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The Benefits of Cod Liver Oil for your Health
Cod Liver Oil: The Number One Superfood
By Krispin Sullivan, CN
Doctor Price was right, as usual. Cod liver oil is very good for you, more
than you ever knew. Research studies ranging from 1918-2001 give cod liver
oil an A+ rating. This marvelous golden oil contains large amounts of
elongated omega-3 fatty acids, preformed vitamin A and the sunlight vitamin
D, essential nutrients that are hard to obtain in sufficient amounts in the
modern diet. Samples may also naturally contain small amounts of the
important bone- and blood-maintainer vitamin K.
There is hardly a disease in the books that does not respond well to
treatment that includes cod liver oil, and not just infectious diseases but
also chronic modern diseases like heart disease and cancer. Cod liver oil
provides vitamin D that helps build strong bones in children and helps
prevent osteoporosis in adults. The fatty acids in cod liver oil are also
very important for the development of the brain and nervous system. "If you
want to prevent learning disabilities in your children," said David
Horrobin, distinguished medical and biochemical researcher, "feed them cod
liver oil."
Cod liver oil contains more vitamin A and more vitamin D per unit weight
than any other common food. One hundred grams of regular cod liver oil
provides 100,000 IU of vitamin A, almost three times more than beef liver,
the next richest source; and 10,000 IU vitamin D, almost four times more
than lard, the next richest source. Of course, cod liver oil is only
consumed in small amounts, but even a tablespoon (about 15 grams) provides
well over the recommended daily allowance for both nutrients.
In addition, cod liveroil contains 7 percent each of the elongated omega-3
fatty acids EPA and DHA. EPA is the precursor of important prostaglandins,
localized tissue hormones that help the body deal with inflammation; and DHA
is extremely important for the development and function of the brain and
nervous system. So it's no surprise that in numerous studies cod liver oil
has proven to be a powerhouse in fighting disease.
GOOD FOR WHAT AILS YOU
Cod liver oil greatly improves heart function to prevent heart disease and
to treat it even in advanced stages, after a heart attack and after heart
surgery. Cod liver oil alters the linings of the arteries in such a way as
to improve healing after damage. This is attributed to the omega-3 fatty
acids but vitamin A, D and K all have important roles to play in
facilitating mineral absorption, improving muscle function and supporting
elasticity of the blood vessels. The inflammation-reducing prostaglandins
made from EPA help mediate the inflammatory response in the arteries. In
other studies the heart-protective effect was associated with changes in the
muscle response to serotonin, increasing the heart's ability to "relax."1-15
In a study with rats, treatment with cod liver oil actually caused
artery-blocking atheromas to become smaller and blood vessel diameter to
enlarge.55 Weston Price noted that heart attack deaths increased during
periods when the vitamin A content of the diet was low. Cod liver oil can
provide vitamin A on a continuous basis throughout the year.
Many of the conditions addressed by cod liver oil are considered related
under the title Syndrome X. These include obesity, hypertension, insulin
resistance, adult onset diabetes and stroke. Evidence is accumulating that
these diseases of civilization are the result of high levels of omega-6
fatty acids and low levels of omega-3 fatty acids along with deficiencies of
fat-soluble vitamins. We may be paying a very high price for our rejection
of parental wisdom to take our cod liver oil.
In numerous studies, the elongated omega-3 fats found in cod liver oil have
been shown to improve brain function, memory, stress response, immune
response, allergies, asthma, learning and behavioral disorders, including
bipolar syndrome and manic-depression.
Cod liver oil is most famous for contributing to bone health, preventing and
reversing rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults.16, 17 Before the
discovery of cod liver oil as a source of vitamin D, many children suffered
greatly with deformed bones. Osteoporosis responds to vitamin D and to cod
liver oil. Sufficient elongated omega-3 oils found in cod liver oil are one
of the keys to keeping and rebuilding bone.18, 19 In women, higher levels of
vitamin D from cod liver oil improve bone mineral density.20
Two of the symptoms of low levels of vitamin D are bone pain and muscle
pain. This may manifest as pain in the legs, muscle weakness and difficulty
climbing stairs. Numerous studies have shown improvement in muscle pain,
muscle strength and bone pain scores with cod liver oil.40, 41
Cod liver oil is effective in treating arthritis as well. Researchers funded
by Great Britain's Arthritis Research Campaign found that the elongated
omega-3 fatty acids in cod liver oil reduce both pain and damage in inflamed
joints.56
Pregnant women using cod liver oil have infants with a lower risk for
juvenile type 1 diabetes.21 This effect was found only in mothers taking cod
liver oil, not in mothers taking multivitamin supplements. Cod liver oil
taken by nursing mothers improves the fatty acid profile in breast milk to
promote optimal brain development and also increases levels of vitamin A to
prevent infections. Interestingly, cod liver oil does not provide increased
vitamin D in breast milk.23,24
Cod liver oil given to infants after birth and during the first year had no
protective effect against type 1 diabetes but it nevertheless is an
important source of nutrients for optimal infant health.22 In more than
forty trials, vitamin A has been shown to reduce morbidity and mortality of
children.25 Cod liver oil was the supplement of choice in many of these
trials. Books on feeding infants published in the 1930s and 1940s routinely
recommended cod liver oil, starting with 1 teaspoon at the age of three
weeks. It was Dr. Spock who threw this wisdom out the window by recommending
vaccinations instead of the powerful nutritional support of cod liver oil.
Few modern books on infant care mention the importance of the fat-soluble
nutrients in this wonderful superfood.
As for treating diabetes in adults, cod liver oil has been used in a number
of trials with both insulin-dependent and non-insulin-dependent diabetes. In
both conditions cod liver oil improved glucose response and other markers of
the disease.26-31 Vitamin A in cod liver oil helps promote healing and
protects the retina, both problem areas in the diabetic patient.
Cod liver oil has lowered blood pressure induced by stress-elevated levels
of cortisol.32-35 Cod liver oil given to rats reduced intraocular pressure
suggesting a use in prevention and treatment of glaucoma.36 Vitamin D in cod
liver oil promotes absorption of calcium and magnesium, thereby lowering
blood pressure.
Colitis responds more effectively to the type of omega-3 fatty acids in cod
liver oil than to medication.37-38 Cod liver oil should be the first
protocol for this condition as well as irritable bowel syndrome and Crohn's
disease.
Topically applied, cod liver oil contributes to faster wound healing and
improvement in skin quality.39 An excellent treatment for diaper rash and
other skin conditions is cod liver oil mixed with zinc oxide. And cod liver
oil taken orally helps maintain soft skin and minimize wrinkles.
And what about cancer? All the nutrients in cod liver oil help prevent
cancer. Vitamin A has been part of every successful alternative cancer
therapy so far. In a study in China, use of cod liver oil was found to be
protective against childhood leukemia.57 In a study of Norwegian men and
women, consumption of cod liver oil was found to protect against lung
cancer.58
PRACTICAL ASPECTS
Eating fish will not provide the levels of nutrients that are found in cod
liver oil. Even in heavy fish-eating populations, the addition of cod liver
oil improves health.42-43 And taking fish oils is not the same as taking cod
liver liver oil. One tablespoon of regular cod liver oil and one-half
tablespoon of high-vitamin cod liver oil provide the amount of elongated
omega-3 fatty acids found in twelve 1,000 mg fish oil capsules.
As for vitamin D, body oils of fish can be good sources as long as you are
willing to eat a lot of them. One-half pound of fatty herring or sardines
gives a dose of vitamin D equal to that of about one tablespoon of cod liver
oil. But salmon oil has one-fifth the potency of cod liver oil.
One concern about taking cod liver oil is the presence of contaminants.heavy
metals (such as mercury, cadmium and lead), PCBs and so forth. Fortunately,
consumers need not worry when it comes to cod liver oil. All cod liver oils
in the US must be tested according to protocols of the Association of
Analytical Communities (AOAC) and approved free of detectable levels of 32
contaminants before they can be imported into this country. Furthermore,
mercury is water soluble. It may be present in the flesh of fish, but it is
not present in the oil.
Another concern is rancidity. Cod liver oil can become rancid if improperly
handled. In a 1988 study, peroxide values (indicating rancidity) ranged from
a low of 2 to a high of 44.7.44 Nevertheless, properly handled cod liver oil
is relatively stable. It contains 21 percent saturated fatty acids and 57
percent monounsaturated fatty acids, which provide stability. The fishy
smell of cod liver oil is due to the presence of small amounts of fish
protein and is not a sign of rancidity. To ensure that your cod liver oil is
fresh, avoid buying the large economy size or the end-of-season sale item.
Buy cod liver oil in small dark bottles and keep them in a cool dark place.
Cod liver oil need not be refrigerated after opening if it is used up
quickly.within two months.
Virtually all cod liver oil imported into the US comes from Norway, and
while all of it is safe, there are different grades, depending on vitamin
levels. The lighter oil from the "top of the barrel" has a lower molecular
weight, goes rancid more quickly and has lower levels of vitamins, while the
heavier oil, which sinks, is richer in vitamins. The heavier oil is what Dr.
Price referred to as high-vitamin cod liver oil. It contains double the
amounts of vitamin A and D as regular cod liver oil. Virtually all cod liver
oil imported into the US is the lighter, "top of the barrel" variety. The
Norwegians keep the best for themselves!
Whenever taking cod liver oil, remember the findings of Dr. Price. He noted
that he did not get good results from cod liver oil unless he gave it
concurrently with high-vitamin butter. Just why this is so is a matter of
speculation, but we do know that the very unsaturated fatty acids found in
cod liver oil cannot be effectively assimilated and stored in the tissues
without the presence of adequate saturated fatty acids, the kind that would
be provided by butter. This means that even regular butter would help
support cod liver oil therapy; but Price found that the combination of cod
liver oil with high-vitamin butter, from cows eating rapidly growing green
grass, was nothing short of miraculous, reversing tooth decay and bringing
patients back from the brink of death.
I do not find it hard to take Carlson's cod liver oil on a spoon, but for
many, the big challenge is how to get this oily substance down. One
technique is to add cod liver oil to a small amount of water or fresh juice,
stir and then quickly send it down the hatch. If you can't bring yourself to
take cod liver oil on a spoon or in water, then use the capsules. For babies
and small children, use an eye dropper.
OLD RESEARCH BROUGHT TO LIGHT
In researching this article, I had the great fortune to stumble upon a book
published in the 1930s.it is truly exciting to come upon material found and
lost and found again. Ultraviolet Light and Vitamin D in Nutrition, by
Katharine Blunt and Ruth Cowan, published by the University of Chicago,
contains fascinating material, including a chapter on the research of Mrs.
May Mellanby published in 1918 in The Lancet II, page 767.
The book describes the work of scientists E. M. Honeywell, A. F. Hess and C.
E. Bills (after which the Bills's Scale for determining antirachitic value
for vitamin D is named) who studied all aspects of fish oil potency,
production and seasonal distribution. Early in their research they
discovered that oil extracted from cod when the fish were fat in the summer
contained much lower amounts of vitamin D. Summer oil scored 100 on the
Bills scale but winter oil scored above 1,000 and some oils scored 20,000.
Their conclusion: "For a fish of a given size, antirachitic potency varies
inversely with the amount of fat or oil in the liver." In other words, the
less oil in the fish, the more concentrated it was.
In one fascinating study, they found that fish kept in darkened aquariums
and fed on trimmed raw veal muscle had the same amount of vitamin D as
free-swimming fish exposed to sunlight. So how the fish obtain vitamin D
remains a mystery. Perhaps they are able to extract it from microscopic
plankton and algae.
It is important to note that the amount of vitamin A in cod liver oil does
not have any consistent relation with the amount of vitamin D. In numerous
samples, oils rich in vitamin A were poor in vitamin D, and oils rich in
vitamin D were poor in vitamin A.
According to the book, in 1922 the US imported about 1.8 million gallons of
cod oil and cod liver oil. By 1927 this amount grew to almost 5 million
gallons based on data from the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of
the United States Department of Commerce. Cod oil is rancid oil used in the
tanning industry, not for human consumption. The figures don't distinguish
the difference, but most of the increase was in the edible cod liver oil due
to research showing its benefit in preventing rickets. According to the
Commerce Yearbook of 1928, "Medicinal oil production has increased greatly,
and the advance in its price has lessened the supply of common cod oil for
tanning."
In 2000, America imported only about one tenth that amount (less than half a
million gallons), indicating a huge decline in use.
In 1930, when the book was compiled, the technology was just being developed
to determine vitamin D potency. The accepted value as of August 31, 1929 was
" one rat unit of vitamin D," defined as "that amount of vitamin D which,
when uniformly distributed into the standard vitamin D deficient
diet-ration, will produce a narrow and continuous line of calcium deposits
on the metaphyses of the distal end of the radii and ulnae of standard
rachitic rats." "Potent cod liver oil" is defined as that containing one of
these rat units per 0.75 mg. The International Units started out as rat
units!
Testing of 18 oils in use at that time showed great variations in potency.
Luckily today we have methods of standardization and much better methods of
transportation and storage to improve the amount of vitamin D and freshness
of our cod liver oil.
EAT YOUR EGGS
In 1929, researchers tested a variety of foods for vitamin D content and
found the second most potent source of vitamin D was egg yolk. The book
describes studies in which Hess both cured and prevented rickets in rats by
giving them egg yolks. He also gave prophylactic treatment to 12 infants to
forestall development of rickets in the winter months, which his experience
had taught him to expect in the great majority of bottle-fed infants. He
gave them one egg yolk added to their regular formula starting in December.
None of the 12 developed rickets in March as expected and, unlike prior
years, blood phosphates remained stable at summer values.
About this same time, Johns Hopkins University investigators cured seven
African-American children of rickets, in most cases severe, by adding one or
two eggs daily to their diet of milk and cereal.
Like the vitamin D in cod liver oil, the amount of vitamin D in egg yolks
also varies. Researchers in Kansas looked at four groups of hens: one group
got sunlight in the yard plus 30 minutes under a quartz mercury vapor lamp
producing UV-B light; another got sunlight through glass plus 30 minutes
under the lamp; the third group got sunlight alone; and the fourth group got
sunlight under glass alone. Eggs from hens under glass produced rickets in
rats. Those with considerable UV-B prevented rickets completely and those
with less (no lamp) caused the development of slight rickets. Only the
sunlight plus lamp completely prevented rickets, showing that the natural
UV-B in Kansas did not provide sufficient light for optimal vitamin D.
Giving cod liver oil to the chickens had the same effect as exposure to UV-B
light. Cod liver oil as two percent of the ration increased levels of
vitamin D in the egg yolks fivefold.
The surprising conclusion is that chickens should either be given sunlamp
treatment or cod liver oil. Poultrymen and consumers alike need to recognize
that the axiom "an egg is an egg" is a mistaken one. Rather, "an inadequate
ration may yield impoverished eggs as well as animals." The authors suggest
that eggs be graded by vitamin content. What a concept! Too bad no one
listened. What would they think of our so-called "organic" eggs from hens
raised in barns, never exposed to light and given "all-vegetarian" feed?
DOWNSIDE
Now that I have told you all this good news about cod liver oil, I need to
comment on the research surrounding its possible toxicity. Over-elevated
serum levels of vitamin D are a possibility if you combine summer or
southern sun and cod liver oil. So if you are spending a lot of time out in
the sun during the summer months, it's probably best to cut back on the
dose. If you are unsure, you should test your blood levels of vitamin D.
Cod liver oil is no longer recommended in Great Britain and in the US
pregnant women are advised to avoid most vitamin A and vitamin A-containing
foods, including cod liver oil. Both countries have adopted this policy
because of the recognized teratogenicity (may cause birth defects) of
retinoic acid, a synthetic form of vitamin A. But low vitamin A also causes
birth defects. In the developing countries, such as Brazil, Pakistan and
India, vitamin A deficiency is widespread, afflicting millions. A 1992
survey of the US population determined that 50 percent of Americans consume
19 percent or less of the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) or 400 IU.
The original study showing birth defects associated with intake of mostly
synthetic vitamin A exceeding 5,000 IU daily was published November 23, 1995
in the New England Journal of Medicine.46 Other studies showing an
association of birth defects with vitamin A concerned topical creams
containing vitamin A derivatives such as Accutane, or extremely high doses
of A used in animal studies.47-52
A later study, less well publicized, from the National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development (NICHD), found no association with birth
defects in women who took up to 10,000 IU of vitamin A during pregnancy.
Because few women took more than 10,000 IU, researchers could not determine
whether higher doses were a problem. Later Mills and others continued their
research and determined that after serum testing and determining safe serum
levels, women taking 30,000 IU of preformed vitamin A from animal foods (not
beta-carotene) daily had the same blood levels of A as healthy pregnant
women in the first trimester who had healthy babies. The conclusion is that
a dosage over 30,000 IU vitamin A daily may be teratogenic for a certain
few, but anything up to that amount is safe.53-54
Thus if you are or may become pregnant, limit cod liver oil intake to not
more than a total vitamin A value of 30,000 IU. If using my favorite brand,
Carlson Labs cod liver oil, that would equal the amount of vitamin A found
in 12 teaspoons or 4 tablespoons, more than anyone would ever take. If using
high-vitamin cod liver oil, the limit would be 2 tablespoons. Two
tablespoons of regular cod liver oil provide 15,000 IU vitamin A, 2600 IU
vitamin D and 6 grams of mixed omega-3 fatty acids, safe for pregnancy and
good for mom and baby.
There is one situation in which high levels of vitamin A are not recommended
and that is the condition of certain types of liver disease in which there
is altered vitamin A metabolism. This is frequently the case with
alcoholism. Alcoholics should not take high doses (not more than 1-1.5
tablespoons of regular cod liver oil) and what they do take should be
accompanied by zinc supplements. The enzymes needed for vitamin A metabolism
in the liver are zinc dependent.
The most likely culprits for production of birth defects in humans are
topical and oral vitamin A analogs, not cod liver oil. Researchers have
criticized the original 1995 study, from which governmental policy has been
derived, for overstating the negative effect. Only 1.4 percent took
supplements exceeding 10,000 IU a day, not a large enough sample from which
to draw conclusions. However, it is important to never combine cod liver oil
or vitamin A from supplements with oral or topical medications for acne or
other skin disorders treated with retinoic acid derivatives.
If you sunbathe regularly and have found that your vitamin D levels are
within the normal range, do not use cod liver oil unless you are willing to
test and retest to determine that your blood levels of vitamin D have not
gone too high. We do not know enough to say whether or not sunbathing and
cod liver oil work synergistically or antagonistically. If you decide to get
lots of sun and also use cod liver oil, please send me your vitamin D tests
for my continued research. Cod liver oil use is safe in most of the US and
all of Canada in winter but it should not be combined with other sources of
vitamin D without careful testing and monitoring.
PRICE WAS RIGHT
Dr. Price was right. . . we all need to take cod liver oil (and eat plenty
of good butter). For growing children, and for almost every disease
condition, cod liver oil is the number one superfood, the supplement of
choice.