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Tired of being tired?
by James South MA
According to Dr. Michael Schmidt in
his book Tired of Being Tired, chronic fatigue, tiredness and low energy
plague millions of people in the Western world. Indeed, fatigue, chronic
tiredness and low energy are the most common reasons which lead people to seek
medical care. Dr. Schmidt notes that a 1987 survey found that 24% of adults who
visit primary care health clinics "always feel tired." (1)
Constant fatigue and low energy are
not restricted to those who suffer the relatively uncommon "Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome," nor are they direct indicators of any specific disease. Dr.
Schmidt lists a host of factors or conditions associated with chronic fatigue
and low vitality: vitamin/mineral insufficiency; food allergy/intolerance; blood
sugar disorders; hidden infections; depression; thyroid problems; physical
inactivity; poor sleep/insomnia; cancer, heart or lung disease;
antibiotic/prescription drug overuse; stress; chemical toxicity, and more! (1)
Yet more people suffering chronic
low energy receive thorough medical exams which rule out these conditions and
more, and then are told by their physicians that there is nothing medically
wrong with them, with the barely (if at all) hidden implication that perhaps
"It's all in your head", or that they're just neurotic hypochondriacs.
Fortunately for the
"energetically-challenged," scientific research has uncovered a
cluster of issues relating to nutrition, cellular energy metabolism, and free
radical/antioxidant biochemistry, which offers both explanation and remedy for
the modern epidemic of the "low energy blues."
ENERGY: E=ATP!
Energy is needed at all levels of
our being - from the microscopic to the macroscopic. At the cellular
level, energy is used to make new proteins, to bring nutrients into a cell and
expel cellular wastes, to repair damaged DNA, to synthesize neurotransmitters,
etc. At the organ level, the heart uses energy to pump blood, the kidneys
use energy to filter wastes while recycling precious nutrients, the brain uses
energy to conduct electrical nerve impulses, the lungs use energy to take in
oxygen and expel carbon dioxide and so on. At the level of the whole
person, we use energy to walk, run, talk, chop wood, lift objects, work a
computer keyboard, ad infinitum. The energy source for all these levels is
the same - it is the bio-energy molecule ATP (adenosine triphosphate) the
"universal energy currency of the cell." As Mathews and van Holde
point out, "The processes of photosynthesis and metabolism of foodstuffs
are used mainly to produce ATP. It is probably no exaggeration to call ATP the
single most important substance in bio-chemistry." (2,
p.83) ATP is the energy of life. Where there
is no ATP, there is no life. Where ATP is low, energy is low. It's that
simple.
FROM FOOD TO ENERGY
ATP does not come ready-made in the
food we eat. Rather, the trillions of cells which make up the human body
must each generate their own ATP from the glucose, fatty acids and amino acids
derived from digestion of the carbohydrates, fats and proteins provided by the
food we eat. After digestion/absorption by the stomach/small intestine and
processing by the liver, molecules of glucose, fatty acids and amino acids are
transported through the bloodstream to the trillions of ever-hungry cells
waiting to convert these nutrient molecules into the ATP the cells/organs need
to power their every activity.
Cells primarily "burn"
glucose and fatty acids to make ATP, but amino acids - especially alanine and
the branch-chained amino acids - may also be used as fuel during intense
exercise, hard physical labor, starvation, or even during periods of low blood
sugar between meals.
Once inside the cell, these fuel
molecules are processed through three interlocking ATP-energy production cycles.
The first cycle is the glycolytic cycle. This nine-step cycle
"burns" only glucose, and is driven by enzymes that exist in the
cytoplasm of the cell - the gel-like watery fluid between the cell's outer
membrane and the nucleus. If the glucose is metabolized in the absence of
oxygen (anaerobic glycolysis), then one molecule of glucose generates two
molecules of ATP-bioenergy, as well as two molecules of lactic acid - a
"waste product" that may cause the "muscle burn" and skin
redness associated with intense exercise.
If glucose is "burned"
with oxygen (aerobic glycolysis), then one molecule of glucose yields two ATP's,
but two "bonus products" are also made that serve as further
ATP-producing fuels in the next two ATP-generation cycles: the Kreb's or citric
acid cycle and the electron transport chain.
The first "bonus product"
is two molecules of NADH - the reduced (energy rich) coenzyme form of vitamin
B3, which will make six ATP's when successfully processed through the electron
transport chain. The other "aerobic bonus" is pyruvic acid,
which can then be converted by the multi-enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
into acetyl coenzyme A, the starting fuel for the Krebs'/citric acid cycle,
which in turn feeds the electron transport chain with more NADH , altogether, if
every step of the complex, interlocking ATP "tri-cycle" works
perfectly (it doesn't always happen), in the presence of adequate oxygen, then
one molecule of glucose starting through aerobic glycolysis can ultimately
generate 38 ATP molecules. Thus anaerobic glycolysis is only about 5% as
energy efficient (2/38) as the combined aerobic glycolysis/citric acid cycle/ETC
energy metabolism "tri-cycle."
MITOCHONDRIA: WHERE THE (ATP) ACTION
IS
Mitochondria are tiny,
sausage-shaped organelles that exist inside virtually all cells, except for red
blood cells. Their number may range from 50-2500 per cell, and they may
account for 20% of the cell volume in high-energy cells (brain, heart, liver).
It is inside the mitochondria that
both the Kreb's/citric acid cycle and electron transport chain occur.
Fatty acids are metabolized inside the matrix, or innermost part of the
mitochondria, producing acetyl coenzyme A to feed the Kreb's cycle. The
Kreb's cycle enzymes are also found in the matrix. The electron transport
chain is a chain of five enzyme complexes embedded in the inner mitochondrial
membrane, where NADH and FADH2 (the energy-rich coenzyme form of vitamin B2,
produced in the Kreb's cycle) are processed to generate ATP.
Each NADH can yield 3 ATPs, with
each FADH2 yielding 2 ATPs. A phenomenon
unique to the mitochondria is the existence of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA),
located inside the matrix. MtDNA encodes for 13 of the proteins that make up the
five electron transport chain enzyme complexes, while the DNA of the cell
nucleus encodes for about 60 of the proteins that make up the electron transport
chain. (3)
Research of the past decade has
shown that mtDNA is one of the "Achilles' heels" of ATP energy
generation (3,4,5,6)
- more on that later.
ACTIVE ENZYMES: THE MITOCHONDRIAL
SPARK PLUGS
In order for food-derived fuels to
be broken down step-by-step through the glycolytic cycle and mitochondrial
citric acid cycle/electron transport chain to yield ATP, they must be processed
by enzymes. Enzymes are catalysts that facilitate and radically speed up
these steparise breakdowns. Enzymes are analogous to spark plugs in a
gasoline engine. If the fuel were pumped into a gas engine without working
spark plugs, no combustion and hence no energy release would occur. Similarly,
if the multiple enzymes involved in the three interlocking ATP cycles are
working poorly, ATP will be underproduced or not produced at all. A functional
enzyme is called a "holoenzyme". It is composed of two parts - the
"apoenzyme" and the "coenzyme". The apoenzyme is a
specific protein, with a unique shape and composition that enables it to process
a specific biochemical in a specific way. For example, the succinate
dehydrogenase apoenzyme, when activated by its appropriate coenzyme, helps
convert succinic acid in the Krebs' cycle into the next phase of the cycle -
fumaric acid, and simultaneously produces FADH2 as a fuel for the electron
transport chain. With few exceptions, enzymes are ultraspecialists - they
act on only one or a few substances, in only one or a few ways.
The coenzyme is the
"activator" of the apoenzyme. Without its proper coenzyme, even
the most perfectly formed apoenzyme will be inert, and will not do its catalyst
job. And it turns out that coenzymes are always made of the active form of
vitamins, or of vitamin-like substances, such as lipoic acid or coenzyme Q10.
A coenzyme form of a vitamin is always more complex than its basic form, the
form which we get from food or supplements. For example, the basic form of
vitamin B1 is thiamin, while the coenzyme form is thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP).
The basic form of vitamin B3 is niacin or niacinamide, while the coenzyme form
is nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH). Coenzymes often have a
mineral partner that serves as a "co-activator" of the apoenzyme.
For many of the enzymes of the glycolytic cycle and Krebs' cycles, the mineral
co-activator is magnesium (7,p.159).
Once ATP is formed, it is normally complexed with magnesium. (2,p.84)
The vitamins used as coenzymes in
the three interlocking ATP cycles are vitamin B1 (thiamin), B2 (riboflavin), B3
(niacin/amide), B5 (pantothenic acid), biotin, and the B vitamin-like substance
lipoic acid, as well as Coenzyme Q10. Other vitamins, such as B6
(pyridoxine), B12 (cobalamin) and folic acid are used to transform various amino
acids into forms that allow them to be "burned" in the glycolytic and
Kreb's cycles (8, pp. 423-427, 463-478).
Even a cursory inspection of diagram 2 should make clear the pivotal role
vitamin-coenzymes play in facilitating the three energy cycles that convert food
into ATP.
VITAMIN-COENZYMES: THE MISSING LINK
BETWEEN FOOD & ENERGY
When a person suffers a severe
enough nutritional deficiency of a specific nutrient for a long enough period of
time, a classic nutritional deficiency disease will usually result. In east Asia
earlier in this century, the vitamin B1-deficiency disease "beriberi"
was widespread due to the reliance on polished white rice, low in B1, as the
chief foodstuff. In the American South in the late 1800's-early 1900's, the B3
deficiency disease "pellagra" was common due to the low-B3 corn-based
diet, with 10,000 people dying from pellagra every year. During long
sailing voyages in the period 1500-1780, often as much as 1/3 to 1/2 of a ship's
crew would sicken or perish from scurvy, the vitamin C deficiency disease, due
to the lack of C-containing fresh fruits and vegetables in the shipboard diet.
Thanks in part to the
government-mandated fortification of basic foodstuffs such as flour and cereals
with small amounts of vitamins B1, B2 and B3, and with C added to other foods
such as fruit juices, the classic nutritional deficiency diseases are a mostly
historical curiosity in the Western world. Western governments, often with the
aid of scientific Food and Nutrition Boards, have set RDAs (Recommended Dietary
Allowance) for most of the major vitamin and mineral nutrients, and have even
required food packaging to provide detailed information on the nutrient levels
of various foods, to aid choosing a nutrient-adequate diet. Given the
widespread availability of cheap food in the Western world, so that even poor
people can easily obtain calorie-adequate diets, it is usually assumed that a
dietary/cellular deficiency of key energy-promoting nutrients (such as the B
vitamins and magnesium) is rarely, if ever, a cause of inadequate cellular ATP
production. Yet an examination of various lines of evidence, both
conceptual and scientific, will show that such assumption is dubious at best.
To put it simply, the evidence of near-universal absence of classic nutritional
deficiency diseases does not equal evidence for a near-universal optimum level
(both dietary and cellular) of energy-enhancing nutrients.
The first problem to be considered
is the RDAs. Numerous dietary studies in recent years have shown that most
Americans fail to consume the US RDA for various nutrients. For example,
Kant and Block reported in 1990 that "71% of males and 90% of females
consumed less than 1980 RDA of vitamin B-6" (9) With regard to the B
vitamin folic acid, Subar stated in 1989 that "Based on the Recommended
Dietary Allowance of 400 mcg/d, our results suggest that folate intake in the
United States is low." (10)
Ironically, the very fact that
Americans consume less than the (1980) RDAs has led the Food and Nutrition
Board, which sets the RDAs, to lower them in the 1989 RDA revisions, and again
in the recent late 1990s RDA revisions. Thus the 1989 folate RDA was halved to
200mcg/day, a level more in line with the actual average US consumption of
folate (10). The 1989 vitamin E RDA was halved from 30 IU to 15 IU, with
typical US intakes being 10-15 IU (7-10 mg). (11,p.33)
Yet even the conservative, establishment researcher A.T. Diplock had argued in
1987 in the prestigious journal Free Radical Biology & Medicine that
"It appears likely that the present [1980] RDA will prove too low and the
evidence suggests that an increase of between three and five-fold [i.e. to
90-150 IU] would be expected to be beneficial." (12)
The general lowering of (already modest) RDAs in the last two US RDA revisions
has been based in part on the question-begging "logic" that since
Americans are a basically healthy people, and since they routinely fail to
consume the earlier higher RDAs of most nutrients, therefore the new lower RDAs
are more appropriate. In a land where over $1 trillion (1/7 of the total
national income) is spent annually on "health" - i.e. disease-care;
where cancer is one of the leading causes of death of children; where half the
adult population is medically obese; where tens of millions suffer diabetes,
asthma, allergies, arthritis, ulcers/heartburn, chronic insomnia, depression,
alcoholism, drug addiction, vision disorders, etc., to assume that Americans are
healthy just because they don't suffer classic nutritional deficiency diseases
is rather Alice-in-Wonderland "logic," indeed.
However, there is a deeper
conceptual and scientific falseness to the RDAs beyond their recent specious
downward revisions. Part of the problem stems from the conceptual framework of
the RDAs as such. The 1980 Recommended Dietary Allowances states that "RDA
are recommendations for healthy populations. Special needs for nutrients arising
from such problems as premature birth, inherited metabolic disorders,
infections, chronic diseases and the use of medications require special dietary
and therapeutic measures. These conditions are not covered by the RDAs. The
requirement for a nutrient is the minimum intake that will maintain normal
function and health. For certain nutrients, the requirements may be
assessed as the amount that will just prevent failure of a specific function or
the development of specific deficiency signs - an amount that may differ greatly
from that required to maintain maximum [i.e. optimum] body stores,".
[author's note] (13, pp.1-3)
With regard to the first statement,
since the majority of Western peoples (especially Americans) suffer either
chronic diseases such as diabetes, arthritis, asthma, allergies, depression etc
or routinely take both over-the-counter and prescription medications, such as
aspirin/ibuprofen/acetaminophen, allergy medications, Zantac, Maalox, laxatives,
Prozac, heart drugs, cholesterol-lowering statin drugs, etc. Then by the
National Research Council's own statement the RDAs are irrelevant to their
required (for optimum health) nutrient intake. The second two RDA
statements focus on minimum nutrient intake, and on just [i.e. barely] avoiding
specific physiologic function failure and/or specific nutritional deficiency
symptoms. This makes it clear that the RDAs were never formulated as a
guide to maintaining robust, vibrant, high energy, optimal health, but are
merely intended to keep a person "healthy" enough to (barely) avoid
classical nutritional deficiency diseases like scurvy and pellagra, or to avoid
their heart or brain or liver failing today or tomorrow - but who knows about
next week or next month?
In 1964 Myron Brin published a
classic analysis of the five stages of the development of a vitamin or nutrient
deficiency. He illustrated this scheme with reference to vitamin B1.
In the first, or preliminary stage, inadequate thiamin availability due to
faulty diet, malabsorption or abnormal metabolism leads to a greatly reduced
urinary thiamin loss. In the second, or biochemical stage, the activity of
a blood cell enzyme - transketolase - for which thiamin is the coenzyme, is
significantly reduced; adding thiamine to a blood sample from the
developing-deficiency person increases their transketolase activity. In the
third, or physiologic stage, various general symptoms develop, such as lessened
appetite, insomnia, increased irritability, and malaise develop. In the fourth,
or clinical stage, a constellation of symptoms classically specific to thiamine
deficiency disease (beriberi) develops - e.g. intermittent claudication,
polyneuritis, bradycardia, peripheral edema, cardiac enlargement and
ophthalmoplegia. In the fifth, or anatomical stage, histopathological changes
due to cellular structural damage are seen, such as cardiac hypertrophy,
degeneration of the granular layer of the cerebellum, and swelling of the
microglia. (14)
Although Brin's five-stage
deficiency scheme is exemplified with regard to thiamin, it is in principle
applicable to any nutrient, as Brin himself notes. Brin's scheme is
especially illuminating with regard to the RDAs, since the "just preventing
failure of specific functions" or "just preventing specific deficiency
signs" criteria of nutrient requirement, which underlies the RDA concept,
are only evidenced in the fourth (clinical) and fifth (anatomical) stages of
developing nutrient deficiency disease. The first three stages, although
they are objectively, empirically measurable and observable phases of a
developing nutrient deficiency, do not involve either "specific deficiency
signs" or "failure of a specific nutrient-related function."
Furthermore, it should be noted that "malaise," which developed in the
third (physiologic) stage of B1 (and which is common to many illnesses and
nutrient deficiency diseases), is a general bodily weakness - i.e. a felt
experience of low energy and vitality. This is hardly surprising, given
the key roles of coenzyme B1 in the glycolytic and Kreb's cycles and a
demonstrable failure of an apoenzyme - transketolase - to be fully saturated
with - i.e. activated by - B1, is measurable in the early second (biochemical)
stage.
What follows from this is quite
simple. The RDA level of nutrients may keep most people out of the severe
illness-leading-to-death fourth and fifth nutrient deficiency stages, but RDA
nutrient levels cannot be presumed to be adequate to keep one out of the first
three stages of "subclinical" deficiency disease, let alone in a more
optimal, vibrant, energized state of health.
Drawing upon and extending Brin's
work, Dr. Karl Folkers, M.D., Ph.D., the "godfather" of CoQ10
research, developed a methodology to determine a more realistic RDA for vitamin
B6, pyridoxine (the official RDA is 2mg), and published his research in 1993. (15)
Folkers noted that 16 years of ongoing biochemical and clinical research had
strongly confirmed the existence of a B6 deficiency in carpal tunnel syndrome,
and had also shown B6 to be a specific and successful prophylactic and therapy
for carpal tunnel syndrome. Folkers had also discovered an easily measurable
enzyme - EGOT (erythrocyte glutamine oxaloacetic transaminase) - whose specific
activity (SA) could be correlated both with carpal tunnel syndrome remission and
with varying B6-intake levels. Folkers discovered that a maximally
B6-saturated EGOT apoenzyme specific activity level is approximately 0.7.
Folkers tested 17 patients who had no overt symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome
(which Folkers and others believe to be a specific B6-deficiency sign) and
determined their EGOT SA levels before and after dosages of 2, 25 and 50mg of
B6. The initial mean level of EGOT SA was 0.35 +/- 0.06. After 12 weeks dosage
of 2mg B6 (the typical period established for response to B6), the EGOT SA
increased to only 0.45 +/- 0.07. With a dose of 25mg B6, EGOT SA rose to
0.64+/-0.08, but 6 of 13 subjects at that dose had a SA of only 0.5-0.6. At a
dose of 50mg B6 for 7 subjects, every one showed an EGOT SA very close to 0.7,
the "ideal" level. Folkers' research established that even for
"well" patients a more realistic B6 RDA is 25-50mg (12-25 times the US
RDA), while carpal tunnel syndrome patients may require 100mg or more to achieve
the "ideal" EGOT SA and to achieve complete and ongoing symptom
remission. (15)
Based upon the previous reasoning,
as well as my own clinical experience working with hundreds of fatigue/low
energy clients over the past 25 years, as well as the published clinical
experience of colleagues such as Robert Crayhon (11)
and Dr. Robert Atkins (16),
my first and basic recommendation for a "super-energy" regime is the
following: 25-150mg of the "basic B's" - B1, B2, B3, B5, B6;
300-10,000mcg biotin; 100-1,000mcg B12; 400-2,000mcg folic acid.
Magnesium, ideally as malate, succinate, aspartate, glycinate, or chloride;
400-800mg daily. B's to be taken in divided dose with breakfast and lunch;
magnesium 100-200mg with each of three meals and at bedtime (magnesium is
anti-stress/relaxing, as well as energizing). Reduce magnesium dose if
diarrhea should develop.
THE "METAVITAMIN"
METABOLIC ENERGY ENHANCERS
In his 1981 article "Toward a
Bio-Energy Supplement," (17) M.F.
McCarty provides a persuasive rationale for including what he terms
"metavitamins," and which I call "metabolic enhancers," in a
comprehensive energy supplement. The key "metavitamins" are
alpha-lipoic acid, carnitine/acetyl-l-carnitine, and coenzyme Q10.
All four of these substances are
life-critical cellular vitamin-like nutrients, even though they are not,
strictly speaking, vitamins. A vitamin is generally considered to be an organic
substance that an organism requires for its normal health and metabolism, in
relatively small amounts, and which it cannot make itself, but must get
preformed from diet (or supplements). Yet three classic vitamins - A, D,
B3 - can be made within the human body (from beta-carotene, cholesterol and
tryptophan, respectively), and are still considered vitamins. Carnitine,
lipoic acid and CoQ10 are all normal dietary constituents, and are absolutely
essential for life, yet they are (somewhat arbitrarily) not considered vitamins,
since they can be made within the body.
Lipoic acid is an essential part of
the enzyme complex that feeds pyruvic acid from the glycolytic cycle into the
Kreb's cycle enzyme. (18)
No lipoic acid = no ATP from the Kreb's cycle or electron transport chain; not
enough cellular lipoic acid = not enough cellular ATP. Lipoic acid has
been in medical use in Germany for decades, both to treat liver diseases and to
treat diabetic neuropathy. (17,18,19)
Dr. Lester Packer, a lipoic acid "enthusiast" recommends 50mg twice
daily. (19)
I have found 50-100mg twice daily with meals to be an excellent energy aid - I
have used it for the past 13 years as a key part of my own energy regimen.
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is an
absolutely energy-critical cellular nutrient. When one molecule of glucose is
aerobically metabolized through the glycolytic and Kreb's cycles, only 4 ATPs
are directly produced by these cycles. Their main contribution is to send
NADH (reduced coenzyme B3) and FADH2 (reduced coenzyme B2) to the electron
transport chain, where 5 enzyme complexes use these substances to generate the
other 34 ATPs that can arise from "combusting" one molecule of
glucose. Complex I (NADH dehydrogenase) uses NADH to pass electrons on to
CoQ10. Complex II (succinate dehydrogenase) uses Kreb's cycle-generated FADH2 to
pass electrons on to CoQ10. CoQ10 then passes these electrons to Complex III
(cytochrome b). From there cytochrome c passes the electrons on to Complex IV
(cytochrome oxidase), where they combine with oxygen and hydrogen ions to make
water. This electron transport chain enzyme complex activity in turn operates
Complex V - ATP synthase, which produces the actual ATP that powers everything
we do. (20, pp.66-73)
CoQ10 is obviously the "linch-pin" of the electron transport chain,
uniting 3 of the 5 enzyme complexes that ultimately make most of our ATP.
Like many other substances produced
by the body, levels of CoQ10 decline with age. Although CoQ10 is found in
food such as salmon, liver and other organ meats, it is nearly impossible to get
enough CoQ10 from diet alone, especially in our later years. Dr. Karl
Folkers was the first to suggest that the age-related decline in CoQ10 was a
contributing factor to. Cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer's disease.
Since CoQ10 is involved in the production of ATP, it made sense that a decline
in the production of this antioxidant would disrupt the body's energy-producing
system. In fact, heart muscle biopsies in patients with various heart
diseases showed a CoQ10 deficiency in 50 to 75 percent of all cases". (19,pp.94-96)
Idebenone is a synthetic derivative of CoQ10. Various studies have shown that
Idebenone may function even better as an antioxidant and electron transport
chain agent than CoQ10. Thus Latini et al report that "A stimulation of
respiratory and phosphorylating activity [i.e. ATP production] has been observed
in mitochondria prepared from rats treated with Idebenone. Our experiments
suggest that Idebenone, by increasing brain adenosine levels and nucleotide
phosphorylation [i.e. ATP production], may be beneficial in ischemic [low
oxygen] disorders" (21)
Wieland et al note that idebenone, a synthetic CoQ10 derivative, is known to
have greater antioxidative capacity than CoQ10, which is not restricted to the
reduced form of the molecule [only reduced - i.e. non-oxidized - CoQ10 is an
effective antioxidant]. In our experiments, idebenone was far more
effective than CoQ10 in preventing oxygen radical-mediated damage to microsome
lipids and proteins. It is noteworthy that after oral. administration idebenone
can preserve the electron transfer activity in the terminal respiratory chain
[ETC] of mitochondria, thus stimulating ATP formation. Idebenone is
non-toxic to humans and has been used successfully in the therapy of patients
suffering from a variety of neurological disorders". (22)
"[Idebenone] significantly suppressed by about 10% the non-respiratory
oxygen consumption [i.e. oxygen which generates toxic free radicals rather than
ATP], which [is] closely associated with non-enzymatic [free radical] reactions
such as lipid peroxidation, membrane lysis and swelling of mitochondria. Thus,
Idebenone may contribute to stimulate the net ATP formation by the well-coupling
of electron and energy transfer, and by the reduction of [toxic] non-respiratory
oxygen consumption in cerebral metabolism." (23)
Thus a combination of CoQ10 (50-100mg) and Idebenone (45-90mg), taken with
fat-containing meals, may provide effective enhancement to the electron
transport chain production of ATP.
Carnitine is a B vitamin-like
substance the body makes from the aminos lysine and methionine, with the help of
vitamins B3, B6 and C. (24)
Carnitine is generally found in the same animal foods that are rich in CoQ10.
Carnitine is the only substance that will serve to transport fats (fatty acids)
into the mitochondrial matrix, where they can be converted to acetyl coenzyme A
and "plugged in" to the Kreb's cycle to produce ATP. Without a
carnitine "escort," the fatty acids cannot pass through the inner
mitochondrial membrane. (24)
Carnitine also functions to couple pyruvic acid from the glycolytic cycle to the
Kreb's cycle, especially in conditions of maximal physical exertion, thus
enhancing ATP production when it is most in demand. (25)
Carnitine expert Brian Leibovitz in
a 1993 review article wrote that "...studies of endurance athletes have
revealed that subjects given 2g of carnitine (twice daily) had higher levels of
electron transport system [ETC] components. Specifically, carnitine supplements
increased the activities of NADH, cytochrome C reductase, succinate cytochrome C
reductase, and cytochrome oxidase. Carnitine supplements are also important in
maintaining optimal health. Available evidence strongly suggests that one cannot
achieve optimal health without taking carnitine supplements" (24).
Acetyl l-carnitine is carnitine's
"alter ego." Carnitine and Acetyl l-carnitine can interconvert to each
other under some circumstances. (25)
In their excellent review "Oxidative damage and mitochondrial decay in
aging" Shigenaga, Hagen and Ames state that "A rapidly growing body of
evidence suggests that the apparent age-related deficits in mitochondrial
function can be slowed or reversed by Acetyl l-carnitine, a normal component of
the inner mitochondrial membrane that serves as a precursor from acetyl-CoA as
well as the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Acetyl l-carnitine has been
shown to reverse the age-related decrease in the levels of mitochondrial
membrane phospholipid cardiolipin and the activity of the phosphate carrier in
rat heart mitochondria. Acetyl l-carnitine's function in the aging brain
is supported by its ability to create a shift in ATP production from [anaerobic]
glycolytic pathways to mitochondria. It is plausible that Acetyl
l-carnitine can increase the metabolic efficiency [of ATP production] of
compromised sub-population of mitochondria and cause a redistribution of the
metabolic workload, resulting in increased cellular efficiency."
(3)
The various performance studies
cited by Leibovitz typically use 2-4 grams per day of carnitine (24)
Robert Crayhon in his book The Carnitine Miracle recommends 1-4 grams
daily. He writes that "Acetyl l-carnitine in particular appears to be
important in maximizing carbohydrate metabolism. Older adults benefit
greatly from carnitine during exercise. Carnitine levels decline with age.
For these and many other reasons, carnitine is a must supplement for those over
forty who want to maximize their energy and exercise endurance" (11,pp.70-71)
For those who wish to gain both the
energy enhancing and mitochondrial rejuvenation effects of carnitine/Acetyl
l-carnitine, a regimen of 1 gram carnitine plus 500mg Acetyl l-carnitine twice
daily will probably be a reasonable dose.
NADH: THE ENERGIZING COENZYME
As discussed earlier, NADH is the
key molecule used in the electron transport chain to generate ATP. Both
the aerobic glycolytic and Kreb's cycle generate NADH that the electron
transport chain then "converts" to ATP through its five enzyme
assemblies. It is almost literally true to say that, given a healthy
glycolytic system and mitochondrial citric acid cycle/electron transport chain,
NADH=ATP. It is then a major breakthrough in energy supplementation that has
occurred in the 1990's. The first stabilized, absorbable NADH supplement was
developed by Georg Birkmayer, M.D., Ph.D., in 1993. Birkmayer has used his
oral NADH successfully in a published open-label trial as medication in 205
patients suffering from depression (of which fatigue is a common symptom) (26)
Birkmayer has also successfully used a daily 5mg NADH dose in both an open-label
trial with 470 Parkinson patients, as well as with 60 Parkinson patients at a
German clinic in a double blind trial (26)
In a 1995 study conducted with competitive-level cyclists and long-distance
runners using 5mg NADH daily, a significant range of performance improvements
was found, including increased oxygen capacity, decreased reaction time, and
greater mental activity and alertness (26)
In a recent study performed with a European soccer team, players were given 5mg
NADH for one month. Blood levels of L-dopa and noradrenaline were
increased, and vigilance, alertness, concentration, and stress capacity
improved. (26)
Birkmayer points out that "A deficiency of NADH will result in an energy
deficit at the cellular level, the symptom of which is fatigue. The more NADH a
cell has available, the more [ATP] energy it can produce. Unfortunately,
the level of NADH in our body declines with aging and so do the NADH-dependent
enzymes, in particular those for energy production" (26)
A daily dose of 5-10mg NADH, taken upon arising on an empty stomach, should be a
key part of any serious energy-enhancement program.
ATP: THE ULTIMATE ENERGY SUPPLEMENT?
In his 1981 bio-energy supplement
article, McCarty points out that various nucleosides (adenosine, inosine) and
nucleotides (ATP, inosine monophosphate) have been used clinically in Europe for
decades. Adenosine and ATP have been the preferred German
nucleoside/tides. They have been used to reduce angina pain and
lower/eliminate nitoglycerin requirements in angina heart patients, and to
improve psychological status in cerebral atherosclerosis patients. (17)
"Although all tissues require [adenosine] nucleotides for an energy source
(ATP), not all tissues have an optimal capacity for de novo nucleotide
production. Indeed it appears that many tissues have an absolute or partial
dependence on an external source. If they are to function optimally, most cell
membranes possess transport mechanisms enabling the transfer of nucleosides (the
non-phosphorylated form of nucleotides) from the extracellular space [i.e.
blood] to the cytosol, where these nucleosides can then be phosphorylated to
nucleotides [e.g. AMP, ADP, ATP] by special kinases. Hepatocyte [liver
cell] ATP levels can indeed be substantially raised by adenosine,".
(17) McCarty notes that nucleotides
such as ATP are quickly converted into nucleosides by blood phosphatase enzymes,
when given by injection or sublingually. Nucleosides are digested when
swallowed. But since cells can absorb blood-carried adenosine and convert
it to AMP and ADP, the precursors of ATP and sublingual ATP supplements promise
a "short-cut" way to quickly raise cellular ATP levels. Indeed, when
AMP and ADP levels build up inside cells, this serves as a signal to activate
mitochondrial ATP production via the electron transport chain, using the ADP as
substrate for ATP. (2,pp.83-85)
That is why the 1975 paper by Lund et al was able to report a 3-fold increase in
ATP and adenosine nucleotides in liver cells (in vitro) 60 minutes after adding
0.5mM of adenosine. (27)
In the various German studies
McCarty reported on, modest doses of adenosine (12mg intramuscularly 3 times
weekly, plus 2-3mg sublingually per day) brought significant clinical benefit.
Thus taking one - three 10mg sublingual ATP tabs daily may prove an effective
way to boost cellular ATP levels, especially when combined with previously
discussed energy-enhancing measures.
FREE RADICALS: MITOCHONDRIA'S WORST
NIGHTMARE
So far this article has focused on
"offensive" ways to boost ATP energy levels. However, it pays to
"play defense" as well, due to the unique susceptibility of
mitochondria to free radical damage.
"Oxidants [free radicals] are
produced continuously at a high rate as a by-product of aerobic metabolism.
These oxidants include superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl
radicals (the same oxidants produced by radiation), and possibly singlet oxygen.
They damage cellular macromolecules, including DNA, protein and lipid.
Mitochondria constitute the greatest source of oxidants. Cross-links of
inner mitochondrial membrane proteins by oxidants, or reactive aldehydes
generated from lipid peroxidation, may also result in increased [superoxide] and
hydrogen peroxide production, thus further increasing the damage that can lead
to mitochondrial dysfunction.
Studies in mammalian cell culture
show that oxidative stress can adversely affect the activity of key
mitochondrial enzymes and subsequently lead to a decline in ATP production.
Oxidant-induced damage to inner mitochondrial membrane proteins can lead to
increased leakage of [superoxide] and hydrogen peroxide that may cause
[mitochondrial] DNA mutations." (3)
It thus turns out that by increasing
mitochondrial ATP production, we are increasing our risk of mitochondrial
oxidative/free radical damage, since "a small percentage of electrons leak
away from the main stream of the mitochondrial respiratory chain [electron
transport chain],...". (28)
And superoxide begat hydrogen peroxide, and hydrogen peroxide begat hydroxyl
radicals, and hydroxyl radicals begat mitochondrial mayhem!
Thus it is essential to any serious
energy-enhancement program to provide a suitable range of antioxidants to quench
the electron transport chain-produced free radicals before they can spread and
do serious damage to mitochondrial DNA, proteins and lipids - the very
substances which make up our mitochondria.
It is important not to rely on just
one or two "pet favorite" antioxidants, such as vitamin C or vitamin
E, for several reasons. Some antioxidants (e.g. vitamin C) work best in the
watery portions of cells and tissues, while others (e.g. vitamin E) work best in
the lipid-rich membranes of cells, mitochondria, ribsomes, etc. Also,
different antioxidants quench different free radicals - vitamin E (tocopherol)
quenches singlet oxygen and polyunsaturated fatty acid radicals, while vitamin C
neutralizes hydroxyl and superoxide radicals. (29,
p.48)
Another important aspect of
antioxidants is their ability to regenerate each other. When tocopherol
quenches a free radical, it itself becomes a (weak) radical - the tocopheryl
quinone radical. But fortunately ascorbate can regenerate tocopheryl radical
back to tocopherol for reuse. But the ascorbate becomes oxidized into
dehydroascorbic acid (DHA).
Fortunately along comes glutathione
to reconvert DHA back to C; but now glutathione is oxidized. Lipoic acid,
in its reduced from DHLA, can then regenerate oxidized glutathione. (18)
And NADH can regenerate oxidized lipoic acid. (18)
CONCLUSIONS
Lester Packer, one of the world's
foremost free radical/antioxidant researchers, has discovered a network of 5
chief antioxidants which mutually reinforce and regenerate each other.
They are lipoic acid, vitamin E, vitamin C, CoQ10, and glutathione. (19)
Birkmayer notes that NADH is the most powerful antioxidant of all, in addition
to being the chief fuel for ATP production. (26)
Thus three of the chief
ATP-enhancers - CoQ10, lipoic acid, and NADH - are also three of the key
mitochondria-protecting antioxidants. And as noted earlier, Idebenone is
an even more effective CoQ10-like antioxidant than CoQ10 itself. Packer
has also reported that lipoic acid supplements can boost cellular glutathione
levels "an astounding 30%". (19,p.35)
Thus, by adding 100-400 IU vitamin E
as mixed tocopherols or d-alpha tocopheryl succinate (taken with a
fat-containing meal) and 250-500mg vitamin C (ascorbic acid or magnesium
ascorbate) three or four times daily to the previously described ATP-enhancement
regimen, one has safely "covered all the bases" in preventing the very
mitochondrial damage that might otherwise ensue from successfully increasing
ATP-production through energy-enhancement supplements.
The energy-supplement program
described in this article is intended for "reasonably healthy" people.
Those suffering any serious illness, especially liver, kidney, or intestinal
disease, may need to modify and/or use it under medical supervision.
THE ENERGY PROGRAM AT A GLANCE
| Vitamin B1, B2, B6 |
5-50mg |
breakfast and/or lunch |
|
Vitamin B3, B5 |
50-100mg |
breakfast and/or lunch |
|
Biotin |
150-5,000mcg |
breakfast and/or lunch |
|
Folic |
200-1,000mcg |
breakfast and/or lunch |
|
Magnesium |
100-200mg |
two to four times daily |
|
Alpha-lipoic acid |
50-100mg |
breakfast and/or lunch |
|
CoQ10 |
30-60mg |
breakfast and/or lunch |
|
Carnitine |
500-1500mg |
AM and PM - empty stomach |
|
Vitamin E |
100-400 IU |
daily with fat-containing meal |
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