Vibrant viewers, on this week’s Healthy Living, in part one of a 
two-part series, we’ll learn some of the key principles of diet and 
nutrition from Dr. Jay Sutliffe of Chadron State College, Nebraska, USA.
 
Dr. Sutliffe is a registered dietician with a background in 
health education and public health. He is a popular speaker at health 
expos and conferences and is an advocate of the vegan lifestyle.
Given
 the seemingly endless array of food choices, some feel it is a 
challenge to know which are truly the foods that can keep our bodies 
strong and full of energy.
Dr. Sutliffe first discusses the C 
Reactive Protein level as an indicator of health status and why this 
measure shows that always selecting natural, plant-based foods is vital 
to keeping healthy and active.
Dr. Sutliffe(m):
 The C Reactive Protein is a protein made in the liver in response to 
inflammatory conditions in the body. It’s a better indicator than even 
cholesterol to see the likelihood or the possibility of us having a 
cardiovascular event, and so the C Reactive Protein is measuring how 
much inflammation we have actually within the arteries. 
And so 
when we have this check, what we see is if there’s an elevated 
condition. What we can do is we can change lifestyle factors to actually
 bring the C Reactive Protein level down and bring our inflammation 
down. 
Now inflammation is also synonymous with cancer, diabetes, and
 any of the arthritic conditions, because when we become inflamed 
internally it starts narrowing off the blood flow in the body. 
In
 some of the clinical studies that we’re currently doing with some 
colleagues of mine, we’re actually looking at using a plant-based 
lifestyle to lower the C Reactive Protein. 
In our preliminary 
findings right now we’re finding that the plant-based lifestyle is a 
major benefit in bringing the C Reactive Protein down in the short-term,
 even as little as two to three weeks. 
Dr. Sutliffe(m):
 When we take in an animal- based protein diet, we’re finding that a lot
 of the sulfur containing amino acids are causing an inflammatory 
response in the body. 
When you eat foods of plant origin, that 
have plant proteins, they’re typically very low in sulfur-containing 
amino acids, and so automatically that’s starting to help reduce the 
amount of inflammation within the arteries. 
For more details on Dr. Sutliffe, 
please visit 
www.CSC.edu or 
www.FullCircleofWellness.com