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Adventurer Bear Grylls' battle with back pain and high cholesterol
by MOIRA PETTY
To the outside world, the adventurer Bear Grylls epitomises supreme
fitness. The man who catapults himself into alien, life-threatening environments, surviving on his wits alone, practically bursts with good health - or so it seems to the viewer watching him on television from the comfort of the sofa.
Yet despite appearances, Bear has been plagued with back pain for over ten years - for which he only recently found an effective treatment.
More worryingly,
he also suffers from high levels of cholesterol, caused
by a genetic disease which killed his father and grandfather
- and which poses as much of a danger to him as his Boys'
Own exploits.
Adventurer Bear Grylls may throw himself into some of the
most uninhabitable places on earth but the super fit action
man suffers from a genetic condition which means he suffers
from very high cholesterol levels
Bear's father, former Tory MP Sir Michael Grylls, died suddenly
of a heart attack at 66 in 2001; his grandfather also died
prematurely of heart disease.
But it was only six months ago that Bear had a cholesterol
test. He was staggered to find that he had a reading of
six-and-a-half, which is very high for someone of his age
and fitness.
"I had been in the SAS Territorial Army and spent my
life on physical challenges. Even when at home I exercised
six days a week, alternating circuit training, running and
yoga," says Bear, now 33.
Without these high levels of activity his reading could
have been even worse; his older sister, Lara, had an even
higher reading of eight.
Doctors recommend that cholesterol levels are under five
and even lower for patients at particular risk of heart
disease.
Bear appears to suffer from a hereditary predisposition
to dangerously high levels of cholesterol, which clogs the
arteries and can lead to heart attacks and stroke. The condition
- hypercholesterolaemia - affects seven people in 1,000.
Men with the condition are at greater risk of heart attack:
80 per cent will have had their first heart attack by 60,
but many will suffer one in their 40s or 50s.
Although the condition is not caused by a bad diet, it can
be improved by one low in fats.
Despite the warning given by his father's and grandfather's
heart attacks, Bear had enjoyed a diet rich in animal fats,
especially meat and milk which he thought necessary to sustain
his high-octane and physically strenuous existence.
But soon after his cholesterol test, he came across The
Rave Diet, written by American filmmaker Mike Anderson,
who had seen members of his family die of cancer and heart
disease.
Based on fruit, vegetables and wholegrains with as much
raw food as possible and no animal fats or vegetable oils,
it is a Spartan regime, but Bear has embraced it enthusiastically.
"After I read this, the links between the heart disease
which killed my father and grandfather, my high cholesterol
and my fatty diet became startlingly clear. My mother fed
my father butter and cream all day long.
"It breaks my heart that my father never knew my children.
He should have been around for another 25 years."
Bear has learnt that the key to his survival may lie not
in his awesome ability to live off hostile landscapes, but
in adhering to the sort of lifestyle advice promoted in
every GP's surgery.
"I am planning to have my cholesterol tested again
soon. But I think my new diet is the answer."
Bear, his wife Shara and two sons (aged four and one) now
eat neither meat nor fish, but get their protein from nuts,
seeds, pulses and quinoa (a protein rich grain which can
be used like rice or as a porridge).
They also drink oatmilk (made from oats mixed with water
and other grains and beans; it is high in fibre, vitamin
E, folic acid and phytochemicals, which fight cancer and
heart disease).
"We're not bonkers about it - if we go out, we eat
what's available. And when I'm on an expedition I eat what
I have to in order to stay alive. I've eaten sheep's eyes,
the still hot meat from a zebra killed by a lion, and maggots
which give you 70 calories to the ounce."
As well as his risk of heart disease, Bear also suffers
from chronic back problems.
Twelve years ago, aged 21, he broke his back when training
with the SAS after his parachute failed to inflate at 16,000
feet.
"I should have cut the main parachute and gone to the
reserve but thought there was time to resolve the problem." He landed on his parachute pack, which was like an iron
bar, and fractured three vertebrae.
It was extraordinary that he was alive, let alone not paralysed
- but incredibly the spinal cord, which channels messages
between the brain and all parts of the body, had not been
severed.
Bear was treated at Headley Court, the defense forces' rehabilitation
centrein Surrey.
"The doctor said I was a miracle man. I had come so
close to severing my spinal cord. Because of my age and
my fitness, they decided I could avoid surgery."
Instead, he underwent ten hours a day of physiotherapy,
swimming, stretching and ultrasound treatment - a
programme designed to help servicemen get back to active
duty, but rarely available to civilians.
The alternative - and one offered to most people in a similar
situation, but without Bear's peak fitness - is surgery
to fuse the broken vertebrae.
'I had nightmares for months. Still, I was lucky to walk
away without surgery - but ever since, I have suffered twinges
and pains."
Deep massage helped, but he says he always felt physically
'unbalanced' by his injury.
Then a year ago his wife suggested he see a Bowen therapist.
The Bowen technique, developed in the 1950s, involves using
rolling movements over muscles, ligaments and tendons.
This is said to send impulses to the brain to trigger the
body's own healing system.
Precisely how it works is a mystery, but many professional
football clubs maintain a Bowen therapist as it has been
shown to be very effective in realigning the skeletal structure.
"I was sceptical, but wanted to keep an open mind," says Bear.
He went to see East Sussexbased Bowen therapist Sarah Yearsley.
"With the slightest squiggle of her fingers, it felt
like petrol was being put back in my tank and I could feel
all the stress seeping away. More importantly, after my
back accident, my spine and pelvis had lost alignment, so
I felt unbalanced."
Sarah explained that Bear's pelvis was slightly twisted
- and that this would cause endless problems and backache.
Most fans of Bear's Born Survivor series will not have noticed
anything wrong, yet a subtle misalignment - visible only
to the expert eye - can impact on total health For Bear,
who is often jumping out of planes, having complete structural
alignment is even more important than for the average person.
Bear describes himself as now 'hooked' and has treatment
every month.
It has helped him prepare for his most perilous challenge
yet. Next month he is attempting a powered paraglide over
Everest's 29,035ft summit.
"I am scared I could black out in the click of a finger." If this venture seems inconsistent with his desire to lead
a healthy life, Bear has an announcement.
"This is the last of my big expeditions or challenges.
They're getting too dangerous. I'm not on the Ranulph Fiennes
road of trying to beat the last expedition." Sir Ranulph
has been an inspiration to Bear all his life.
As a boy, Bear climbed the bell tower at Eton, where the
baronet had also once been a pupil. "In the lead lining,
I found the initials RF. I put BG next to his," he
recalls.
But while he is 'full of dreams and ambitions,' he also
has a family and a long-suffering wife at home.
In fact, relaxation is vital to Bear, who says, somewhat
surprisingly: "I don't thrive on stress. I love lying
on the deck on our houseboat reading a
book.
"I'm terrified of walking into a room full of people.
Sitting down at a dinner table with 15 strangers brings
me out in a sweat." Yet, he says, fear isn't the reason
not to do something.
"I'm scared of heights, yet I've just abseiled 770
feet off Canary Wharf for charity.
"But the folly of youth is that you think you're immortal.
Losing my father and having my children has brought me to
my senses. I want to be around to love and guide my sons
for a long time." |