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Immunity

Surgery: What you need to know before undergoing surgery


Date: 21/04/05
 
Keywords: Vitamins,
Surgery is one of the biggest stresses the body can endure.

Surgery is one of the biggest stresses the body can endure.

The mental stress that goes hand in hand with surgery is a given. The stress that HSI Panellist Dr Allan Spreen refers to in the above quote concerns the demands that surgery puts on the immune system.

In last weeks e-alert Defend yourself from ill-health with these vital nutrients (14/4/05), Dr. Spreen shared his insights on five immunonutrients that have been shown to improve immune system function after surgery. But if you regularly take a host of dietary supplements, there are some important adjustments youll need to make prior to any surgical procedure that requires anaesthesia.

Going under 
As Dr. Spreen told us in previous e-alerts, high levels of vitamin C can complicate the anaesthesia process. Heres how Dr. Spreen explains the interaction:

The specifics of vitamin C apply to the mega-vitamin takers. Very high doses of C over time cause the body to awaken dormant enzyme systems that more fully utilise high doses of the nutrient. If you take low doses, the body shuts these pathways down for your benefit. If it didnt it would too rapidly empty the bodys C pipeline and youd be constantly deficient.

For those people I tell them to TAPER the C over time, reaching nearly zero just before surgery (not weeks before). This is because such high doses are good enough detoxifiers that more anaesthetic drugs may be necessary for the anaesthesiologist to keep you under. BUT, the absolute INSTANT you tolerate oral intake, you jack the C back up to heroic levels.

The herbal question
In one of the commentaries I found on the immunonutrients report that appeared in the British Medical Journal, osteopathic physician Dr. Joseph Mercola stated his opinion that herbal supplements should be discontinued prior to surgery, noting that some of these supplements are powerful enough to function like drugs.

I asked Dr. Spreen about the herbal issue, and he agreed with Dr. Mercola...to a point.

Yes, herbs are like drugs. The simple reason is that no drug companies design their drugs using mere brilliance. Pharmaceutical developers get their ideas from herbal effects, then try to alter the molecule enough to patent the thing (and cause all sorts of toxic side effects), hoping itll still do what the herb did, without killing you first.

The developers are good, however, at picking good herbs. Proscar is an excellent example. It is a derivative of the herb Serenoa repens (saw palmetto), which does work against benign enlargement of the prostate (better than Proscar), and with no side effects. Of course, the drug company will admit neither detail.

As to when, and whether, to stop taking a herb, the situation is much the same as with prescription drugs. You should seek advice from someone educated in the agents effects to know whether to stop it and when (or whether to increase it and how much!). Id certainly never stop my saw palmetto weeks before surgery (or the day before, or ever).

Beyond vitamin C
Returning to the subject of non-herbal supplements, Dr. Spreen had this final note:

Surgery is a major stress, and for that you want the maximum dose of nutrients for the body to choose from for the repair function. Vitamin C, and probably NAC should be discontinued (my sister-in-law required half-again as much medication to put her under as she was pumping the vitamin C heavily as insurance...the anaesthesiologist even commented on it).

However, the instant I could hold something down Id be right back at them (and tons of other supplements) full force - C, A, E, B-complex, NAC, alpha lipoic acid, milk thistle extract, zinc, essential fatty acids, and others.

Wonder drug hazards
In addition to dietary supplements, any over-the-counter medications need to be scrutinised before surgery as well - especially aspirin.

Most patients are advised that aspirin therapy for heart health should be discontinued well before surgery to minimise bleeding. And even though it might be a good idea to stop aspirin therapy altogether (see the e-alert Taking aspirin could harm rather than benefit your health 23/3/05), evidence shows that coronary bypass surgery patients may want to talk with their doctors about aspirin use after surgery.

In a 2002 New England Journal of Medicine study, in the US, that examined more than 5,000 coronary bypass patients, the use of aspirin immediately after surgery was associated with a 48 percent reduction in ischaemic complications and a 50 percent reduction in the incidence of stroke.

The current rule of thumb is to avoid aspirin for the first 24 hours after bypass surgery because aspirin increases the risk of bleeding.

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