The Dark Side of Soy
The Dark Side of Soy
Is
Utne Reader July / August 2007 Issue
|
|
As someone who is conscious of her health, I spent 13 years
cultivating a vegetarian diet. I took time to plan and balance meals that
included products such as soy milk, soy yogurt, tofu, and Chick'n patties. I
pored over labels looking for words I couldn't pronounce--occasionally one or
two would pop up. Soy protein isolate? Great! They've isolated the protein from
the soybean to make it more concentrated. Hydrolyzed soy protein? I never
successfully rationalized that one, but I wasn't too worried. After all, in
1999 the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved labeling I found on nearly
every soy product I purchased: "Diets low in saturated fat and cholesterol
that included 25 grams of soy protein a day may reduce the risk of heart
disease." Soy ingredients weren't only safe--they were beneficial.
After years of consuming
various forms of soy nearly every day, I felt reasonably fit, but somewhere
along the line I'd stopped menstruating. I couldn't figure out why my stomach
became so upset after I ate edamame or why I was often moody and bloated. It
didn't occur to me at the time to question soy, heart protector and miracle
food.
When I began studying
holistic health and nutrition, I kept running across risks associated with
eating soy. Endocrine disruption? Check. Digestive problems? Check. I
researched soy's deleterious effects on thyroid, fertility, hormones, sex drive,
digestion, and even its potential to contribute to certain cancers. For every
study that proved a connection between soy and reduced disease risk another
cropped up to challenge the claims. What was going on?
"Studies showing the
dark side of soy date back 100 years," says clinical nutritionist Kaayla
Daniel, author of The Whole Soy Story
(New Trends, 2005). "The 1999 FDA-approved health claim pleased big
business, despite massive evidence showing risks associated with soy, and
against the protest of the FDA's own top scientists. Soy is a $4 billion [
Epidemiological studies
have shown that Asians, particularly in
"There is important
information on the cancer-protective values of soy," says clinical
nutritionist Ed Bauman, head of Bauman Clinic in
"Soy is not a food
that is native to North America or
Once considered a
small-scale poverty food, soy exploded onto the American market. Studies--some
funded by the industry--promoted soy's ability to lower disease risk while
absolving guilt associated with eating meat. "The soy industry has come a
long way from when hippies were boiling up the beans," says Daniel.
These days the industry has
discovered ways to use every part of the bean for profit. Soy oil has become
the base for most vegetable oils; soy lecithin, the waste product left over
after the soybean is processed, is used as an emulsifier; soy flour appears in
baked and packaged goods; different forms of processed soy protein are added to
everything from animal feed to muscle-building protein powders. "Soy
protein isolate was invented for use in cardboard," Daniel says. "It
hasn't actually been approved as a food ingredient."
Soy is everywhere in our
food supply, as the star in cereals and health-promoting foods and hidden in
processed foods. Even if you read every label and avoid cardboard boxes, you
are likely to find soy in your supplements and vitamins (look out for vitamin E
derived from soy oil), in foods such as canned tuna, soups, sauces, breads,
meats (injected under poultry skin), and chocolate, and in pet food and
body-care products. It hides in tofu dogs under aliases such as textured
vegetable protein, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, and lecithin--which is
troubling, since the processing required to hydrolyze soy protein into
vegetable protein produces excitotoxins such as glutamate (think MSG) and
aspartate (a component of aspartame), which cause brain-cell death.
Soy also is one of the
foods--in addition to wheat, corn, eggs, milk, nuts, and shellfish--most likely
to cause allergic reactions. Most people equate food allergies with
anaphylaxis, or a severe emergency immune response, but it is possible to have
a subclinical sensitivity, which can lead to health problems over time (and is
exacerbated by the lack of variety common in today's American diet).
"People can do an
empirical food sensitivity test by eliminating the food for a period of time
and reintroducing it to see if there's an immune response, but most don't do
this," says Bauman. "Genetically modified (GM) soy is the most
problematic, and that's probably what most people are eating if they're not
paying attention. People can develop sensitivity to a food that has antigens or
bacteria not originally in the food chain, as is the case with GM foods."
Yet avoiding GM soy doesn't
mean all is well, Daniel says: "One question I get all the time is, ‘What
if I only eat organic soy?' The assumption is that GM soy is problematic and
organic is fine. Certainly, organic is better, but the bottom line is that
soybeans naturally contain plant estrogens, toxins, and antinutrients, and you
can't remove those."
The highest risk is for
infants who are fed soy formula. "It's the only thing they're eating,
they're very small, and they're at a key stage developmentally," says
Daniel. "The estrogens in soy will affect the hormonal development of
these children, and it will certainly affect their growing brains, reproductive
systems, and thyroids." Soy formula also contains large amounts of
manganese, which has been linked to attention deficit disorder and
neurotoxicity in infants. The Israeli health ministry recently issued an
advisory stating that infants should avoid soy formula altogether.
Antinutrients in soy block
enzymes needed for digestion, and naturally occur-ring phytates block
absorption of essential minerals. This is most worrisome for vegans and
vegetarians who eat soy as their main source of protein, and for women in
menopause who up their soy intake through supplements.
Soy contains
phytochemicals--plant nutrients with disease-fighting activity--called
isoflavones. Studies claim isoflavones can mimic the body's own estrogens,
raising a woman's estrogen levels, which fall after menopause, causing hot
flashes and other symptoms. On the other hand, isoflavones may also block the
body's estrogens, which can help reduce high estrogen levels, therefore
reducing risk for breast cancer or uterine cancer before menopause. (High
estrogen levels have been linked to cancers of the reproductive system in
women.)
Although soy's isoflavones
may have an adaptogenic effect (contributing to an estrogen-boosting or
-blocking effect where needed), they also have the potential to promote hormone-sensitive
cancers in some people. Studies on the effects of isoflavones on human estrogen
levels are conflicting, and it's possible that they affect people differently.
In men, soy has been shown to lower testosterone levels and sex drive, according
to Daniel.
Bauman believes processed
soy foods are problematic but maintains that soy has beneficial
hormone-mediating effects. "People are largely convenience-driven,"
he says. "We're looking at this whole processed-food convenience market
and we're making generalizations about a plant. Is soy the problem, or is it
the handling and packaging and processing of the plant that's the problem?
"Primary sources of
food are a good thing. Once there was a bean, but then it got cooked and
squeezed and the pulp was separated out, and it was heated and processed for
better shelf life and mouth feel. Soy milk is second or third level in terms of
processing."
Bauman's eating-for-health
approach calls for a variety of natural and seasonal unprocessed whole foods,
including soy in moderation, tailored to individual biochemistry and
sensitivities. "Using soy as part of a diet can bring relief for
perimenopause, for example," he says. "Throw out the soy and you
throw out the isoflavones." (It is possible to obtain plant estrogens to a
lesser extent from other foods, such as lima beans or flax.) "The
literature is extensive on the benefits of soy, and that should always be
stated, just as the hazards should be. That's science. These studies are not
ridiculous or contrived, but take a look at them. Who's funding them?"
asks Bauman.
"There are a lot of
problems with these studies," Daniel says, adding that the 1999 heart
health claim was an industry-funded initiative. "Even if there is positive
information, and even if these studies are well designed, we need to weigh that
against the fact that we've also got really good studies showing the dangers.
Better safe than sorry is the precautionary principle. Possible bene-fits are
far outweighed by proven risks."
Daniel and Bauman agree on
the benefits of variety. "My experience as a clinical nutritionist is that
people who have a varied diet tend not to get into trouble," says Daniel.
"We like to demonize
certain foods in this society," says Bauman. "If you want to find a
fault, you'll find it. The bottom line is: What is a healthy diet?"
Reprinted from Terrain (Spring 2007), published by
Soy "Nuggets"
Tofu
Soy milk, curdled and pressed into cubes of varying firmness. Often used as
meat substitute. A nonfermented product, tofu contains antinutrients, which can
block absorption of essential minerals.
Miso
Fermented soybean paste, used in soups and sauces. Rich in probiotics, good
bacteria that aid vitamin absorption. Miso is high in sodium but is considered
one of the healthiest soy products.
Soybean Oil
To extract oil, soybeans are superheated, ground, pressed, mixed with
chemicals, and washed in a centrifuge. Soybean oil accounts for 80 percent of
all liquid oils consumed annually in the
Soy Milk
A processed beverage made of ground soybeans mixed with water and boiled, which
removes some toxins. Sugar is added to improve flavor. An eight-ounce serving
contains up to 35 milligrams of isoflavones, which may change estrogen levels
and hormonal function.
Snack Food
Highly processed, a source of trans fat. Check your labels: Potato chips,
tortilla crisps, and many other deep-fried things have been cooked in soy
oil--straight up or partially hydrogenated.
Tempeh
Whole soybeans pressed into loaves, which are then fermented. Often used as a
meat substitute. Tempeh is rich in B vitamins, minerals, and omega-3 fatty
acids.
Fast Food
A source of hidden soy. Processed soy proteins extend some burgers and chicken
(nuggets, patties, even "grilled breasts"). Buns contain soy oil and
to a lesser extent soy flour and lecithin. Soy oil also appears in dressings
and dips, in American "cheese," and as the No. 2 ingredient in fries.
There's even soy in Big Mac's secret sauce: Soybean oil nets top billing.
Edamame
Whole soybeans, commonly boiled in the pod and eaten as a snack. Most
commercial edamame has been preheated to make digestion easier, but it still
contains antinutrients.
Want more? Read the
rest of Utne
Reader's
July/August package on the secrets of soy:
- How Much
Is Too Much?
Clinical nutritionist Kaayla Daniel on the Dos and Don'ts of soy consumption
interview by Mary Vance, from Terrain - Whole
New Diet
A health-savvy cookbook shows how to get away from processed foods
by Julie Hanus - Biofuel's
Big Bean
How large-scale soy is threatening the environment and a South American way of life
by April Howard and Benjamin Dangl, from In These Times
3D Spine Simulator
Launch 3D Spine Simulator
