even a normal person can have problems at levels greater than
that," says Shames.
Dr. Gillespie says the daily amount to cause thyroid problems may
be as low as 30mg, or less than a serving of soymilk.
A number of soy proponents say the thyroid concerns are exaggerated
and that if dietary iodine is sufficient, problems won't likely
happen.
Not so says Shames. "Iodine is a double-edged sword for people
with thyroid problems, and for those people, more is going to increase
their chance for an autoimmune reaction... throwing iodine at it
is not going to be the protective solution. Shames recommends limiting
soy foods to a few times a week, preferably fermented or well cooked.
Birth Control Pills for Babies?
Environmental toxicologist Mike Fitzpatrick, PhD says he doesn't
have it out for soy. His original concern was for babies. "They
were getting more soy isoflavones, at least on a body weight basis,
than anybody else," he notes. "It wasn't so much that
I knew what that would do, but that I didn't know what that would
do." Fitzpatrick, who is also Web master of Soy Online Services
(www.soyonlineservice.co.nz), Web site devoted to informing people
about the potential problems with soy, stresses the potential dangers
for the developing human body. "Any person with any kind of
understanding of environmental endocrine disruptors, compounds {like
isoflavones} that are not in the body normally and can modify hormones
and the way they work in the body, any expert will say that infants
need to avoid these things like the plague."
Fitzpatrick was quoted - and misquoted - world wide a few years
ago when he suggested that the isoflavones in soy formula were the
equivalent of birth control pills.
"When I first did my review I did compare the estrogenic equivalents
of the contraceptive pill with how much soy infants and adults would
be consuming," he says. "It's at least the equivalent
of one or two estrogen pills a day, on an estrogenic basis. I've
been criticized that it's not the same form of estrogen, but in
terms of estrogenicity, it's a crude but valid and alarming statistic."
The typical response by industry experts has been to downplay the
uniqueness of soy isoflavones, stating - accurately - that isoflavones
of ovarious kinds are prevalent in most fruits, vegetables, and
legumes.
Is it time to toss out the apple sauce?
"No, you're not going to do that because you get exposure
from all kinds of things, but the exposure you get from soy is way,
way higher," Fitzpatrick says. "Soy formula is going to
give babies a real whack, far in excess of what you might find in
apples. Soy is a very rich source of isoflavones - that's how the
industry markets their product. You don't see an apple extract to
help women deal with menopause."
You've got to wonder how the industry can market soy isoflavones
as a form of estrogen replacement therapy for menopausal women (and
a host of other health claims) and still claim that soy formula
is safe for infants. And while the mechanism for biological activity
is clearly defined, the industry keeps repeating the same tune:
"no credible evidence exists."
But credible for whom? Says Fitzpatrick: "We're not talking
about little studies here but long-term effects on infants and adults,
and that's what concerns me. It's very trite. They (the industry)
give half-baked answers. What you really need is longterm studies."
Likewise, "no credible evidence" is not good enough for
Dr. Naomi Baumslag, professor of pediatrics at Georgetown University
Medical School. She joined a host of others in criticizing a recent
article in JAMA that was perported to be the definitive study on
soy formula safety.
"It was not an acceptable epidemiological study - you can
take it to any decent epidemiologist and hear what they think about
it, and they use it to say that soy is safe," says Baumslag.
"It's totally unsubstantiated."
Manganese Madness
Besides the dangers of prematurity and other reproductive problems
posed by isoflavones, Baumslag mentions the high levels of the mineral
manganese (no, not magnesium) often found in soy formula. The problem
of manganese is so serious that even one soy manufacturer put warning
labels on its soymilk. The company's president, in a press release,
states that "there is mounting evidence of a correlation between
manganese in soy milk (including soy-based infant formula) and neurotoxicity
in small infants." With manganese toxicity known for producing
behavioral disorders, the press release even goes further stating,
"If research continues, showing that the current epidemic levels
of ADHD in children, as well as impulsivity and violence among adolescents,
are connected with the increase in soy-based infant formula use
our industry could suffer a serious setback by not dealing with
the issue upfront."
With all of the potential problems with soy formula, Baumslag notes
that formula is also missing key immunological factors only found
in mother's milk, the lack of which could give a child a life sentence
of chronic health problems. She links soy pushing to corporate profits
and the PR campaigns that they fund.
"There's been so much PR in regards to soy formula and I think
you also have to ask yourself why it's so much cheaper for them
to make, which means there's more profits. How come only 1% in the
UK are on formula, where it's closer to 30% in the United States?
I don't know why it's so important for them to push soy, they should
push breast feeding." Perhaps its because breast milk for babies
isn't as lucrative as milking the soybean for profits.
Caveat Emptor
As a former vegan - and big soy eater - I'm disturbed by the vast
array of modern, processed soy products that have come on the market
in the last few years, without any recognition of potential pitfalls.
Safe bet: If it hasn't been eaten safely for thousands of years,
you probably shouldn't put it at the center of your diet. We've
been sold a bill of goods that says "soy is good for you"
but it doesn't tell you what kind of soy or how much, or even definitively
if soy really is what makes Asians so supposedly healthy.
It's well known that the Japanese also eat a very large amount
of omega 3 fatty acids from fish each day - substances which have
been clearly shown to have anti-cancer and anti-heart disease effects.
So, is it the soy or is it the fish? As the industry spends millions
and millions of dollars to find something that isoflavones are good
for, some health claim to justify their unprecedented presence in
the American diet, I have to ask: why are they trying so hard? Why
is there such a push to push soy?
Soy isoflavones are clearly biologically active - they affect change
in your body. It's no longer acceptable for the industry to see
no bad, hear no bad, and speak no bad. Legitimate concerns need
to be studied - and not studies funded by the industry, conducted
by soy scientists.
In the meantime, I've located a wonderful, old miso company on
the north coast. They age their miso for three years in wood barrels
and sell it in glass jars. It's rich, earthy, and real. I enjoy
a teaspoon in a glass of hot water a few times a week after dinner.
It tastes lively and feels good. I no longer get the "urge"
to eat soy "dogs" or soy "burgers," though I
now suspect that urge didn't come from my own instinct, but from
the lofty dictates of the soy experts.
But why wait years, while ignorant armies clash over this and that
isoflavone and studies that say one thing or another? Perhaps the
safest way to use soy, if you choose to use soy, is the way it's
been used by Asians for thousands of years: fermented, in moderation,
as a condiment. In short, color me cautious.
|