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Showing posts with label Greens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greens. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Foods That Can Purify Your Blood Naturally

Blood is an important component of the body. The task of blood is to provide important nutrients and oxygen to various parts of the body, and removing waste and carbon dioxide from those blood cells. Our body has its own detoxification system, which include kidneys, liver, intestines and skin. These are constantly filtering the blood to eliminate the harmful toxins from the body to maintain good health. Blood purification is very crucial for the healthy functioning of the body, because our overall health of an individual is dependent upon the blood of that individual. So if you want to purify your blood naturally, then include the following detoxifying foods in your diet.

foods that can purify blood naturally
Image courtesy of dream designs at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Foods that can purify your blood naturally

Dandelion

The rich amount of antioxidants and phytonutrients present in the dandelion helps to eliminate the toxins and free radicals from your digestive tract. Drinking dandelion root tea stimulates the liver and flushes out the toxins from your bloodstream.

Green Vegetables

Green vegetables like cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli and spinach are rich in antioxidant and anticancer compounds, which helps the liver to detoxify the blood and acts as natural cleansing agent for the blood. So include these vegetables on regular basis in your diet.

Garlic

Garlic is enriched with sulfur, it is an essential mineral which helps the body to get rid of harmful toxins. Also, it keeps your intestine free of viruses, parasites and bad bacteria.

Neem Leves

Neem leaves are one of the very well-known remedy to cleanse the body. Boil some neem leaves in a cup of water and have this water in the morning on an empty stomach. It acts as a natural blood cleanser.

Carrots

Carrots are rich in vitamin A, C, B6, K and glutathione, a natural liver cleansing protein. Drink a glass of fresh carrot juice in the morning on an empty stomach helps the body to cleanse and remove the toxins.

Flaxseed

Rich in omega-3 fatty acids and fiber helps the body to get rid of blood sugar and also eliminate the toxins from the body.

Avocado

Avocado is very helpful in cleansing the blood and it is good for maintaining healthy skin. Avocado helps to lower blood pressure, cholesterol and also detoxify the liver.

Parsley

Parsley is widely used as a remedy for cleansing the blood. It helps the kidneys to eliminate the toxins through urine.

Turmeric

Turmeric is well-known ayurvedic medicine to detoxify the liver. It helps to speed up the body's detoxifying process.

Alfalfa

Alfalfa helps in detoxifying the body, it lowers cholesterol, regulates pH levels in the blood and balances hormones. Also it is a natural diuretic .

http://www.dailyhealthgen.com/2015/03/foods-that-can-purify-blood-naturally.html


This post is on Healthwise


Go to Healthwise for more articles

Saturday, 7 June 2014

Five Ways to Avoid a Gout Attack

June 6, 2014  


Uric acid is a natural waste product in your body. But when too much builds up, it can crystalize. This accumulates in your joints and causes gout. It's a painful—even crippling—condition. Once you've had it, you'll always be prone to it...
Gout pain can be downright crippling. But following these five easy steps may help you prevent any future attacks.Gout can pop up in your ankle, heel, knee, wrist, toe, and even fingers. But don't let fear of a flare up stop you from enjoying your summer. Here are five ways to help avoid a gout attack:
1. Steam Your Greens: Leafy greens are among the best things you could possibly eat to help add years to your life. But there's a little-known problem with these foods... Some of them are high in oxalic acid. It's a natural defense against predators. Eating too much oxalic acid over time can lead to higher levels of uric acid... And that could mean a gout attack.
But don't stop eating your greens. Just don't eat them raw. Gently steaming spinach, kale, collard greens, and Swiss chard is a great way to reduce oxalic acid. This may even help you absorb more of the nutrients in these vegetables. Be sure to drain the veggies and let them dry after steaming. The oxalic acid can actually accumulate in the leftover water. Buying organic veggies may also help reduce inflammation—and chances of an encounter with gout—by lowering your exposure to toxins.
2. Eat Tart Cherries: Preventing inflammation is important for avoiding a gout attack. But don't rely on NSAIDs to do it. One study found that eating just a half cup serving of tart cherries each day can reduce the frequency of gout attacks by 35%. People who took tart cherry extract instead had even more impressive results. They saw a 45% reduction in gout attacks.
The anthocyanin that gives tart cherries their red color also helps prevent inflammation. It may also lower the amount of uric acid in your blood—another important factor in preventing a gout attack. If you can't find fresh tart cherries, you can buy organic juice and natural extract online.
3. Eliminate High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS): This dangerous food additive may do more than just spike your blood sugar levels... The fructose in HFCS also causes your uric acid levels to rise. It may also make it harder for your body to process and eliminate this acid. This causes a major buildup that can lead to a gout attack.
One study found that men who drink two or more soft drinks sweetened with HFCS a day have an 85% higher risk of developing gout. But it's not just soda. Look out for fruit juices—even the "healthy" ones—that use HFCS as one of their main ingredients.
4. Limit Alcohol: We don't recommend that you drink alcohol in excess to begin with. But here's yet another reason to limit your intake... It boosts your uric acid levels. One study found that subjects who drank the most beer and liquor raised the uric acid content of their blood by up to 60%. In fact, for every 10 grams of alcohol you consume in a day, your gout risk may go up by 17%.
To put that number in real world terms, there's about 14 grams of alcohol in a single shot of most liquors. Though some studies suggest drinking wine may lower your risk, it's probably best to avoid it if you're already prone to gout flare ups.
5. Supplement with Celery Seed: It's an ancient Indian medicine used to treat colds, flu, and poor digestion. But it may also help prevent a gout attack. Celery seed is a diuretic. It helps your body pass water by increasing urine output. This may also help you flush out uric acid and keep it from building up in your joints. And it's not just uric acid that it helps get rid of. The antioxidant content of these seeds may also help prevent inflammation that can bring on gout.
Your best bet for celery seed is to find a natural extract in supplement form. Try your local health food store. But if you can't find it near you, it's also available online.
If you already suffer from gout, these tips can help you prevent a future attack. But if you've never had an attack, following these five steps may keep you from ever experiencing one.
References:
1http://www.greenmedinfo.com/article/fructose-may-cause-metabolic-syndrome-due-its-ability-raise-uric-acid-levels
2http://www.bmj.com/content/336/7639/285
3http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15593346
4http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/524766_5
5http://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/faqs.htm
6http://umm.edu/health/medical/altmed/herb/celery-seed

http://institutefornaturalhealing.com/2014/06/five-ways-to-avoid-a-gout-attack/#References


Tuesday, 31 December 2013

Four anti-inflammatory foods you should be eating

Published: Tuesday March 26, 2013 MYT

Tomatoes, rich in lycopene, are part of a healthful anti-inflammatory diet.
Tomatoes, rich in lycopene, are part of a healthful anti-inflammatory diet.

While inflammation is the body's natural response to injury, chronic inflammation can lead to health problems -- but here are four anti-inflammatory foods that can help minimise the damaging effects.
"The inflammation process has one goal: to respond immediately to detect and destroy the toxic material in damaged tissues before it can spread throughout the body," said Dr. Lauren Whitt of the University of Alabama in a March 22 release from the university.
"The trouble with inflammation occurs when the defense system gets out-of-control and begins to destroy healthy tissue, causing more damage than the original issue."
Being overweight is known to increase inflammation in the body, which researchers say can lead to increased risks of heart attack or stroke. Prior research from Johns Hopkins University (November 2012) in the US has found that low-fat and low-carbohydrate diets can reduce inflammation.
Whitt added that the right anti-inflammatory foods are one way of targeting the problem. Here are a few items to consider adding to your shopping list:
• Citrus fruits -- vitamin C and vitamin E are essential antioxidants 
• Dark, leafy greens -- high in vitamin K 
• Tomatoes -- the fruit's red pigment, lycopene, is a potent antioxidant 
• Wild-caught salmon -- contains a rich concentration of omega-3 fatty acids
"Eating to minimise inflammation doesn't have to be an overwhelming task," she said. "Take baby steps by incorporating leafy greens into a salad at lunch, or add a piece of whole fruit to your breakfast."
In addition, Whitt recommended eating more foods straight from the farm, as well as fewer processed and fried foods. Doing so may reduce the need for some medications, she said.
People "are constantly on the lookout for a quick-fix, so when our immune systems kick into overdrive, we would generally prefer to pop a pill and keep moving," Whitt added. "But if we focus on our diets, we can alleviate the need for the anti-inflammatory medications in many cases." -- AFPRelaxnews
http://www.thestar.com.my/Lifestyle/Health/2013/03/26/Four-antiinflammatory-foods-you-should-be-eating/

Sunday, 24 November 2013

Spring Cleanse: Detox the Body



To create a healthy body you’ve got to clean it up. Cleansing the inside of the body helps it to heal and maintain optimum health. Cleansing also helps you to look younger and feel more energized.

Everyone can benefit from cleansing and detoxification. With spring in the air, this is the perfect time to do a complete cleaning.

     There are several ways to cleanse the body including food, herbs, essential oils, enemas and colonics. All of these are very effective when used together. They create a cleansing synergy that is powerful enough to clean deep down at the cellular level.

     If we didn’t take a bath, wash our hair or brush our teeth we’d be pretty dirty and smelly, but we wouldn’t get cancer, heart disease, diabetes or any other serious disease because we didn’t clean the outside. However, when we don’t clean the inside of the body it can become sick and diseased and can lead to very serious illnesses.

     When the colon becomes impacted with waste matter, worms, parasites and mucoid plaque it can become a breading ground for disease. Foods like meat, sugar, flour, and additives, preservatives, and chemical toxins fill up the colon, dirty the blood and lymphatic system, and create sickness!

Cooked food is acidic and difficult to digest, assimilate and eliminate. It has no enzymes and the vitamins and minerals have been compromised so much that you get little value from the cooked food. Raw and living foods are excellent to detox the body and they are the most nutritious foods on the planet.

     Here are five things you can do to cleanse and detoxify your body right now:

1. Eat more organic raw and living sprouted foods, especially dark green leafy vegetables which are full of chlorophyll, nature’s best cleanser.

2. Drink more alkaline water. Hydration is key in the cleansing and detoxification process. Many diseases could be eliminated if people drank more alkaline water. The body needs lots of water to cleanse itself. Drink a minimum of one ounce of water for every two pounds you weigh. Drink more and get an even deeper cleanse.

3. Exercise every day to help detox the stress out. Exercise helps you build up strong muscles, but it also helps you to feel better and more energized.

4. Give yourself a cleansing enema and schedule a series of colonics to flush your colon out with good filtered water. Implant some fresh wheatgrass juice in your colon for a powerful cleansing and nourish your body at a cellular level too. Wheatgrass juice has most every vitamin and mineral known.

5. Use cleansing herbs and essential oils to clean up your blood and lymphatic system and to get rid of parasites, candida yeast and worms which can zap your energy and make you sick.

     This cleansing process will help you recover your digestion, assimilation and elimination, which is the foundation of good health. The colon is not only the body’s major elimination organ; it is also an organ of digestion. The colon absorbs nutrients and disperses them throughout the body. If the colon is clogged up nutrients from food cannot be properly assimilated.

     Cleaning out the body of old toxic waste and eating good, organic, raw and living foods will ensure you a clean body, which will reward you with good health and overall well-being for many years to come.

Clean Up Greens
  • 3-cups kale
  • 1-cup parsley
  • 3 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
  • 1 large clove garlic
  • 1-cup carrots
  • 1-cup celery
    
Chop all the vegetables into very small pieces, which are easier to digest and toss with the lemon juice. Let the mixture sit for a couple of hours to marinate, which will help the greens become tender.

http://www.healthiertalk.com/spring-cleanse-detox-body-1582

Thursday, 7 November 2013

Hidden SuperFood: The Secret Life of Kale

Crouching Garnish, Hidden SuperFood: The Secret Life of Kale

November 06, 2013

Kale

Story at-a-glance

  • Kale is a form of cabbage that evaded domestication, sharing many of the same traits as wilder plant relatives, such as broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts
  • The nutritional density of kale is virtually unparalleled among green leafy vegetables. It has a 3:1 carbohydrate-to-protein ratio, which is an exceptionally high amount of protein for any vegetable, and one reason why it has recently been acclaimed as the "new beef"
  • Like meat, kale contains all 9 essential amino acids needed to form the proteins within the human body, plus, 9 other non-essential ones for a total of 18. It also contains more omega-3 than omega-6, which is almost unheard of in nature
  • For a hearty protein breakfast, try chopping up half a bunch of kale, a quarter of an onion, and stir fry it in a tablespoon of olive oil for a few minutes till it is tender. Make sure to add in a pinch of natural unprocessed salt, a pinch of pepper, a teaspoon of lemon or Ume Plum Vinegar

By Sayer Ji 

Few foods commonly available at the produce stand are as beneficial to your health as kale. And yet, sadly, it is more commonly found dressing up something not as healthy in a display case as a decoration than on someone's plate where it belongs. 
Kale is actually a form of cabbage that evaded domestication, sharing many of the same traits as wilder plant relatives unafraid of holding on to their bitter principle, and relatively unruly appearance. 
Kale is perfectly content letting its luscious green leafy hair down, being the 'hippie' member of a family that includes the more tightly wound broccoli, cauliflower and the Brussel sprout, whose greater respectability as far as most restaurant menus go

This means kale is more likely to be found forgotten, shriveling up somewhere on the bottom shelf of someone's refrigerator, no doubt possessed by someone with every intention (but not the time and appetite enough) to eat it. 
But please do not underestimate this formidable plant, which grows as high as six to seven feet in the right conditions, casting a shadow as long as the impressive list of beneficial nutritional components it contains.  
Its nutritional density, in fact, is virtually unparalleled among green leafy vegetables. Consider too that during World War II, with rationing in full effect, the U.K. encouraged the backyard cultivation of this hearty, easy to grow plant for the Dig for Victory campaign that likely saved many from sickness and starvation. Over a half century later, kale's status as a former cultural nutritional hero has faded into near oblivion ... until now, we hope!

 

Kale Contains ALL the Essential Amino Acids and 9 Non-Essential Ones 

You will notice that one cup of raw kale contains less than 1 gram of fat (0.3 grams to be exact), 2 grams of protein, and subtracting the 1 gram of fiber from the total carbohydrate content (7), an effective carb content of 6 grams per serving, which is almost entirely complex carbohydrate, i.e. "starch." This means it has a 3:1 carbohydrate-to-protein ratio – an exceptionally high amount of protein for any vegetable, and one reason why it has recently been acclaimed as the "new beef." 
Kale Nutrition Facts
 
Indeed, like meat, kale contains all 9 essential amino acids needed to form the proteins within the human body: histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, valine – plus, 9 other non-essential ones for a total of 18: 
Kale Protein and Amino Acids
 
Consider too that compared to meat, the amino acids in kale are easier to extract. When consuming a steak, for instance, the body has to expend great metabolic resources to break down the massive, highly complex, and intricately folded protein structures within mammalian flesh back down into their constituent amino acids;

Then, later, these extracted amino acids must be reassembled back into the same, highly complex, intricately folded and refolded human proteins from which our body is made. This is a time-consuming, energy-intensive process, with many metabolic waste products released in the process. 
For the same reason that massive mammalian herbivores like cows, for instance, eat grass -- not other animals -- kale can be considered anabolic, "meaty," and worthy of being considered as a main course in any meal. The nice thing, too, is that less is needed to fulfill the body's protein requirements.

Also, kale is so much lower on the food chain than beef, that it doesn't bio-accumulate as many, and as much, of the toxins in our increasingly polluted environment. And this, of course, doesn't even touch on the great "moral debate" concerning avoiding unnecessary harm to sentient beings, i.e. eating kale is morally superior than eating/killing animals.

 

Kale is an Omega-3 Diamond In the Rough 

While it is considered a "fat free" vegetable, it does contain biologically significant quantities of essential fatty acids – you know, the one's your body is not designed to create and must get from the things we eat or suffer dire consequences. 
Kale Fatty Acid Composition
 
In fact, you will notice it contains more omega-3 than omega-6, which is almost unheard of in nature. It is a general rule that you will find a 40:1 or higher ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 found in most grains, seeds, nuts and beans. Peanuts, for instance, have 1,800 times higher omega-6 fat levels than omega-3 , which (taken in isolation) is a pro-inflammatory and unhealthy ratio. Kale, therefore, is a superstar as far as essential fatty acids go, and especially considering that all of its naturally occurring fat-soluble antioxidants protect these fragile unsaturated fats from oxidizing.

 

Kale's Vitamin Content More Pays for Itself Many Times Over 

Now to the vitamins. Kale is a king of carotenoids. Its vitamin A activity is astounding. One cup contains over 10,000 IU's, or the equivalent of over 200% the daily value. Also, consider that most of this vitamin A (retinol) is delivered the form of beta-carotene, which in its natural form is the perfect delivery system for retinol (two retinol molecules attached to one another), as it is exceedingly difficult to get too much. If you compare it to the synthetic vitamin A used in many mass market foods and vitamins, it is an order of magnitude or higher safer. 
Kale Vitamin Facts

 

Kale is an Eye-Saving Super Food Rich In Vitamins 

Kale has a few more surprises left in the "vitamin" department. It turns out that it is loaded with both lutein and zeaxanthin at over 26 mg combined, per serving. Lutein comes from the Latin word luteus meaning "yellow," and is one of the best known carotenoids in a family containing at least 600. In the human eye it is concentrated in the retina in an oval-shaped yellow spot near its center known as the macula (from Latin macula, "spot" + lutea, "yellow"). This "yellow spot" acts as a natural sunblock, which is why adequate consumption of lutein and zeaxanthin may prevent macular degeneration and other retinal diseases associated with ultraviolet light-induced oxidative stress. 
Keep in mind that a 26 mg dose of lutein+zeaxanthin can easily cost a $1 per dose. In effect, one could calculate the cost reduction of this added bonus into kale's sticker price, which incidentally, is insultingly low considering all it has to offer. How, after all, does one price the preservation of your vision? 
Next, the vitamin C content, at over 80 mg per serving, is impressive. Consider, this is not ascorbic acid (which is semi-synthetic, and divorced from the food factors that help confer its amazing vitamin activity). Food vitamin C is a rare and precious element in the modern diet that is an absolute requirement for us to maintain our health. It can be likened to condensed sunlight frozen within the plant and released into our bodies after we eat it. Those who know kale well, can feel a happy little glow form within them after consuming it. And, I imagine, if we had the proper measuring device, we might see a slight uptick in intensity of the  biophotons that are continually emitted from our body.

 

Kale: The New "Vegetable Cow"? 

Now, just when you thought kale was just too good to be true, there is the matter of its remarkable mineral composition. Of course, the quality and mineral and microbial density of the soil within which it is grown is a factor, but kale generally has the ability to provide an excellent source of minerals, in what is known as food-state. Unlike inorganic minerals, e.g. limestone, bone meal, oyster shell, the calcium in kale is vibrating with life-sustaining energy and intelligence.  
At 90 milligrams per cup, this highly bioavailable calcium actually contains more calcium per gram than whole milk! Also, a calcium bioavailability study3 from 1990, comparing milk and care in human subjects, found that kale calcium was 25% better absorbed, proving that the propaganda in support of milk as the ultimate source of calcium isn't as mooo-ving as commonly believed. 
Kale Mineral Composition
 
Just to be a bit exact about how much calcium there is in kale, for every gram of kale there is 1.35 mg of calcium. For every gram of whole milk, there is 1.13 mg. The difference, also, is that milk calcium is complexed with a sticky protein known as casein. This is why Elmer's glue was once made of milk protein. It is exceedingly hard for one-stomached (monogastric) mammals (that's us) to digest, and so, the calcium is difficult, if not impossible (in some) to liberate. 
Also, casein proteins require a large amount of hydrochloric acid to break down with our protein-digesting pancreatic enzymes.Over time, this can lead to some metabolic acidosis which may further leach calcium from our mineral stores,

For example, bones, teeth, causing a net loss in calcium following the consumption of cow's milk products heavy in casein, especially cheese. Kale, like most vegetables, on the other hand, are alkalinizing and therefore actually reduce the body's requirements for acid-neutralizing minerals (e.g. calcium, magnesium, sodium, silica, potassium) and therefore reducing the total amount of calcium we need to stay in pH and mineral balance. Kale, therefore, not only contains more of the right form of calcium, but may actually reduce your daily bodily requirements for it. Move over moo juice, there's a new "vegetable cow" on the block! 
Kale is also an excellent source of magnesium, which is why it is green. That deep, dark chlorophyll within its leaves contains one atom of magnesium per molecule. And considering how many of us are dying from excess elemental calcium4, adding additional sources of magnesium (which acts to balance out calcium) can have live-saving health benefits5
Finally, kale is more than just a nutritional "superfood." It comes from a long line of plant healers, and could very well be considered and (given future FDA drug approval6) used as a medicine. Newly emergent biomedical literature now shows it may be of value in the treatment of cancer, elevated blood lipids, glaucoma, and various forms of chemical poisoning.

We have made available the first-hand abstracts on our Kale Health Benefits7 research page, for those who, like us, enjoy geeking out to the science. Also, kale, like most cruciferous vegetables, is exceedingly high in several other extensively research anticancer compounds, such as sulforaphane and indole-3-carbinol8. The data set on these are even more impressive than on kale itself, with over 140 disease states potentially remedies for sulforaphane alone: sulforaphane health benefits9.

 

How to Get Kale into Your Diet 

Here is a great tip worth trying. Instead of eating an egg for breakfast with toast, try chopping up half a bunch of kale, a quarter of an onion, and stir fry it in a tablespoon of olive oil for a few minutes till it is tender. Make sure to add in a pinch of sea salt (I prefer Bragg's liquid aminos), a pinch of pepper, a teaspoon of lemon or if you are like me, use Ume Plum Vinegar. Also, go to your local health food store and get dulse flakes.
Note: Dulse flakes can be found in a pepper shaker like container. Kale, like most Cruciferous vegetables, contain naturally occurring goitrogens (or unnatural ones that have accumulated in them, such as perchlorate10 and various agrichemicals, especially in non-organically farmed vegetables) which can block the ability of the thyroid to utilize the iodine required to produce thyroid hormones (T4, T3). Since so many folks are already completely deficient in iodine, it really can't hurt (excepting rare cases of hyperthyroidism). Therefore it is a good practice to use it as a kale-specific antidote seasoning.Do all this and I promise you, there is a good chance but it will taste great, and leave you feeling deeply and completely nourished!

About the Author 

Sayer Ji is the founder and director of GreenMedInfo.com and an advisory board member at the National Health Federation, an international nonprofit, consumer-education, health-freedom organization. He co-authored the book Cancer Killers: The Cause Is The Cure, and is working on another one with Tania Melkonian titled EATomology: An Edible Philosophy of Food.

[-] Sources and References



http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2013/11/06/kale-benefits.aspx?

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

The 7 Best Energy Boosters



October 1, 2013

Are you tired all the time? You have plenty of company. About 10 million doctor visits each year are attributed to fatigue. And all of those bottomless cups of strong coffee won’t help. Too much caffeine actually saps energy and makes fatigue worse.

4205.jpgThe only way to beat fatigue is to create the conditions that bring more energy into your days and remove the obstacles that drain it away.

Most people know that exercise is energizing. It increases blood flow and circulates oxygen to the brain and other tissues. It also increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a protein that improves alertness and focus, along with physical energy.

Other energy-boosters that really work...

1. Green drinks. We are always being told to eat more greens, but ­drinking them can be a much better choice when your energy flags during the day.

What to do: Take advantage of the liquid greens in health-food stores. Juices made from wheatgrass, barley and other vegetable extracts are alkalizing. They increase pH and shift the body’s balance to a less acid state. Too much acidity—a consequence of all the meat and grains in the American diet—­impairs energy as well as health.

The grasses used in green drinks contain chlorophyll and related substances that remove energy-­depleting toxins from the body. The drinks typically have little or no added sugar, so they won’t cause the spike and drop in blood sugar that you get from sweetened soft drinks or fruit juices.

Green drinks are not delicious. They have a slightly grassy taste that takes some getting used to. My favorite is Barlean’s Greens, which is readily available online and in health-food stores and tastes surprisingly good.

2. Whole eggs. You need plenty of protein to satisfy your appetite, keep your energy humming and prevent the postmeal slump that occurs when you eat too much.

For years, people thought that egg-white omelets were the perfect high-protein meal. Not true. Whole eggs are better because the yolks are high in choline, a B vitamin that reduces inflammation—and the fatigue that accompanies it.

Don’t worry about the saturated fat in egg yolks. It’s not the enemy that people once thought. When researchers from Harvard and other institutions analyzed 21 previous studies that looked at the relationship between saturated fat and heart disease, they found that ­saturated fat did not cause an increase in heart disease or stroke.

What to do: Include a source of protein with every meal. It could be eggs, nuts, fish, grass-fed meat, beans or tofu.

3. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10). This is probably the most important ­energy-producing nutrient that most people don’t get enough of.

CoQ10 increases the activity of mitochondria, the energy-producing structures within cells. The body naturally produces CoQ10, but it’s a complicated process that involves at least seven vitamins. Since many people don’t get enough of these nutrients—including vitamin C and a variety of B vitamins—levels of CoQ10 tend to be too low to boost energy.

What to do: Supplement with 100 milligrams (mg) of CoQ10 daily if you’re generally healthy. If you have been ­diagnosed with a heart condition or are taking a cholesterol-lowering statin, increase the daily dose to 200 mg. Statins deplete CoQ10 from the body. It’s particularly important for heart patients to get enough because the heart requires CoQ10 to beat efficiently.

4. High-glycemic foods occasionally. You probably have heard that the best carbohydrates for long-term energy have a low-glycemic load. Fiber-filled foods such as lentils, peanuts, carrots and chickpeas are absorbed slowly into the intestine. They keep blood sugar and insulin at steady levels—not too low or too high.

There’s one possible exception. If you’re trying to lose weight and still keep your energy high, you might want to have occasional servings of high-glycemic foods. There’s some evidence that people who mainly eat low-glycemic carbs but allow themselves a high-glycemic meal every four to seven days help the body to overcome its tendency to burn fewer calories during a weight-loss diet.

My advice: Suppose that you eat mainly low-glycemic carbs but still want to lose a few pounds. Once or twice a week, have one meal that includes ­faster-burning carbohydrates, such as pasta, white potatoes or white rice. Scientists speculate that the jump in insulin overcomes the slowing of your metabolism that comes along with ­dieting.

5. Replenish your bacteria. You might not think that digestion has much to do with energy, but the action inside your intestines greatly affects how you feel.

A study published in Journal of Psychiatric Research found that probiotics (live, beneficial bacteria) may have antidepressant effects. The same organisms improve immunity and make it easier to fight off the fatiguing effects of viruses and bacteria.

My advice: Eat one or more daily servings of live-culture yogurt. Look for the letters LAC (Live and Active Cultures) on the label. It means that the yogurt contains at least 100 million live organisms per gram.

6. Lights out. Nothing saps your energy more than a poor night’s sleep. And what people don’t realize is that even very dim lights—such as the small LED indicators on computers, cell phones and bedside clocks—can make it difficult to get a decent night’s rest. Sleep scientists have found that even trace amounts of ambient light inhibit the production of melatonin, a sleep-promoting hormone.

My advice: Minimize the amount of light. Turn your digital clock so that it faces away from the bed, for example, or drape something over the computer to cover up the “on” light.

If you don’t get enough sleep, take a nap. Napping improves memory, lowers stress and improves all-day ­energy. Studies done by NASA have found that a short 26-minute nap can increase performance by 34% and alertness by 54%. Limit your naps to 26 minutes or less, preferably late in the morning or early in the afternoon.

7. Breathe deeply and well. You would think that nothing is more natural than breathing, but many people don’t breathe the way that nature ­intended.

Reason: We live in a very fast-paced world…and we spend a lot of time hunched over desks, staring at computer screens. Both stress and poor posture tighten muscles in the upper body and make it harder for the lungs to expand. We have become shallow breathers, which decreases oxygen and causes mental and physical fatigue.

My advice: Every few hours, take a breathing break. While sitting or ­lying down, place one hand on your abdomen and one hand on your chest. Slowly breathe in through your nose, then exhale just as deeply through your mouth. Make sure that the hand on your belly rises and falls while the hand on your chest barely moves.

During the day, if you notice that you’re breathing shallowly or more quickly than usual, remind yourself to relax and breathe in more fully.

Source: Jonny Bowden, PhD, CNS, a nutritionist and weight-loss expert based in Los Angeles. He is board-certified by the American College of Nutrition and is a member of the American Society of Nutrition. He is author of The Most Effective Ways on Earth to Boost Your Energy and coauthor with Stephen Sinatra, MD, of The Great Cholesterol Myth (both by Fair Winds). JonnyBowden.com

http://www.bottomlinepublications.com/content/article/diet-a-exercise/the-7-best-energy-boosters#at_pco=tcb-1.0&at_tot=5&at_ab=-&at_pos=3

Thursday, 25 July 2013

Are Your Leafy Greens Safe? - Oxalic Acid

July 24, 2013

Vegetables are pretty amazing. We can all agree on that.

Prevent Kidney StonesLeafy green vegetables help you lose weight, increase energy levels, and fuel your body. They’re also an excellent way to lower your risk for cancer.1

But beneath the leaves, they’re hiding something you probably didn’t know. It’s a natural chemical defense mechanism that prevents them from being eaten by insects, animals…and people.2

Of course, we still recommend you eat leafy greens every day.

So what’s the catch?

You have to know how to prepare them to avoid ingesting too much of this potentially harmful compound.

This sneaky chemical can lead to health problems down the road including calcium deficiencies, kidney stones, and gout…

Oxalic acid binds to calcium in the gut. It robs you of the calcium that you eat. When you eat a leafy green vegetable that is high in calcium and high in oxalic acid, the oxalic acid steals the calcium for itself by binding to it.

Oxalic acid also forms crystals over time that may cause muscle pain. Even worse… If oxalic acid binds with calcium in the kidneys, it can form kidney stones.

But again, you still need to eat your veggies. And thankfully there are a couple of options so you can keep them as part of your regular diet…

Gently steaming vegetables high in oxalic acid can significantly reduce the oxalic acid content.3
Some vegetables to do this with are spinach, parsley, Swiss chard, collard greens, and kale.

Lightly steaming some vegetables even increases the amount of nutrients you absorb from them. (But don’t overcook them! According to a study in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, cooking vegetables destroys an important cancer killing compound.)4

Supplementing with calcium and magnesium is also a good idea if your diet is high in leafy greens. The oxalic acid will bind to the supplements in the gut instead of the kidneys. This will aid in the proper digestion of oxalic acid and reduce your risk of kidney stones.

Bottom line: You can still get all of the benefits of eating your greens—just be sure to gently steam and drain them first. Steamed vegetables with some grass-fed butter is delicious and creamy. And the healthy fat in the grass-fed butter aids with nutrient absorption, too.

Or you can always supplement with calcium/magnesium.

So don’t skip your veggies. Just be sure you eat them the right way.

References:

1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23841909
2 http://oxalicacidinfo.com/
3 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15826055″>http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15826055
4 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18950181″>http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18950181
Related Articles:
http://institutefornaturalhealing.com/2013/07/are-your-leafy-greens-safe/

Friday, 19 April 2013

Why High Salt Consumption Alone Will Not Increase Your Heart Disease Risk

April 04, 2013 |216,515views

Too Much Salt

Story at-a-glance

  • New preliminary research findings suggest excessive salt consumption contributed to 2.3 million heart-related deaths worldwide in 2010; 42 percent from coronary heart disease and 41 percent from stroke
  • However, previous research has NOT found strong evidence that cutting salt intake reduces the risk for heart attacks, strokes or death. In fact, salt restriction increased the risk of death in those with heart failure
  • Salt is an essential nutrient required for blood pressure regulation, transportation of nutrients into and out of your cells, ion exchange, and brain-muscle communication. But all salts are not equal, in terms of their impact on your health. Processed (table) salt is health harming, while natural unprocessed salt is not only healing, but in fact essential for many biological functions
  • Potassium deficiency may be more responsible for hypertension than excess sodium, and too much sodium along with too little potassium has been found to more than double your risk of death from a heart attack, compared to eating about equal amounts of both nutrients
  • Our ancient ancestors consumed 16 times more potassium than sodium. Many “experts” believe that a “normal” ratio today is four times as much potassium than sodium. It is helpful to strive for at least as much potassium from your diet as sodium
  • The best way to ensure you’re getting enough potassium is not to rely on the use of a supplement, but to avoid processed foods, and dramatically increase your vegetable intake. Juicing is a great way to get more vegetables into your diet

By Dr. Mercola
Salt has long been a treasured food staple. Far from being harmful, high-quality salt is actually essential for life, but in the United States and many other developed countries salt has been vilified as a primary cause of high blood pressure and heart disease.

According to preliminary research presented at an American Heart Association meeting in New Orleans on March 21,1 excessive salt consumption contributed to 2.3 million heart-related deaths worldwide in 2010; 42 percent from coronary heart disease and 41 percent from stroke.  
This includes sodium intake from commercially available table salt and sodium found in processed foods and soy sauce. According to the researchers, 40 percent of deaths were premature, occurring in those under the age of 69. Sixty percent of the deaths were in men; 40 percent were women.
To reach these conclusions, the researchers analyzed 247 food surveys on sodium consumption collected between 1990 and 2010. From these, they tried to determine how the various salt intakes affected cardiovascular disease risks. The ideal salt intake was determined to be less than 1,000 mg per day.

Kazakhstan had the highest average salt intake at 6,000 mg per day. Kenya and Malawi had the lowest average intake at about 2,000 mg. Other salty regions included Central Asia, with an average of 5,500 mg sodium per day; high-income countries in the Asia-Pacific area, averaging 5,000 mg per day; and East Asia at 4,800 mg per day. 
According to the featured article:2
“Global sodium intake from various sources such as prepared food and soy sauce averaged nearly 4,000 milligrams a day in 2010... In the U.S., the average intake was about 3,600 milligrams a day. While the World Health Organization recommends sodium intake of fewer than 2,000 milligrams a day, 181 of 187 countries representing 99 percent of the world’s population exceeded the recommended level.”

You Need Salt, But Make Sure It’s the Right Kind

So is salt a dietary friend or foe? Salt is actually a nutritional goldmine, provided you consume the right kind, and maintain a proper salt-to-potassium ratio, which I’ll discuss in a moment. Unfortunately, modern table salt has very little in common with natural, unrefined salt.

Salt provides two elements – sodium and chloride – that are essential for life. Your body cannot make these elements on its own, so you must get them from your diet. Some of the many biological processes for which natural salt is crucial include:

Being a major component of your blood plasma, lymphatic fluid, extracellular fluid, and even amniotic fluid Carrying nutrients into and out of your cells, and helping maintain your acid-base balance Increasing the glial cells in your brain, which are responsible for creative thinking and long-term planning. Both sodium and chloride are also necessary for the firing of neurons
Maintain and regulate blood pressure Helping your brain communicate with your muscles, so that you can move on demand via sodium-potassium ion exchange Supporting the function of your adrenal glands, which produce dozens of vital hormones

However, not all salts are created equal. Natural salt contains 84 percent sodium chloride, and 16 percent naturally-occurring trace minerals, including silicon, phosphorous and vanadium.

Processed (table) salt, on the other hand, contains 97.5 percent sodium chloride and the rest is man-made chemicals, such as moisture absorbents and flow agents. These are dangerous chemicals like ferrocyanide and aluminosilicate. A small amount of iodine may also be added.

Some European countries, where water fluoridation is not practiced, also add fluoride to their salt.3 In France for example, 35 percent of table salt sold contains either sodium fluoride or potassium fluoride, and use of fluoridated salt is widespread in South America.

Besides these basic differences in nutritional content, the processing—which involve drying the salt above 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit—also radically alters the chemical structure of the salt. So, while you definitely need salt for optimal health, not just any salt will do. What your body needs is natural, unprocessed salt, without added chemicals.

Does Salt Really Cause Heart Disease?

Overindulgence in the typically used commercially processed table salt can lead to fluid retention, high blood pressure, swelling of your limbs, and shortness of breath. In the long term, it is thought to contribute to high blood pressure, kidney and heart disease, heart attacks, and heart failure.

However, compelling evidence suggests that while processed salt can indeed cause fluid retention and related health problems, numerous studies have, overall, refuted the salt-heart disease connection.

For example, a 2011 meta-analysis of seven studies involving more than 6,000 people found NO strong evidence that cutting salt intake reduces the risk for heart attacks, strokes or death.4 In fact, salt restriction actually increased the risk of death in those with heart failure.

Similarly, research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association that same year revealed that the less sodium excreted in your urine (a marker of salt consumption), the greater the risk of dying from heart disease.5 This study followed 3,681 middle-aged healthy Europeans for eight years. The participants were divided into three groups: low salt, moderate salt, and high salt consumption. Researchers tracked mortality rates for the three groups, with the following results:
  1. Low-salt group: 50 people died
  2. Moderate salt group: 24 people died
  3. High-salt group: 10 people died
The risk for heart disease was 56 percent higher for the low-salt group than for the group who ate the most salt! Some studies have shown a modest benefit to salt restriction among some people with high blood pressure, but the evidence does not extend to the rest of the population. So what’s really going on? Well, there are at least three factors that need to be taken into consideration.
  1. First, an ingredient that contributes to high blood pressure and heart disease across the board is fructose, and since so much of salt intake comes from processed foods, it’s easy to see how the lines of causation may get blurred. Virtually all processed foods are high not just in sodium, but also fructose, particularly in processed foods sold in the US.
  2. Another factor is that there’s a huge difference between natural salt and the processed salt added to processed foods and salt shakers in most homes and restaurants. The former is essential for good health, whereas the latter is best avoided altogether.
  3. A third factor that can have a significant impact on whether salt will harm or aid your health is the ratio between the salt and potassium in your diet.
That said, it’s clear that many are consuming far too much processed table salt and not enough natural salt. This begins early. According to the featured article, nearly 75 percent of processed meals and snacks for toddlers contain 210 mg of sodium per serving or more. Some toddler fare contains as much as 630 mg per serving, which equates to 40 percent of the daily limit recommended by the American Heart Association for adults.  
Lead researcher Dariush Mozaffarian, MD, MPH told MedPageToday:6
"'These findings highlight both the tremendous disease burdens caused by sodium but also the incredible opportunities for prevention.' ...He urged global public health efforts rather than relying on individuals to control intake of so pervasive an element. 'Our results should inspire both food industry and policymakers to take rapid and decisive actions to reduce sodium in the food supply... If voluntary agreements are not enough, taxation or restrictions on amounts of sodium should be implemented.'"

The Importance of Maintaining Optimal Sodium-Potassium Ratio

As mentioned earlier, another important factor that needs to be taken into account is the potassium to sodium ratio of your diet. Imbalance in this ratio can not only lead to hypertension (high blood pressure) but also contribute to a number of other diseases, including those highlighted in the featured research, along with a few others:

Heart disease and stroke Memory decline Osteoporosis Ulcers and stomach cancer
Kidney stones Cataracts Erectile dysfunction Rheumatoid arthritis

The easiest way to achieve this imbalance is by consuming a diet of processed foods, which are notoriously low in potassium while high in sodium. (And, to reiterate, processed foods are also loaded with fructose, which is clearly associated with increased heart disease risk, as well as virtually all chronic diseases.)

Why is potassium so important?

Among other things, your body needs potassium to maintain proper pH levels in your body fluids, and it also plays an integral role in regulating your blood pressure. It’s possible that potassium deficiency may be more responsible for hypertension than excess sodium. Potassium deficiency leads to electrolyte imbalance, and can result in a condition called hypokalemia. Symptoms include:
  • Water retention
  • Raised blood pressure and hypertension
  • Heart irregularities/arrhythmias
  • Muscular weakness and muscle cramps
  • Continual thirst and constipation
According to a 1985 article in The New England Journal of Medicine, titled "Paleolithic Nutrition,"7 our ancient ancestors got about 11,000 mg of potassium a day, and about 700 mg of sodium. This equates to nearly 16 times more potassium than sodium. Compare that to the Standard American Diet where daily potassium consumption averages about 2,500 mg (the RDA is 4,700 mg/day), along with 3,600 mg of sodium... As mentioned earlier, if you eat a diet of processed foods, you can be virtually guaranteed that your potassium-sodium ratio is upside-down.

This may also explain why high-sodium diets appear to affect some people but not others. According to a 2011 federal study into sodium and potassium intake, those at greatest risk of cardiovascular disease were those who got a combination of too much sodium along with too little potassium.

The research, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine,8 was one of the first and largest US studies to evaluate the relationship of salt, potassium and heart disease deaths. According to Dr. Elena Kuklina, one of the lead authors of the study at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), potassium may neutralize the heart-damaging effects of salt. Tellingly, those who ate a lot of salt and very little potassium were more than twice as likely to die from a heart attack as those who ate about equal amounts of both nutrients.

How Can You Ensure Proper Sodium-to-Potassium Ratio?

So, how do you ensure you get these two important nutrients in more appropriate ratios?
  1. First, ditch all processed foods, which are very high in processed salt and low in potassium and other essential nutrients.
  2. Eat a diet of whole, unprocessed foods, ideally organically and locally-grown to ensure optimal nutrient content. This type of diet will naturally provide much larger amounts of potassium in relation to sodium.
I do not recommend taking potassium supplements to correct a sodium-potassium imbalance. Instead, it is best to simply alter your diet and incorporate more potassium-rich whole foods. Green vegetable juicing is an excellent way to ensure you’re getting enough nutrients for optimal health, including about 300-400 mg of potassium per cup.  
By removing the fiber you can consume even larger volumes of important naturally occurring potassium. Some additional rich sources in potassium are:
  1. Lima beans (955 mg/cup)
  2. Winter squash (896 mg/cup)
  3. Cooked spinach (839 mg/cup)
  4. Avocado (500 mg per medium)
Other potassium-rich fruits and vegetables include:
  • Fruits: papayas, prunes, cantaloupe, and bananas. (But be careful of bananas as they are high in sugar and have half the potassium that an equivalent of amount of green vegetables. It is an old wives tale that you are getting loads of potassium from bananas, the potassium is twice as high in green vegetables)
  • Vegetables: broccoli, Brussels sprouts, avocados, asparagus, and pumpkin

Putting Salt Consumption into Proper Context

More than 80 percent of the salt most people consume is from processed foods. Indeed, there is far too much sodium in processed foods. But you shouldn't be eating those foods anyway—sodium is just one of MANY ingredients in packaged foods that will adversely affect your health. The salt added to these convenience foods is bleached out, trace mineral deficient and mostly sodium—as opposed to natural salt, which is much lower in sodium and contains a myriad of other critical trace minerals. Himalayan salt, for example, contains about 86 different minerals, and in terms of taste, you cannot compare it to regular table salt. Natural salt has flavor, over and above just salty taste.

The more you can move toward a diet of whole organic foods in their natural state, the healthier you'll be—whether it's veggies, meat, dairy products, or salt. And increasing your vegetable intake will help insure you’re getting the ideal ratio of sodium-to-potassium, which may be more crucial for overall health than we currently imagine.

Given that salt is absolutely essential to good health, I recommend limiting, or ideally, eliminating processed foods and processed table salt and switching to a pure, unrefined salt. Generally speaking, it is perfectly fine to salt your food to taste, provided the salt you're using is natural and unrefined and you’re eating plenty of vegetables.

[-] Sources and References

 
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2013/04/04/high-salt-consumption.aspx?