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Natural Toxins By Warren Peary and
William Peavy, Ph.D.� Natural
toxins in food has become a hot and controversial subject recently. In
the last few years, some popular writers have attacked sprouts (particularly
alfalfa and legume sprouts) as containing natural toxins. These writers
may have heard something about a lathyrogen toxin, saponins, canavanine,
and maybe other nasty-sounding toxins, and concluded that the sprouts of
legumes are toxic in the raw state and so should not be eaten. These statements
are taken out of context. LATHYROGEN
TOXIN Non-edible peas of the genus Lathyrus
include sweet peas, which are ornamentals grown for their scented flowers.
In India, where food is often scarce, some people have resorted to eating
a non-edible pea known as Lathyrus sativus. It is often called "chickpea"
but is NOT the same chickpea eaten in this country or any other developed
country. The edible chickpea is of the genus Cicer and in botany is known
as Cicer arieti-num. � Outbreaks
of lathyrism in India have been blamed on eating large amounts of the non-edible
chickpea without proper cooking. Well-cooked, it is safe to eat. But it
shouldn't matter to us at all because it is considered an inedible species.
There are at least 1,500 species of
legumes within one of three subfamilies of the family Leguminosae (Latin
for legume). Of these 1,500 species, only a few dozen are regularly used
as human food. Of course there are toxins in many of the raw legumes not
usually used for human food; that's why humans have learned not to eat them.
This is the first mistake sometimes made in warning about natural toxins
- talking about a toxin that's found in some non-edible species people don't
or shouldn't eat to begin with!� SAPONINS Saponins
are a compound found in legumes and legume sprouts. They are toxic to red
blood cells only in vitro (outside of the body in a test tube) but harmless
when ingested. In fact, Saponins appear to be beneficial,
being responsible for a major part of the cholesterol- lowering effect of
legumes.�� Perhaps it is more than coincidence that the increase in the
incidence of heart disease in the 20th century in the Western countries
coincides with a decline in the consumption of saponin-rich legumes. Saponins
also seem to be anticarcinogens; in one study they inhibited colon cancer.�
Even some of the most beneficial nutrients,
such as vitamin C, can be shown to be toxic under certain laboratory conditions.
Vitamin C is considered an important antioxidant, and substantial evidence
shows that it is involved in cancer prevention.� Yet
under the right experimental conditions, in the presence of iron (Fe III)
or copper (Cu II) ions, ascorbic acid can actually cause the formation of
harmful free radicals.6 Does this mean you should try to avoid vitamin C?
Absolutely not! These experimental conditions do not appear to be relevant
to what goes on in our bodies. CANAVANINE �Canavanine is so irrelevant
that the 1980 text, Toxic Constituents of Plant Foodstuffs, doesn't even
mention it. A 150-pound human would have to consume 14,000 milligrams of
canavanine all at once for it to be toxic at the same level it is toxic
in mice. This is an incredible amount! It is doubtful that with a generous
helping of alfalfa sprouts, you would get more than a few milligrams. There
is NO canavanine at all in other legumes that are commonly used as human
food.� Even
in toxic amounts, canavanine has nothing to do with cancer. In very high,
toxic amounts it can cause a lupus-like anemia in susceptible animals due
to an alteration in the red blood cells. These studies are not relevant
to the human diet. The minute doses found in the diet are completely irrelevant
and harmless. Just
remember that most substances can show some kind of toxic effect at a high
enough dose. Vitamin A, selenium, copper, zinc, and iron will all kill you
at a high enough dose. So don't stop eating alfalfa sprouts any more than
you would any other food because of some minute toxin that may be present.
They are a good source of vitamin C, folic acid, and other protective compounds.
ANTI-NUTRIENTS
IN SPROUTED LEGUMES Around the world, studies have been
and are being conducted on the use of germinated seeds as a low-cost, highly
nutritive source of human food. It is well-established that when legumes
are properly soaked and germinated, their nutritive value increases greatly,
usually to levels equal to or exceeding those of the cooked bean. (Nutritive
value is the ability of food to provide a usable form of nutrients: protein,
carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals). This has been shown for mung bean,
lentil, chickpea (garbanzo bean), cowpea (blackeye pea), pigeon pea,� fava
bean, �fenugreek seeds� (a member of the pea family), green And black gram,
�kidney bean,� moth bean,� rice bean, soybean,� and legumes in general.
The
increase in nutritive value in the raw sprouted seed is due to an explosion
of enzyme activity, which breaks down the storage-protein and starch in
the seed into amino acids, peptides, and simpler carbohydrates needed for
the seed to grow. The seed is literally digesting its own protein and starch
and creating amino acids in the process. Because of this process, sprouted
seeds are essentially a predigested food. At the same time, the anti-nutritional
factors such as enzyme inhibitors and other anti-nutrients are greatly decreased
to insignificant levels or to nothing. Soaking
alone causes a significant decrease in anti-nutrients, as the antinutrients
are leached into the soak water. Soaking for 18 hours removed 65% of hemag-glutinin
activity in peas.66 Soaking for 24 hours at room temperature removed 66%
of the trypsin (protease) inhibitor activity in mung bean, 93% in lentil,
59% in chickpea, and 100% in broad bean. Then as germination proceeds, anti-nutrients
are degraded further to lower levels or nothing. Soaking for 12 hours and
3-4 days of germination completely removed all hemagglutinating activity
in mung bean and lentil. Soaking for 10 hours and germination for 3 days
completely eliminated amylase inhibitor in lentils. Normal cooking removes
most or all of the anti-nutrients. ANTI-NUTRIENTS
AS PROTECTORS Substantial
research shows that protease inhibitors are one of the most powerful anti-carcinogens
we have in our arsenal. They have proven to be particularly protective against
cancer of the colon, breast, and prostate. Tannins have also been shown to give
substantial protection against cancer (including cancer of the stomach and
lungs) when ingested orally. Tannins and other polyphenols may play a role
in fighting tooth decay. Evidence shows that some tannins inhibit the growth
of bacteria that cause tooth decay. Phytates, like tannins, may also interact
with digestive processes in a beneficial way. Small amounts in food slow
down the absorption of sugars and regulate insulin levels. This is beneficial
in the prevention and treatment of diabetes and hyperlipidemia (high blood
fats).� Small amounts of protease inhibitors, tannins, and phytates are
beneficial and can be considered to be a normal part of our nutritional
ecology. This
information and further information about sprouting can be found at http://www.tfb.com/~soymilk/nutrigro/nutrigro.htm
in Sprouted Seeds:
Separating Myth from Reality
One of the natural toxins
that has been mentioned comes from peas of the genus Lathyrus. It is blamed
for causing a disease known as lathyrism. Lathyrism causes paralysis in
the legs in susceptible individuals and is believed to be caused by a toxic
amino acid. This sounds scary, but it's not, because peas of the genus Lathyrus
are NOT edible peas. The toxin is found only in the seeds of certain Lathyrus
species (L. sativus, L. cicera, L. clymenum).� Edible peas and beans are
of the genera Cicer, Glycine, Phaseolus, Pisum, and Vigna. They DO NOT contain
any such toxin.
The second mistake often
made in talking about natural toxins is to call something toxic that, in
the body, is not toxic at all but rather, is beneficial. Such is the case
with saponins.�
The third mistake made
in warning about some natural toxins is failing to say that the amount encountered
in a food is so minuscule that it is completely insignificant. Such is the
case with a toxin called canavanine, which is found in alfalfa seeds. While
some writers may make canavanine sound like a dangerous carcinogen - it
isn't. Canavanine is a non-protein amino acid that's toxic in high amounts.
In the dry seed it serves as a storage protein, a growth inhibitor, and
a defense against natural predators. As you might guess, as the sprout grows,
canavanine falls rapidly to insignificant levels.� The text, Seed Physiology,
clearly states that "Canavanine... is non-toxic to mammals at low concentration."
As far as the sprouts
of other edible legumes go, the only other toxins for which any concern
has been raised is for a class known as anti- nutrients. These are sub-stances
that bind enzymes or nutrients and inhibit the absorption of the nutrients.
The commonly alleged anti- nutrients are protease inhibitors, amylase inhibitors-
, phytic acid, and polyphenolic compounds such as tannins. With proper soaking
and germination, none of these is anything to worry about.�
Some
of the substances commonly referred to as anti-nutrients are actually powerful
cancer-protecting phyto-chemicals. These include protease inhibitors and
tannins. The problem in most diets is that we don't get enough of these
substances.