Category Archives: Healthy Eating

OD on veggies!

Consuming  a wide variety of vegetables is the quickest way to better health for just about any ailment, including pain. There are not many instances where this is not true, nor “experts” that will challenge this advice.

Incorporating tons of seasonal, colorful vegetables on a daily basis will ensure you are covered with vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, and other essential micronutrients, with very little need for supplemental vitamins.

Some of the reasons vegetables are so valuable for long term health are :

1 – High in antioxidants

Antioxidants help combat the daily “exhaust products”, (otherwise known as free radicals) produced from normal functioning of our body’s cellular machinery, environmental exposure to toxins, and stress.

To keep your joints, muscles, tendons, ligaments and other important organs from rusting away, aim to get about 50% of your daily caloric intake from vegetables.

2 – Low in fat

This is self-explanatory. Overconsumption of unhealthy fats (in addition to lots of highly refined carbohydrates) is the number one reason for the declining health and exploding obesity rates.

Plenty of healthy fats and a hearty helping of vegetables at each meal, will help keep the body in a more anti-inflammatory state, and with time moving it towards a more pain free state.

3 – High in fiber

Diets high in fiber help to keep your gastrointestinal tract functioning optimally to allow maximal extraction of vital nutrients and lead to timely and regular elimination of those toxic “exhaust products”.

4 – Low Glycemic Index 

Lower GI foods, whether natural or refined, are less likely to spike blood sugar. Maintaining a fairly constant blood sugar without huge peaks and troughs over the course of a day is key to successful aging.

At the cellular level, there are many reasons why you age. One particular reason is the formation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs). This is a reaction where excess circulating sugars crosslink, or glycate, fats and proteins causing molecular rearrangements.

With molecular rearrangements, this leads to deterioration and decreased function of the tissue, the release of free radicals known to promote inflammation, and in turn – you guessed it – more pain.

AGEs are strongly linked to metabolic disorders, such as diabetes and hyperlipidemia. They are also known to promote inflammation and contribute to tendon, ligament, and joint damage.

Bottom line – next time you’re in the grocery store, make sure a minimum of 50% of what you plan to prepare comes from plant-based sources.

WHO recommends 9-13 servings of vegetables and fruit daily. Obviously this is difficult to achieve, however it is necessary to get rid of the free radicals. Hence supplementation from a good organic source is recommended.

Stay Healthy!

Lower Blood Pressure Naturally

High blood pressure, or hypertension, is the most important risk factor for premature death, accounting for half of all deaths caused by cardiovascular disease and 13.5 percent of all deaths each year. 

Thus,  keeping your blood pressure under control is one of the most important things you can do to extend your lifespan.

Recent research suggests that even “high normal” blood pressure (120–129 / 80–84 mmHg) increases the risk of death from cardiovascular disease by 46% on average.

Making the problem worse, studies have shown that drug therapy for “high normal” blood pressure and even mild hypertension is not effective. A large review of randomized, clinical trials performed by the prestigious Cochrane Collaboration found that anti-hypertensive drugs used to treat mild hypertension (140–159 / 90–99 mm/Hg) did not reduce disease complications or the risk of death.


But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing you can do. Like most other chronic diseases, high blood pressure is caused by a mismatch between our genes and the modern diet and lifestyle, characterized by processed and refined foods, sedentary behavior, chronic sleep deprivation, a lack of sun exposure and excess use of caffeine, alcohol and tobacco.
If you have “high-normal” blood pressure or mild hypertension, here are three recommendations for decreasing your blood pressure naturally.
Diet

• Sugar. Increased consumption of sugar is associated with high blood pressure, and reducing sugar intake has been shown to lower blood pressure.
• Potassium. High dietary intake of potassium is associated with lower blood pressure.
• Cold-water fish. DHA, in particular, is very effective at reducing blood pressure.
• Magnesium. A high dietary intake of magnesium has been shown to reduce blood pressure, though its effect is not as strong as what is observed with potassium. Nuts, seeds, spinach, beet greens, and chocolate are the highest food sources of magnesium. Magnesium’s effect on blood pressure is magnified when combined with increased potassium intake. In fact, increasing potassium and magnesium intake together while moderately reducing sodium intake can lower blood pressure as much as a single medication.
What about salt? We’ve been told for years that a high salt intake is one of the primary risk factors for high blood pressure and cardiovascular disease, but it’s time to shake up the salt myth. Though some studies do suggest that restricting salt can lower blood pressure, the evidence supporting a connection between salt intake and cardiovascular disease is weak at best. What’s more, some evidence suggests that restricting salt too much may be harmful to our health. There’s no strong evidence that reducing salt intake below one and one-half teaspoons is beneficial.
Lifestyle
There are a number of steps you can take in terms of behavioral and lifestyle change to lower your blood pressure. These include:
• Weight loss. Excess body fat can raise blood pressure, and reducing it can lower blood pressure.
• Exercise. Endurance exercise, strength training, high-intensity interval training and simply moving around more during the day have all been shown to significantly reduce blood pressure.
• Sleep. Both short sleep duration and poor sleep quality increase the risk that you’ll develop high blood pressure. (
• Sunlight. Exposure to ultraviolet light increases the production of a chemical in our bodies called nitric oxide. Nitric oxide is a powerful vasodilator; it helps our blood vessels to relax, which in turn lowers blood pressure.
• Meditation. Several studies have shown that meditation can be effective for lowering blood pressure, possibly via its relaxing effects on the nervous system.
• Deep breathing. Deep breathing is part of many traditional practices such as yoga, qi gong and certain forms of meditation. Even short periods of deep breathing have been shown to modestly lower blood pressure, and using deep-breathing techniques over weeks to months may lead to long-term reductions in blood pressure. Research suggests that three to four fifteen-minute sessions per week of deep breathing are sufficient to have this effect.
• Biofeedback. Biofeedback, the process of becoming aware of the body’s physiological functions, has been shown to effectively reduce blood pressure, with no side effects or risks.
First get your weight loss, exercise, sleep and sun exposure started. Then choose either meditation, deep breathing, or biofeedback and stick with it for a month. You’ll be amazed at the results.
Supplements
Several supplements have been shown to be quite effective for lowering blood pressure. In fact, research suggests that when combined together, diet and lifestyle changes and supplements can be even more effective than drug treatment.
Here’s a list of the supplements you should consider:
• CoQ10. Coenzyme Q10 is an antioxidant that plays an important role in protecting the heart. Levels of CoQ10 decrease with age and are lower in patients with diseases that are characterized by inflammation and oxidative stress, such as high blood pressure, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes. At doses of 100–225 mg per day, CoQ10 reduces systolic blood pressure by 15 mgHg and diastolic blood pressure by 10 mgHg.
• Garlic. Clinical trials have shown that garlic supplements have a modest but significant impact on blood pressure in people with high blood pressure, with an average reduction of 8.4 mmHg (systolic) and 7.3 mmHg (diastolic).
• Magnesium. Magnesium taken in supplemental form at doses of 500–1,000 mg/d over an eight-week period has been shown to significantly reduce blood pressure.
• Vitamin C. Vitamin C has been shown to modestly reduce blood pressure and improve arterial health in clinical studies.The recommended dose is 1,000 mg a day.
• Potassium. Potassium may help reduce blood pressure. The main dietary sources of potassium are starchy vegetables like potato, sweet potato and plantain, fruits like banana, and some species of fish, like halibut, rockfish, and salmon.

You’ll find that your doctor can soon reduce and even stop the antihypertensives they are giving you. What’s more, you’re saving yourself from developing the complications of high blood pressure. In a safe, easy and natural way!

Be Healthy.

Colored Carcinogens in Cola drinks

In food coloring, caramel color sounds almost natural. Unlike artificial colors like FD&C Blue No. 1 or FD& C Yellow 5, which bring up images of being created by a mad scientist in a lab, caramel color sounds like it comes from the age-old process of heating sugars to form dark-brown caramel.

But it doesn’t. Furthermore, far from being innocuous, caramel color, which is widely used in brown soft drinks, may cause cancer due to 4-methylimidazole (4-MeI), a chemical byproduct formed when certain types of caramel coloring are manufactured.
There’s no way to tell for certain whether 4-MeI is in soda, as it is listed on labels simply as caramel coloring or artificial coloring.

“‘It’s possible to get more than 29 micrograms – 10 times the danger level – of 4-MeI in one can of some of the drinks we tested. And even if your choice of soft drink contains half that amount, many people have more than one can per day.

Pepsi Says 4-MeI Levels Meet Standards Based on One-Third Can a Day Consumption. ABC News reported: “PepsiCo arrived at their conclusion by including people with low-consumption rates, such as children under the age of 2, in their averages. 


Caramel coloring can be found in a wide variety of other common products beyond soda, too, including:
Fast-food beef

Cat food and dog food

Beer
Chocolate

Potato chips

Soy sauce
Sauce mixes and gravies

Dark breads – the so-called ‘brown bread’

Being careful with these can go a long way toward reducing your risk for chronic health problems and weight gain, not to mention your exposure to potentially cancer-causing additives like caramel coloring.

Quality Nutraceuticals

The future of Personalized Nutrition is Quality Nutraceuticals Based on Actual Individual Biological Need.

We have addressed supplementation in a previous post, but this bears repeating, because it remains a highly misunderstood topic. Even in the medical community.

Evolution biology proves that vitamins have been essential to life forms for billions of years; and early life forms including primitive humans could manufacture their own vitamins but, curiously, lost this ability over time.

Sadly, the diet we consume is usually inflammatory and devoid of the quantity and quality of nutrients we require for optimum health.

Some people do have specific nutritional deficiencies. Others are simply unable to absorb essential nutrients. Many can benefit from high quality supplementation … IF they truly know what their bodies really need!

Supplementation of micronutrients, as determined by lab tests or lifestyle factors, is crucial to staying healthy.

 

Saturated fat, cholesterol and heart health

The nutritional myth that saturated fat is bad, continues to fall apart as a steady stream of new books and studies on this topic hit the media. The latest work to challenge the old dogma is a book called The Big Fat Surprise by journalist Nina Teicholz.

She points out the flaws in the original Ancel Keys study; how saturated fat has been a healthy human staple for thousands of years, and how the low-fat craze has resulted in excessive consumption of refined carbohydrates, which has resulted in increased inflammation and disease.

In 2012, researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology concluded that women with “high cholesterol” (greater than 270 mg/dl) had a 28 percent lower mortality risk than women with “low cholesterol” (less than 183 mg/dl).
Researchers also found that, if you’re a woman, your risk for heart disease, cardiac arrest, and stroke are higher with lower cholesterol levels.

In 2013, a prominent London cardiologist by the name of Aseem Malhotra argued in the British Medical Journal that you should ignore advice to reduce your saturated fat intake, because it’s actually increasing your risk for obesity and heart disease.

Fat Has Been Blamed for Sugar’s Evil Deeds

A high-sugar diet raises your risk for heart disease by promoting metabolic syndrome—a cluster of health conditions that includes high blood pressure, insulin and leptin resistance, high triglycerides, liver dysfunction, and visceral fat accumulation.

Cholesterol Is Not Only Beneficial for Your Body—It’s Absolutely Mandatory

Cholesterol plays important roles such as building your cell membranes, interacting with proteins inside your cells, and helping regulate protein pathways required for cell signaling. Having too little cholesterol may harm your brain health, hormone levels, heart disease risk, and more. Therefore, placing an upper limit on dietary cholesterol, especially such a LOW upper limit as is now recommended, is likely causing far more harm than good.

The Truth About Saturated Fats

Just as your body has requirements for cholesterol, it also needs saturated fats for proper function. One way to understand this is to consider what foods humans consumed during their evolution. Many experts believe that since the Paleolithic Era, we evolved as hunter-gatherers. Paleolithic nutrition states that we have eaten animal products for most of our existence on Earth. To suggest that saturated fats are suddenly harmful to us makes no sense, especially from an evolutionary perspective.

The latest science suggests healthy fats (saturated and unsaturated fats from whole food, animal, and plant sources) should comprise anywhere from 50 to 85 percent of your overall energy intake. Saturated fats provide a number of important health benefits, including the following:

  • Providing building blocks for cell membranes, hormones, and hormone-like substances
  • Mineral absorption, such as calcium
  • Carriers for important fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K.
  • Conversion of carotene into vitamin A.
  • Acts as antiviral agent.
  • Optimal fuel for the brain.
  • Provides satiety.
  • Modulates genetic regulation and helps prevent cancer.

What REALLY Constitutes a Heart-Healthy Diet?

A “heart-healthy diet,” is one which minimizes inflammation, reduces insulin resistance, and helps reduce risk for cardiovascular disease.

1. Limit or eliminate all processed foods
2. Eliminate all gluten and highly allergenic foods from your diet
3. Eat organic foods whenever possible to avoid exposure to harmful agricultural chemicals.
4. Avoid genetically modified ingredients (GMO), which are linked to abundant health problems, including chronic inflammation and heart disease
5. Eat at least one-third of your food uncooked (raw), or as much as you can manage; avoid cooking foods at high temperatures
6. Increase the amount of fresh vegetables in your diet, locally grown and organic if possible
7. Eat naturally fermented foods, which help optimize your gut bacteria and prevent inflammation- as well as providing valuable vitamin K2, B vitamins, and other nutrients
8. Avoid all artificial sweeteners.
9. Limit fructose to less than 25 grams per day from all sources, including whole fruits. If you have insulin resistance, diabetes, hypertension, or heart disease, you’d be well advised to keep your fructose consumption below 15 grams per day until your insulin resistance has normalized
10. Swap all trans fats (vegetable oils, margarine etc.) for healthy fats like avocado, raw butter, cheese, and coconut oil; avoid consuming oxidized cholesterol (cholesterol that has gone rancid, such as that from overcooked scrambled eggs)
11. To rebalance your omega-3 to omega-6 ratio, take a high-quality animal-based omega-3 supplement, and avoid consumption of processed omega-6 fats from vegetable oils.
12. Drink plenty of pure water every day.

Heart-Healthy Moves

In addition to following the heart-healthy plan  above, there are several more strategies that can help in reducing chronic inflammation and lowering cardiovascular risk:

Exercise regularly. One of the primary benefits of exercise is that it helps normalize and maintain healthy insulin and leptin levels. Exercise also boosts HDL, increases growth hormone production, helps curb appetite, and improves mood and sleep.
Intermittent fasting. Fasting is an excellent way to “reboot” metabolism so that the body can relearn how to burn fat as its primary fuel, which helps shed those excess fat stores.
AVOID statin drugs. Statin drugs can reduce cholesterol to dangerously low levels, while doing nothing to modulate LDL particle size. Statin drugs may even accelerate heart disease.
AVOID chemicals. BPA, for example, has been linked to heart disease: adults with the highest levels of BPA in their urine are more than twice as likely to develop coronary artery disease as those with the lowest levels.

Be Healthy!