“It’s natural! It must be good for you,
right? All those synthetic chemicals are so unnatural and bad for you, but this
is natural so it’s good.” I know you’ve heard that before. You know what, that
might even be you. (If it is, stop it. Here’s why).
People like to make contrasts between the
man-made world and the natural world. People also incorrectly assign good or
bad traits, such as healthiness, to objects based on this classification.
Here’s a little example.
Snake venom. Hey, it’s natural, it’s fine!
Deadly Nightshade. A natural flower, can’t hurt me. Cancer. Who can argue
that’s not a natural process? Tobacco, hemlock, poisonous mushrooms, the list
goes on. The point is, just because something is naturally occurring, doesn’t
mean it is beneficial to health or even safe. The flip side is also true:
Synthetic things do not have to be bad for you.
This leads into my next point: All things
are made of atoms, stuck together in various combinations to make molecules.
This might seem like an obvious statement at first, but there are a lot of
hidden implications here. The effect of any substance in the body is solely
dependent on the shape of the molecule and the atoms that make it up. All
natural things, all man-made things, they are all ultimately made up of exactly
the same building blocks.
| Just in different proportions. |
| Cue abusive comments from overzealous biologists |
One area in which this is easily
demonstrated is in the pharmaceutical industry. They aim to synthesise
molecules with just the right shape to mimic molecules that are already present
in the body, in order to interact with particular enzymes, in order to get the
desired effect. We understand in extreme detail how the vast majority of
drug-enzyme interactions work, right down to the molecular level and the actual
shapes of the objects involved. This is why painkillers, antibacterials,
antidepressants, statins, stimulants, anti-cancer drugs, anti-seizure drugs,
and every other drug ever developed for humans and animals works – because they
mimic naturally occurring molecules. And the simple fact that all of these are
undeniably active, useful substances with quantifiable and predictable
responses demonstrates that the human body, and indeed biology in general,
cannot discriminate between ‘natural’ and ‘man-made’ molecules.
| Note the similarity in structure - this causes the amphetamine molecule to target receptors designed for dopamine in the brain, and cause change in mood, euphoria, focus and increased heart rate. |
This principle extends to completely inert
and inactive molecules in the human body – if a molecule doesn’t fit into any
enzymes, and doesn’t react with anything in the body, it will pass out of the
body unchanged with no effects on the body. These inactive molecules can be
man-made or natural. A natural example is dietary fibre in your food. Made up
of glucose molecules (a type of simple sugar), the molecules are woven together
in a way that your digestive enzymes cannot attack, and so they pass through
the digestive tract untouched. A man-made example is blood-replacement fluid
made of perfluorocarbons, which are completely synthetic molecules made of
carbon and fluorine. These never occur in nature, but are so inactive in the
body that it is perfectly safe to pump them by the litre into your veins. Blood
substitutes are widely used throughout the medical industry to address blood
bank shortage issues, avoid disease transmission and replace large volumes of
blood lost in an accident.
| Breathing fluids such as LiquiVent have a high capacity to dissolve gases such as oxygen, and so are used in situations where lung function is compromised, especially in neonatal care. |
So next time you hear someone say that they
prefer ‘natural’ things, with the sole justification that if it’s natural it
must be healthy, feed them a pufferfish.
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