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Chapter List For:
Prevention's Healing with Vitamins:
  1. Beta-Carotene
  2. Biotin
  3. Calcium
  4. Drugs Can Sabotage Your Nutrition
  5. Folic Acid
  6. Iron
  7. Magnesium
  8. Niacin
  9. Pantothenic Acid
  10. Phosphorus
  11. Potassium
  12. Riboflavin
  13. Selenium
  14. Sodium
  15. Sulfur
  16. Thiamin
  17. Trace Minerals
  18. Vitamin A
  19. Vitamin B12
  20. Vitamin B6
  21. Vitamin C
  22. Vitamin D
  23. Vitamin E
  24. Vitamin K
  25. Zinc
  26. Age Spots
  27. Aging
  28. Alcoholism
  29. Allergies
  30. Alzheimers Disease
  31. Anemia
  32. Angina
  33. Asthma
  34. Bedsores
  35. Beriberi
  36. Birth Defects
  37. Bladder Infections
  38. Bruises
  39. Burns
  40. Cancer
  41. Canker Sores
  42. Cardiomyopathy
  43. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  44. Cataracts
  45. Celiac Disease
  46. Cervical Dysplasia
  47. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
  48. Colds
  49. Cold Sores
  50. Cystic Fibrosis
  51. Depression
  52. Dermatitis
  53. Diabetes
  54. Diarrhea
  55. Eating Disorders
  56. Endometriosis
  57. Epilepsy
  58. Fatigue
  59. Fibrocystic Breasts
  60. Fingernail Problems
  61. Gallstones
  62. Genital Herpes
  63. Gingivitis
  64. Glaucoma
  65. Gout
  66. Hair Loss
  67. Heart Arrhythmia
  68. Heart Disease
  69. High Blood Pressure
  70. High Cholesterol
  71. HIV
  72. Immunity
  73. Infertility
  74. Insomnia
  75. Intermittent Claudication
  76. Kidney Stones
  77. Leg Cramps
  78. Lou Gehrigs Disease
  79. Lupus
  80. Macular Degeneration
  81. Memory Loss
  82. Ménière’s Disease
  83. Menopausal Problems
  84. Menstrual Problems
  85. Migraines
  86. Mitral Valve Prolapse
  87. Morning Sickness
  88. Multiple Sclerosis
  89. Night Blindness
  90. Osteoarthritis
  91. Osteoporosis
  92. Overweight
  93. Parkinsons Disease
  94. Pellagra
  95. Phlebitis
  96. Premenstrual Syndrome
  97. Prostate Problems
  98. Psoriasis
  99. Raynaud's Disease
  100. Restless Legs Syndrome
  101. Rheumatoid Arthritis
  102. Rickets
  103. Scleroderma
  104. Scurvy
  105. Shingles
  106. Smog Exposure
  107. Smoking
  108. Sunburn
  109. Surgery
  110. Taste and Smell Problems
  111. Tinnitus
  112. Varicose Veins
  113. Water Retention
  114. Wilson's Disease
  115. Wrinkles
  116. Yeast Infections
From the Rodale book, Prevention's Healing with Vitamins:
Edit id 1169

Bedsores


Previous Chapter Asthma
Next Chapter Beriberi


Nourishing Skin under Pressure

You would think that a couple of thousand years would be enough time to find a way to beat an ailment as common as bedsores. Evidence of these painful lesions has been found in ancient Egyptian mummies, but today we're still struggling to prevent bedsores from forming on people who are confined to bed.

Clearly, the quality of mattresses has improved since the rule of King Tut. So why are bedsores still such a problem? Because bedsores, also known as pressure ulcers, have less to do with beds and lots to do with nutrition, say the experts. And that, sadly, is something that can still be pretty poor even in this day and age, especially among the elderly.

"The bottom line is that a malnourished person is predisposed to developing a pressure ulcer," explains Mitchell V. Kaminski, Jr., M.D., staff surgeon at Thorek Hospital and Medical Center in Chicago and clinical professor of surgery at the University of Health Sciences/Chicago Medical School. Dr. Kaminski has researched and written extensively on the nutrition-pressure ulcer connection. "In fact, the more malnourished a person is, the more severe the ulcer. I believe that malnutrition may be the most significant component in the development of the type of pressure ulcer commonly seen in Americans today," he says.

Food Factors

Though they're called bedsores, your nutrition--along with change of position--is more important than your mattress when it comes to avoiding these painful lesions. Here is what most experts recommend to keep your skin healthy and free of bedsores.

Get protection from protein. "Protein is very, very important for healing skin," says Mitchell V. Kaminski, Jr., M.D., staff surgeon at Thorek Hospital and Medical Center and clinical professor of surgery at the University of Health Sciences/Chicago Medical School. "You really need to increase your protein intake when you're dealing with pressure ulcers."

Researchers at the University of Maryland at College Park gave supplements containing either 14 or 24 percent protein to 28 people with pressure ulcers. The researchers found that those who received the higher-concentration supplements experienced significant decreases in the surface areas of their pressure ulcers, while those receiving only 14 percent experienced almost no changes.

To prevent or treat bedsores, Dr. Kaminski recommends that people get about 0.68 gram of protein per pound of body weight. That's about double the amount of protein you would typically need. To get enough protein to prevent bedsores, a 140-pound woman who is at risk, for example, would need 95 grams of protein, or about the amount found in four three-ounce cans of tuna.

"If it's too difficult to get that much protein from foods, liquid protein drinks work just as well," says Dr. Kaminski. These are available in your local pharmacy.

Anatomy of a Bedsore

Essentially, a bedsore occurs as the result of skin being suffocated beneath the body's weight. When someone lies or sits in one position for a long time, as is the case with people who are bedridden with illness or who use wheelchairs, the skin over bony prominences such as the hips and tailbone is squeezed against hard surfaces. This squeezing cuts off the blood supply that delivers oxygen and nutrients to the tissues. Eventually the smaller blood vessels clot, and a sore red patch appears, which, left unchecked, can crack open and develop into a crater-like, painful wound. In worst-case scenarios, the tissues can erode deeply, exposing muscle or bone.

One of the best ways to avoid bedsores is by continually changing positions. Doctors recommend moving every 15 minutes, if possible, or at least every two hours if you're in a bed or every hour if you're in a chair. It doesn't take much time for a bedsore to develop, especially when skin is thin and frail, when wound healing is slower and when movement is limited, as is the case with many elderly people.

That's why good nutrition is essential. The healthier and thicker your skin is, the better it can withstand the weight of your body and the less likely you are to get a bedsore.

Note: Though nutritional supplementation may expedite healing, it's very important that any bedsore that develops be treated under a doctor's supervision. And anyone who has diabetes must be especially alert for this condition. Bedsores can get worse very, very quickly.

Multivitamin Protection

Some doctors recommend A multivitamin/mineral supplement is especially important for older people who are confined to bed or to wheelchairs. They are frequently deficient in a wide array of vitamins, notes Dr. Kaminski.

Prescriptions for Healing

Research shows that strong skin and physical activity are your best defenses in the fight against bedsores. Here's what many experts recommend to toughen up and heal your skin.

Nutrient Daily Amount


Vitamin C 1,000 milligrams

Zinc 15 milligrams

Plus a multivitamin/mineral supplement


MEDICAL ALERT: It's important that any bedsore be treated under a doctor's supervision.

Vitamin C Plays a Major Role

One of the most common single vitamin deficiencies among the elderly is vitamin C. Too little of this vitamin opens the door to thinning skin, capillary fragility and, consequently, bedsores.

Some studies even indicate that vitamin C deficiency may be the key nutritional factor in bedsore development. Researchers studying 21 elderly people with hip fractures at St. James's University Hospital in England reported that of the 10 who eventually developed bedsores, all had vitamin C deficiencies. In fact, their vitamin C levels were just half of those of the people in the study who did not develop sores, even though other vitamin levels were similar.

"Vitamin C deficiency can double your healing time," says Dr. Kaminski. "I routinely put my patients who are being treated for or who are at risk for pressure ulcers on 1,000 milligrams of vitamin C a day. Vitamin C won't help if there is no deficiency, but the extra vitamin won't hurt, either."

Zinc Speeds Healing

Like vitamin C, zinc has been linked in studies to preventing bedsores and helping them to heal.

"If there is a zinc deficiency, healing time is retarded by 50 percent," says Dr. Kaminski. "Like vitamin C, supplemental zinc won't do any good if there is no deficiency. But zinc deficiency is so common that I routinely supplement it as well."

The Daily Value for zinc is 15 milligrams, an amount that you can get from either foods or supplements. To add some superior food sources of zinc to your diet, try eating more seafood and shellfish, wheat germ and whole-grain breads and cereals.

Previous Chapter Asthma
Next Chapter Beriberi

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