The propaganda that has created the soy
sales miracle is all the more remarkable because, only a
few decades ago, the soybean was considered unfit to eat
- even in Asia. During the Chou Dynasty (1134-246 BC)
the soybean was designated one of the five sacred
grains, along with barley, wheat, millet and rice.
However, the pictograph for the soybean,
which dates from earlier times, indicates that it was
not first used as a food; for whereas the pictographs
for the other four grains show the seed and stem
structure of the plant, the pictograph for the soybean
emphasizes the root structure. Agricultural literature
of the period speaks frequently of the soybean and its
use in crop rotation. Apparently the soy plant was
initially used as a method of fixing nitrogen.13
The soybean did not serve as a food until
the discovery of fermentation techniques, some time
during the Chou Dynasty. The first soy foods were
fermented products like tempeh, natto, miso and soy
sauce.
At a later date, possibly in the 2nd
century BC, Chinese scientists discovered that a purée
of cooked soybeans could be precipitated with calcium
sulfate or magnesium sulfate (plaster of Paris or Epsom
salts) to make a smooth, pale curd - tofu or bean curd.
The use of fermented and precipitated soy products soon
spread to other parts of the Orient, notably Japan and
Indonesia.
The Chinese did not eat unfermented
soybeans as they did other legumes such as lentils
because the soybean contains large quantities of natural
toxins or "antinutrients". First among them are potent
enzyme inhibitors that block the action of trypsin and
other enzymes needed for protein digestion.
These inhibitors are large, tightly
folded proteins that are not completely deactivated
during ordinary cooking. They can produce serious
gastric distress, reduced protein digestion and chronic
deficiencies in amino acid uptake. In test animals,
diets high in trypsin inhibitors cause enlargement and
pathological conditions of the pancreas, including
cancer.14
Soybeans also contain haemagglutinin, a
clot-promoting substance that causes red blood cells to
clump together.
Trypsin inhibitors and haemagglutinin are
growth inhibitors. Weanling rats fed soy containing
these antinutrients fail to grow normally.
Growth-depressant compounds are deactivated during the
process of fermentation, so once the Chinese discovered
how to ferment the soybean, they began to incorporate
soy foods into their diets.
In precipitated products, enzyme
inhibitors concentrate in the soaking liquid rather than
in the curd. Thus, in tofu and bean curd, growth
depressants are reduced in quantity but not completely
eliminated.
Soy also contains goitrogens - substances
that depress thyroid function.
Additionally 99% a very large percentage
of soy is genetically modified and it also has one of
the highest percentages contamination by pesticides of
any of our foods.
Soybeans are high in phytic acid, present
in the bran or hulls of all seeds. It's a substance that
can block the uptake of essential minerals - calcium,
magnesium, copper, iron and especially zinc - in the
intestinal tract.
Although not a household word, phytic
acid has been extensively studied; there are literally
hundreds of articles on the effects of phytic acid in
the current scientific literature. Scientists are in
general agreement that grain- and legume-based diets
high in phytates contribute to widespread mineral
deficiencies in third world countries.15
Analysis shows that calcium, magnesium,
iron and zinc are present in the plant foods eaten in
these areas, but the high phytate content of soy- and
grain-based diets prevents their absorption.
The soybean has one of the highest
phytate levels of any grain or legume that has been
studied,16 and the phytates in soy are highly resistant
to normal phytate-reducing techniques such as long, slow
cooking.17 Only a long period of fermentation will
significantly reduce the phytate content of soybeans.
When precipitated soy products like tofu
are consumed with meat, the mineral-blocking effects of
the phytates are reduced.18 The Japanese traditionally
eat a small amount of tofu or miso as part of a
mineral-rich fish broth, followed by a serving of meat
or fish.
Vegetarians who consume tofu and bean
curd as a substitute for meat and dairy products risk
severe mineral deficiencies. The results of calcium,
magnesium and iron deficiency are well known; those of
zinc are less so.
Zinc is called the intelligence mineral
because it is needed for optimal development and
functioning of the brain and nervous system. It plays a
role in protein synthesis and collagen formation; it is
involved in the blood-sugar control mechanism and thus
protects against diabetes; it is needed for a healthy
reproductive system.
Zinc is a key component in numerous vital
enzymes and plays a role in the immune system. Phytates
found in soy products interfere with zinc absorption
more completely than with other minerals.19 Zinc
deficiency can cause a "spacey" feeling that some
vegetarians may mistake for the "high" of spiritual
enlightenment.
Milk drinking is given as the reason why
second-generation Japanese in America grow taller than
their native ancestors. Some investigators postulate
that the reduced phytate content of the American diet -
whatever may be its other deficiencies - is the true
explanation, pointing out that both Asian and Western
children who do not get enough meat and fish products to
counteract the effects of a high phytate diet,
frequently suffer rickets, stunting and other growth
problems.20
Soy Protein Isolate: Not So Friendly
Soy processors have worked hard to get
these antinutrients out of the finished product,
particularly soy protein isolate (SPI) which is the key
ingredient in most soy foods that imitate meat and dairy
products, including baby formulas and some brands of soy
milk.
SPI is not something you can make in your
own kitchen. Production takes place in industrial
factories where a slurry of soy beans is first mixed
with an alkaline solution to remove fiber, then
precipitated and separated using an acid wash and,
finally, neutralized in an alkaline solution.
Acid washing in aluminum tanks leaches
high levels of aluminum into the final product. The
resultant curds are spray- dried at high temperatures to
produce a high-protein powder. A final indignity to the
original soybean is high-temperature, high-pressure
extrusion processing of soy protein isolate to produce
textured vegetable protein (TVP).
Much of the trypsin inhibitor content can
be removed through high-temperature processing, but not
all. Trypsin inhibitor content of soy protein isolate
can vary as much as fivefold.21 (In rats, even low-level
trypsin inhibitor SPI feeding results in reduced weight
gain compared to controls.22)
But high-temperature processing has the
unfortunate side-effect of so denaturing the other
proteins in soy that they are rendered largely
ineffective.23 That's why animals on soy feed need
lysine supplements for normal growth.
Nitrites, which are potent carcinogens,
are formed during spray-drying, and a toxin called
lysinoalanine is formed during alkaline processing.24
Numerous artificial flavorings, particularly MSG, are
added to soy protein isolate and textured vegetable
protein products to mask their strong "beany" taste and
to impart the flavor of meat.25
In feeding experiments, the use of SPI
increased requirements for vitamins E, K, D and B12 and
created deficiency symptoms of calcium, magnesium,
manganese, molybdenum, copper, iron and zinc.26 Phytic
acid remaining in these soy products greatly inhibits
zinc and iron absorption; test animals fed SPI develop
enlarged organs, particularly the pancreas and thyroid
gland, and increased deposition of fatty acids in the
liver.27
Yet soy protein isolate and textured
vegetable protein are used extensively in school lunch
programs, commercial baked goods, diet beverages and
fast food products. They are heavily promoted in third
world countries and form the basis of many food giveaway
programs.
In spite of poor results in animal
feeding trials, the soy industry has sponsored a number
of studies designed to show that soy protein products
can be used in human diets as a replacement for
traditional foods.
An example is "Nutritional Quality of Soy
Bean Protein Isolates: Studies in Children of Preschool
Age", sponsored by the Ralston Purina Company.28 A group
of Central American children suffering from malnutrition
was first stabilized and brought into better health by
feeding them native foods, including meat and dairy
products. Then, for a two-week period, these traditional
foods were replaced by a drink made of soy protein
isolate and sugar.
All nitrogen taken in and all nitrogen
excreted was measured in truly Orwellian fashion: the
children were weighed naked every morning, and all
excrement and vomit gathered up for analysis. The
researchers found that the children retained nitrogen
and that their growth was "adequate", so the experiment
was declared a success.
Whether the children were actually
healthy on such a diet, or could remain so over a long
period, is another matter. The researchers noted that
the children vomited "occasionally", usually after
finishing a meal; that over half suffered from periods
of moderate diarrhea; that some had upper respiratory
infections; and that others suffered from rash and
fever.
It should be noted that the researchers
did not dare to use soy products to help the children
recover from malnutrition, and were obliged to
supplement the soy-sugar mixture with nutrients largely
absent in soy products - notably, vitamins A, D and B12,
iron, iodine and zinc.
Marketing The Perfect Food
"Just imagine you could grow the perfect
food. This food not only would provide affordable
nutrition, but also would be delicious and easy to
prepare in a variety of ways. It would be a healthful
food, with no saturated fat. In fact, you would be
growing a virtual fountain of youth on your back forty."
The author is Dean Houghton, writing for
The Furrow,2 a magazine published in 12 languages by
John Deere. "This ideal food would help prevent, and
perhaps reverse, some of the world's most dreaded
diseases. You could grow this miracle crop in a variety
of soils and climates. Its cultivation would build up,
not deplete, the land...this miracle food already
exists... It's called soy."
Just imagine. Farmers have been imagining
- and planting more soy. What was once a minor crop,
listed in the 1913 US Department of Agriculture (USDA)
handbook not as a food but as an industrial product, now
covers 72 million acres of American farmland. Much of
this harvest will be used to feed chickens, turkeys,
pigs, cows and salmon. Another large fraction will be
squeezed to produce oil for margarine, shortenings and
salad dressings.
Advances in technology make it possible
to produce isolated soy protein from what was once
considered a waste product - the defatted, high-protein
soy chips - and then transform something that looks and
smells terrible into products that can be consumed by
human beings. Flavorings, preservatives, sweeteners,
emulsifiers and synthetic nutrients have turned soy
protein isolate, the food processors' ugly duckling,
into a New Age Cinderella.
The new fairy-tale food has been marketed
not so much for her beauty but for her virtues. Early
on, products based on soy protein isolate were sold as
extenders and meat substitutes - a strategy that failed
to produce the requisite consumer demand. The industry
changed its approach.
"The quickest way to gain product
acceptability in the less affluent society," said an
industry spokesman, "is to have the product consumed on
its own merit in a more affluent society."3 So soy is
now sold to the upscale consumer, not as a cheap,
poverty food but as a miracle substance that will
prevent heart disease and cancer, whisk away hot
flushes, build strong bones and keep us forever young.
The competition - meat, milk, cheese,
butter and eggs - has been duly demonised by the
appropriate government bodies. Soy serves as meat and
milk for a new generation of virtuous vegetarians.
Marketing Costs Money
This is especially when it needs to be
bolstered with "research", but there's plenty of funds
available. All soybean producers pay a mandatory
assessment of one-half to one per cent of the net market
price of soybeans. The total - something like US$80
million annually4 - supports United Soybean's program to
"strengthen the position of soybeans in the marketplace
and maintain and expand domestic and foreign markets for
uses for soybeans and soybean products".
State soybean councils from Maryland,
Nebraska, Delaware, Arkansas, Virginia, North Dakota and
Michigan provide another $2.5 million for "research".5
Private companies like Archer Daniels Midland also
contribute their share. ADM spent $4.7 million for
advertising on Meet the Press and $4.3 million on Face
the Nation during the course of a year.6
Public relations firms help convert
research projects into newspaper articles and
advertising copy, and law firms lobby for favorable
government regulations. IMF money funds soy processing
plants in foreign countries, and free trade policies
keep soybean abundance flowing to overseas destinations.
The push for more soy has been relentless
and global in its reach. Soy protein is now found in
most supermarket breads. It is being used to transform
"the humble tortilla, Mexico's corn-based staple food,
into a protein-fortified 'super-tortilla' that would
give a nutritional boost to the nearly 20 million
Mexicans who live in extreme poverty".7 Advertising for
a new soy-enriched loaf from Allied Bakeries in Britain
targets menopausal women seeking relief from hot
flushes. Sales are running at a quarter of a million
loaves per week.8
The soy industry hired Norman Robert
Associates, a public relations firm, to "get more soy
products onto school menus".9 The USDA responded with a
proposal to scrap the 30 per cent limit for soy in
school lunches. The NuMenu program would allow unlimited
use of soy in student meals. With soy added to
hamburgers, tacos and lasagna, dieticians can get the
total fat content below 30 per cent of calories, thereby
conforming to government dictates. "With the
soy-enhanced food items, students are receiving better
servings of nutrients and less cholesterol and fat."
Soy milk has posted the biggest gains,
soaring from $2 million in 1980 to $300 million in the
US last year.10 Recent advances in processing have
transformed the gray, thin, bitter, beany-tasting Asian
beverage into a product that Western consumers will
accept - one that tastes like a milkshake, but without
the guilt.
Processing miracles, good packaging,
massive advertising and a marketing strategy that
stresses the products' possible health benefits account
for increasing sales to all age groups. For example,
reports that soy helps prevent prostate cancer have made
soy milk acceptable to middle-aged men. "You don't have
to twist the arm of a 55- to 60-year-old guy to get him
to try soy milk," says Mark Messina. Michael Milken,
former junk bond financier, has helped the industry shed
its hippie image with well-publicized efforts to consume
40 grams of soy protein daily.
America today, tomorrow the world. Soy
milk sales are rising in Canada, even though soy milk
there costs twice as much as cow's milk. Soybean milk
processing plants are sprouting up in places like
Kenya.11 Even China, where soy really is a poverty food
and whose people want more meat, not tofu, has opted to
build Western-style soy factories rather than develop
western grasslands for grazing animals.12
FDA Health Claim Challenged
On October 25, 1999 the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) decided to allow a health claim for
products "low in saturated fat and cholesterol" that
contain 6.25 grams of soy protein per serving. Breakfast
cereals, baked goods, convenience food, smoothie mixes
and meat substitutes could now be sold with labels
touting benefits to cardiovascular health, as long as
these products contained one heaping teaspoon of soy
protein per 100-gram serving.
The best marketing strategy for a product
that is inherently unhealthy is, of course, a health
claim.
"The road to FDA approval," writes a soy
apologist, "was long and demanding, consisting of a
detailed review of human clinical data collected from
more than 40 scientific studies conducted over the last
20 years. Soy protein was found to be one of the rare
foods that had sufficient scientific evidence not only
to qualify for an FDA health claim proposal but to
ultimately pass the rigorous approval process."29
The "long and demanding" road to FDA
approval actually took a few unexpected turns. The
original petition, submitted by Protein Technology
International, requested a health claim for isoflavones,
the estrogen-like compounds found plentifully in
soybeans, based on assertions that "only soy protein
that has been processed in a manner in which isoflavones
are retained will result in cholesterol lowering".
In 1998, the FDA made the unprecedented
move of rewriting PTI's petition, removing any reference
to the phyto-estrogens and substituting a claim for soy
protein - a move that was in direct contradiction to the
agency's regulations. The FDA is authorized to make
rulings only on substances presented by petition.
The abrupt change in direction was no
doubt due to the fact that a number of researchers,
including scientists employed by the US Government,
submitted documents indicating that isoflavones are
toxic.
The FDA had also received, early in 1998,
the final British Government report on phytoestrogens,
which failed to find much evidence of benefit and warned
against potential adverse effects.30
Even with the change to soy protein
isolate, FDA bureaucrats engaged in the "rigorous
approval process" were forced to deal nimbly with
concerns about mineral blocking effects, enzyme
inhibitors, goitrogenicity, endocrine disruption,
reproductive problems and increased allergic reactions
from consumption of soy products.31
One of the strongest letters of protest
came from Dr Dan Sheehan and Dr Daniel Doerge,
government researchers at the National Center for
Toxicological Research.32 Their pleas for warning labels
were dismissed as unwarranted.
"Sufficient scientific evidence" of soy's
cholesterol-lowering properties is drawn largely from a
1995 meta-analysis by Dr James Anderson, sponsored by
Protein Technologies International and published in the
New England Journal of Medicine.33
A meta-analysis is a review and summary
of the results of many clinical studies on the same
subject. Use of meta-analyses to draw general
conclusions has come under sharp criticism by members of
the scientific community.
"Researchers substituting meta-analysis
for more rigorous trials risk making faulty assumptions
and indulging in creative accounting," says Sir John
Scott, President of the Royal Society of New Zealand.
"Like is not being lumped with like. Little lumps and
big lumps of data are being gathered together by various
groups."34
There is the added temptation for
researchers, particularly researchers funded by a
company like Protein Technologies International, to
leave out studies that would prevent the desired
conclusions. Dr Anderson discarded eight studies for
various reasons, leaving a remainder of twenty-nine.
The published report suggested that
individuals with cholesterol levels over 250 mg/dl would
experience a "significant" reduction of 7 to 20 per cent
in levels of serum cholesterol if they substituted soy
protein for animal protein. Cholesterol reduction was
insignificant for individuals whose cholesterol was
lower than 250 mg/dl.
In other words, for most of us, giving up
steak and eating vegieburgers instead will not bring
down blood cholesterol levels. The health claim that the
FDA approved "after detailed review of human clinical
data" fails to inform the consumer about these important
details.
Research that ties soy to positive
effects on cholesterol levels is "incredibly immature",
said Ronald M. Krauss, MD, head of the Molecular Medical
Research Program and Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory.35 He might have added that studies in which
cholesterol levels were lowered through either diet or
drugs have consistently resulted in a greater number of
deaths in the treatment groups than in controls - deaths
from stroke, cancer, intestinal disorders, accident and
suicide.36
Cholesterol-lowering measures in the US
have fuelled a $60 billion per year cholesterol-lowering
industry, but have not saved us from the ravages of
heart disease.
Soy
And Cancer
The new FDA
ruling does not allow any claims about cancer prevention on food
packages, but that has not restrained the industry and its
marketers from making them in their promotional literature.
"In addition to
protecting the heart," says a vitamin company brochure, "soy has
demonstrated powerful anticancer benefits...the Japanese, who
eat 30 times as much soy as North Americans, have a lower
incidence of cancers of the breast, uterus and prostate."37
Indeed they do.
But the Japanese, and Asians in general, have much higher rates
of other types of cancer, particularly cancer of the esophagus,
stomach, pancreas and liver.38 Asians throughout the world also
have high rates of thyroid cancer.39 The logic that links low
rates of reproductive cancers to soy consumption requires
attribution of high rates of thyroid and digestive cancers to
the same foods, particularly as soy causes these types of
cancers in laboratory rats.
Just how much
soy do Asians eat? A 1998 survey found that the average daily
amount of soy protein consumed in Japan was about eight grams
for men and seven for women - less than two teaspoons.40 The
famous Cornell China Study, conducted by Colin T. Campbell,
found that legume consumption in China varied from 0 to 58 grams
per day, with a mean of about twelve.41
Assuming that
two-thirds of legume consumption is soy, then the maximum
consumption is about 40 grams, or less than three tablespoons
per day, with an average consumption of about nine grams, or
less than two teaspoons. A survey conducted in the 1930s found
that soy foods accounted for only 1.5 per cent of calories in
the Chinese diet, compared with 65 per cent of calories from
pork.42 (Asians traditionally cooked with lard, not vegetable
oil!)
Traditionally
fermented soy products make a delicious, natural seasoning that
may supply important nutritional factors in the Asian diet. But
except in times of famine, Asians consume soy products only in
small amounts, as condiments, and not as a replacement for
animal foods - with one exception. Celibate monks living in
monasteries and leading a vegetarian lifestyle find soy foods
quite helpful because they dampen libido.
It was a 1994
meta-analysis by Mark Messina, published in Nutrition and
Cancer, that fuelled speculation on soy's anticarcinogenic
properties.43 Messina noted that in 26 animal studies, 65 per
cent reported protective effects from soy. He conveniently
neglected to include at least one study in which soy feeding
caused pancreatic cancer - the 1985 study by Rackis.44 In the
human studies he listed, the results were mixed.
A few showed
some protective effect, but most showed no correlation at all
between soy consumption and cancer rates. He concluded that "the
data in this review cannot be used as a basis for claiming that
soy intake decreases cancer risk". Yet in his subsequent book,
The Simple Soybean and Your Health, Messina makes just such a
claim, recommending one cup or 230 grams of soy products per day
in his "optimal" diet as a way to prevent cancer.
Thousands of
women are now consuming soy in the belief that it protects them
against breast cancer. Yet, in 1996, researchers found that
women consuming soy protein isolate had an increased incidence
of epithelial hyperplasia, a condition that presages
malignancies.45 A year later, dietary genistein was found to
stimulate breast cells to enter the cell cycle - a discovery
that led the study authors to conclude that women should not
consume soy products to prevent breast cancer.46
Phytoestrogens: Panacea Or Poison?
The male
species of tropical birds carries the drab plumage of the female
at birth and 'colors up' at maturity, somewhere between nine and
24 months.
In 1991,
Richard and Valerie James, bird breeders in Whangerai, New
Zealand, purchased a new kind of feed for their birds - one
based largely on soy protein.47 When soy-based feed was used,
their birds 'colored up' after just a few months. In fact, one
bird-food manufacturer claimed that this early development was
an advantage imparted by the feed.
A 1992 ad for
Roudybush feed formula showed a picture of the male crimson
rosella, an Australian parrot that acquires beautiful red
plumage at 18 to 24 months, already brightly colored at 11 weeks
old.
Unfortunately,
in the ensuing years, there was decreased fertility in the
birds, with precocious maturation, deformed, stunted and
stillborn babies, and premature deaths, especially among
females, with the result that the total population in the
aviaries went into steady decline.
The birds
suffered beak and bone deformities, goiter, immune system
disorders and pathological, aggressive behavior. Autopsy
revealed digestive organs in a state of disintegration. The list
of problems corresponded with many of the problems the Jameses
had encountered in their two children, who had been fed
soy-based infant formula.
Startled,
aghast, angry, the Jameses hired toxicologist Mike Fitzpatrick.
PhD, to investigate further. Dr Fitzpatrick's literature review
uncovered evidence that soy consumption has been linked to
numerous disorders, including infertility, increased cancer and
infantile leukemia; and, in studies dating back to the 1950s,48
that genistein in soy causes endocrine disruption in animals.
Dr Fitzpatrick
also analyzed the bird feed and found that it contained high
levels of phytoestrogens, especially genistein. When the Jameses
discontinued using soy-based feed, the flock gradually returned
to normal breeding habits and behavior.
The Jameses
embarked on a private crusade to warn the public and government
officials about toxins in soy foods, particularly the
endocrine-disrupting isoflavones, genistein and diadzen. Protein
Technology International received their material in 1994.
In 1991,
Japanese researchers reported that consumption of as little as
30 grams or two tablespoons of soybeans per day for only one
month resulted in a significant increase in thyroid-stimulating
hormone.49 Diffuse goiter and hypothyroidism appeared in some of
the subjects and many complained of constipation, fatigue and
lethargy, even though their intake of iodine was adequate.
In 1997,
researchers from the FDA's National Center for Toxicological
Research made the embarrassing discovery that the goitrogenic
components of soy were the very same isoflavones.50
Twenty-five
grams of soy protein isolate, the minimum amount PTI claimed to
have cholesterol-lowering effects, contains from 50 to 70 mg of
isoflavones. It took only 45 mg of isoflavones in premenopausal
women to exert significant biological effects, including a
reduction in hormones needed for adequate thyroid function.
These effects lingered for three months after soy consumption
was discontinued.51
One hundred
grams of soy protein - the maximum suggested
cholesterol-lowering dose, and the amount recommended by Protein
Technologies International - can contain almost 600 mg of
isoflavones,52 an amount that is undeniably toxic. In 1992, the
Swiss health service estimated that 100 grams of soy protein
provided the estrogenic equivalent of the Pill.53
In vitro
studies suggest that isoflavones inhibit synthesis of estradiol
and other steroid hormones.54 Reproductive problems,
infertility, thyroid disease and liver disease due to dietary
intake of isoflavones have been observed for several species of
animals including mice, cheetah, quail, pigs, rats, sturgeon and
sheep.55
It is the
isoflavones in soy that are said to have a favorable effect on
postmenopausal symptoms, including hot flushes, and protection
from osteoporosis. Quantification of discomfort from hot flushes
is extremely subjective, and most studies show that control
subjects report reduction in discomfort in amounts equal to
subjects given soy.56 The claim that soy prevents osteoporosis
is extraordinary, given that soy foods block calcium and cause
vitamin D deficiencies.
If Asians
indeed have lower rates of osteoporosis than Westerners, it is
because their diet provides plenty of vitamin D from shrimp,
lard and seafood, and plenty of calcium from bone broths. The
reason that Westerners have such high rates of osteoporosis is
because they have substituted soy oil for butter, which is a
traditional source of vitamin D and other fat-soluble activators
needed for calcium absorption.
Birth Control Pills For Babies
But it was the isoflavones in infant formula that gave the
Jameses the most cause for concern. In 1998, investigators
reported that the daily exposure of infants to isoflavones in
soy infant formula is 6 to11 times higher on a body-weight basis
than the dose that has hormonal effects in adults consuming soy
foods. Circulating concentrations of isoflavones in infants fed
soy-based formula were 13,000 to 22,000 times higher than plasma
estradiol concentrations in infants on cow's milk formula.57
Approximately 25 per cent of bottle-fed children in the US
receive soy-based formula - a much higher percentage than in
other parts of the Western world. Fitzpatrick estimated that an
infant exclusively fed soy formula receives the estrogenic
equivalent (based on body weight) of at least five birth control
pills per day.58 By contrast, almost no phytoestrogens have been
detected in dairy-based infant formula or in human milk, even
when the mother consumes soy products.
Scientists have known for years that soy-based formula can cause
thyroid problems in babies. But what are the effects of soy
products on the hormonal development of the infant, both male
and female?
Male infants undergo a "testosterone surge" during the first few
months of life, when testosterone levels may be as high as those
of an adult male. During this period, the infant is programmed
to express male characteristics after puberty, not only in the
development of his sexual organs and other masculine physical
traits, but also in setting patterns in the brain characteristic
of male behavior.
In monkeys, deficiency of male hormones impairs the development
of spatial perception (which, in humans, is normally more acute
in men than in women), of learning ability and of visual
discrimination tasks (such as would be required for reading).59
It goes without saying that future patterns of sexual
orientation may also be influenced by the early hormonal
environment.
Male children exposed during gestation to diethylstilbestrol
(DES), a synthetic estrogen that has effects on animals similar
to those of phytoestrogens from soy, had testes smaller than
normal on manturation.60
Learning disabilities, especially in male children, have reached
epidemic proportions. Soy infant feeding - which began in
earnest in the early 1970s - cannot be ignored as a probable
cause for these tragic developments.
As for girls, an alarming number are entering puberty much
earlier than normal, according to a recent study reported in the
journal Pediatrics.61 Investigators found that one per cent of
all girls now show signs of puberty, such as breast development
or pubic hair, before the age of three; by age eight, 14.7 per
cent of white girls and almost 50 per cent of African-American
girls have one or both of these characteristics.
New data indicate that environmental estrogens such as PCBs and
DDE (a breakdown product of DDT) may cause early sexual
development in girls.62 In the 1986 Puerto Rico Premature
Thelarche study, the most significant dietary association with
premature sexual development was not chicken - as reported in
the press - but soy infant formula.63
The consequences of this truncated childhood are tragic. Young
girls with mature bodies must cope with feelings and urges that
most children are not well-equipped to handle. And early
maturation in girls is frequently a harbinger for problems with
the reproductive system later in life, including failure to
menstruate, infertility and breast cancer.
Parents who have contacted the Jameses recount other problems
associated with children of both sexes who were fed soy-based
formula, including extreme emotional behavior, asthma, immune
system problems, pituitary insufficiency, thyroid disorders and
irritable bowel syndrome - the same endocrine and digestive
havoc that afflicted the Jameses' parrots.
Dissension In The Ranks
Organizers of the Third International Soy Symposium would be
hard-pressed to call the conference an unqualified success. On
the second day of the symposium, the London-based Food
Commission and the Weston A. Price Foundation of Washington, DC,
held a joint press conference, in the same hotel as the
symposium, to present concerns about soy infant formula.
Industry representatives sat stony-faced through the recitation
of potential dangers and a plea from concerned scientists and
parents to pull soy-based infant formula from the market. Under
pressure from the Jameses, the New Zealand Government had issued
a health warning about soy infant formula in 1998; it was time
for the American government to do the same.
On the last day of the symposium, presentations on new findings
related to toxicity sent a well-oxygenated chill through the
giddy helium hype. Dr Lon White reported on a study of Japanese
Americans living in Hawaii, that showed a significant
statistical relationship between two or more servings of tofu a
week and "accelerated brain aging".64
Those participants who consumed tofu in mid-life had lower
cognitive function in late life and a greater incidence of
Alzheimer's disease and dementia. "What's more," said Dr White,
"those who ate a lot of tofu, by the time they were 75 or 80
looked five years older".65 White and his colleagues blamed the
negative effects on isoflavones - a finding that supports an
earlier study in which postmenopausal women with higher levels
of circulating estrogen experienced greater cognitive decline.66
Scientists Daniel Sheehan and Daniel Doerge, from the National
Center for Toxicological Research, ruined PTI's day by
presenting findings from rat feeding studies, indicating that
genistein in soy foods causes irreversible damage to enzymes
that synthesise thyroid hormones.67
"The association between soybean consumption and goiter in
animals and humans has a long history," wrote Dr Doerge.
"Current evidence for the beneficial effects of soy requires a
full understanding of potential adverse effects as well."
Dr Claude Hughes reported that rats born to mothers that were
fed genistein had decreased birth weights compared to controls,
and onset of puberty occurred earlier in male offspring.68 His
research suggested that the effects observed in rats "...will be
at least somewhat predictive of what occurs in humans.
There is no reason to assume that there will be gross
malformations of fetuses but there may be subtle changes, such
as neurobehavioral attributes, immune function and sex hormone
levels." The results, he said, "could be nothing or could be
something of great concern...if mom is eating something that can
act like sex hormones, it is logical to wonder if that could
change the baby's development".69
A study of babies born to vegetarian mothers, published in
January 2000, indicated just what those changes in baby's
development might be. Mothers who ate a vegetarian diet during
pregnancy had a fivefold greater risk of delivering a boy with
hypospadias, a birth defect of the penis.70 The authors of the
study suggested that the cause was greater exposure to
phytoestrogens in soy foods popular with vegetarians.
Problems with female offspring of vegetarian mothers are more
likely to show up later in life. While soy's estrogenic effect
is less than that of diethylstilbestrol (DES), the dose is
likely to be higher because it's consumed as a food, not taken
as a drug. Daughters of women who took DES during pregnancy
suffered from infertility and cancer when they reached their
twenties.
Question Marks Over GRAS Status
Lurking in the background of industry hype for soy is the
nagging question of whether it's even legal to add soy protein
isolate to food. All food additives not in common use prior to
1958, including casein protein from milk, must have GRAS
(Generally Recognized As Safe) status. In 1972, the Nixon
administration directed a re-examination of substances believed
to be GRAS, in the light of any scientific information then
available.
This re-examination included casein protein that became codified
as GRAS in 1978. In 1974, the FDA obtained a literature review
of soy protein because, as soy protein had not been used in food
until 1959 and was not even in common use in the early 1970s, it
was not eligible to have its GRAS status grandfathered under the
provisions of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.71
The scientific literature up to 1974 recognized many
antinutrients in factory-made soy protein, including trypsin
inhibitors, phytic acid and genistein. But the FDA literature
review dismissed discussion of adverse impacts, with the
statement that it was important for "adequate processing" to
remove them.
Genistein could be removed with an alcohol wash, but it was an
expensive procedure that processors avoided. Later studies
determined that trypsin inhibitor content could be removed only
with long periods of heat and pressure, but the FDA has imposed
no requirements for manufacturers to do so.
The FDA was more concerned with toxins formed during processing,
specifically nitrites and lysinoalanine.72 Even at low levels of
consumption - averaging one-third of a gram per day at the time
- the presence of these carcinogens was considered too great a
threat to public health to allow GRAS status.
Soy protein did have approval for use as a binder in cardboard
boxes, and this approval was allowed to continue, as researchers
considered that migration of nitrites from the box into the food
contents would be too small to constitute a cancer risk. FDA
officials called for safety specifications and monitoring
procedures before granting of GRAS status for food.
These were never performed. To this day, use of soy protein is
codified as GRAS only for this limited industrial use as a
cardboard binder. This means that soy protein must be subject to
premarket approval procedures each time manufacturers intend to
use it as a food or add it to a food.
Soy protein was introduced into infant formula in the early
1960s. It was a new product with no history of any use at all.
As soy protein did not have GRAS status, premarket approval was
required. This was not and still has not been granted. The key
ingredient of soy infant formula is not recognized as safe.
The Next Asbestos?
"Against the backdrop of widespread praise...there is growing
suspicion that soy - despite its undisputed benefits - may pose
some health hazards," writes Marian Burros, a leading food
writer for the New York Times. More than any other writer, Ms
Burros's endorsement of a low-fat, largely vegetarian diet has
herded Americans into supermarket aisles featuring soy foods.
Yet her January 26, 2000 article, "Doubts Cloud Rosy News on
Soy", contains the following alarming statement: "Not one of the
18 scientists interviewed for this column was willing to say
that taking isoflavones was risk free." Ms Burros did not
enumerate the risks, nor did she mention that the recommended 25
daily grams of soy protein contain enough isoflavones to cause
problems in sensitive individuals, but it was evident that the
industry had recognized the need to cover itself.
Because the industry is extremely exposed...contingency lawyers
will soon discover that the number of potential plaintiffs can
be counted in the millions and the pockets are very, very deep.
Juries will hear something like the following: "The industry has
known for years that soy contains many toxins.
At first they told the public that the toxins were removed by
processing. When it became apparent that processing could not
get rid of them, they claimed that these substances were
beneficial. Your government granted a health claim to a
substance that is poisonous, and the industry lied to the public
to sell more soy."
The "industry" includes merchants, manufacturers, scientists,
publicists, bureaucrats, former bond financiers, food writers,
vitamin companies and retail stores. Farmers will probably
escape because they were duped like the rest of us. But they
need to find something else to grow before the soy bubble bursts
and the market collapses: grass-fed livestock, designer
vegetables...or hemp to make paper for thousands and thousands
of legal briefs.
Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 7, Number 3 (April-May
2000)
About the Authors:
Sally Fallon
is the author of Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that
Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats
(1999, 2nd edition, New Trends Publishing, tel +1 877 707 1776
or +1 219 268 2601) and President of the Weston A. Price
Foundation, Washington, DC (www.WestonAPrice.org)
Mary G. Enig, Ph.D.,
a nutritionist widely known for her research on the nutritional
aspects of fats and oils, is a consultant, clinician, and the
Director of the Nutritional Sciences Division of Enig
Associates, Inc., Silver Spring, Maryland.
She received her PhD in Nutritional Sciences from the University
of Maryland, College Park in 1984, taught a graduate course in
nutrient-drug interactions for the University's Graduate Program
in Nutritional Sciences, and held a Faculty Research
Associateship from 1984 through 1991 with the Lipids Research
Group in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
Dr. Enig is a Fellow of the American College of Nutrition, and a
member of the American Institute of Nutrition. Her many years of
experience as a "bench chemist" in the analysis of food fats and
oils, provides a foundation for her active roles in food
labeling and composition issues at the federal and state levels.
Dr. Enig is a Consulting Editor to the "Journal of the American
College of Nutrition" and formerly served as a Contributing
Editor to "Clinical Nutrition." She has published 14 scientific
papers on the subject of food fats and oils, several chapters on
nutrition for books, and presented over 35 scientific papers on
food and nutrition topics.
She is the President of the Maryland Nutritionists Association,
past President of the Coalition of Nutritionists of Maryland and
was appointed by the Governor in 1986 to the Maryland State
Advisory Council on Nutrition and served as the Chairman of the
Health Subcommittee until the Council was disbanded in 1988.
COMMENT:
Sally Fallon and Dr. Enig are to be highly commended for this
much needed soy update. Together they have compiled the most
definitive document to date on why one should avoid soy. This is
a MAJOR work and I am hoping to promote it for the national
media attention that it deserves.
ENDNOTES:
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