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Showing posts with label Inulin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inulin. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 April 2014

Eliminate Constipation, Part 4

 | Mar 31, 2014 

Eliminate Constipation, Part 4
Constipation can be a serious issue. To solve it and help you stay healthy, it’s important to take a deep look at bowel and body cleansing as a way to eliminate causes of constipation and the progression of chronic diseases.
The Toxic Load And Constipation Connection
Reversing constipation permanently can become more than just a simple fix. As I’ve pointed out previously, consuming larger quantities of dietary fiber should offer a significant long-term improvement.
If fiber doesn’t reverse your constipation, there are many natural and prescription medicines to get your bowels moving.
However, you may still be plagued with constipation. And unless you can cleanse your bowel and detoxify your body, you will likely continue with constipation and remain at higher risk for chronic diseases of various kinds (as I explained in my first article in this series). This is because you are constantly being exposed to chemicals in your environment that normally would be eliminated daily. These come to you in food, water, air and various commercial products.
Some of these include:
  • Mercury: Exposure is almost always from fish. Mercury in the human body is a neurotoxin affecting your brain and nervous system. Be aware that most people with elevated mercury levels (over the Environmental Protection Agency safe level) have no symptoms (yet) or else have subtle, nonspecific symptoms. [1] Studies show an association between coronary artery disease (and heart attacks) and mercury exposures over time. [2] Testing your blood or hair can identify your risk.
  • Xenobiotics: These are synthetic and plant compounds in your environment that are not natural to your body and that can disrupt hormone balance. They are widely used in industrial compounds for many applications: personal care products (perfumes, deodorants, soaps, detergents, cleaning supplies), medications, insecticides/herbicides/fungicides, plastics (toys, sunscreens, food containers), paints, building materials and petrochemicals (gas & diesel fumes). These include PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), BPA (bisphenol A), insecticides (DDT, DDE, endosulfan, kepone, dieldrin, methoxychlor, toxophene), synthetic estrogens and phthalates (e.g. polyvinyl chloride). Phthalates are universally present in our environment. [3] Interestingly, weight loss corresponds with reducing phthalates in your body, suggesting that they get stored in fat tissue.
  • Beef: Hormones given to beef cows to stimulate weight gain may remain in meat that you eat.
  • Eggs: These may contain traces of the estrogen given to chickens to increase egg production.
  • Milk: Growth hormone given to dairy cows to increase milk production can have estrogenic effects when residues reside in milk.
Just as cleansing your body and preventing exposure to these unnatural chemicals is crucially important, so is keeping your gut itself healthy to decrease gut inflammation and autoimmune inflammation.
Body Cleanse For Detoxification
Doing a liquid cleanse is the most effective and cost efficient method of ridding your body of stored unwanted chemicals. Cleansing methods include water fasting (water only), the lemonade cleanse and the juice fast (juicing fresh vegetables and fruits).
The lemonade cleanse consists of consuming only fresh squeezed lime or lemon juice, grade B maple syrup and cayenne pepper mixed with water for three to 10 days or longer. Expect to experience the detox symptoms of sweating, increased urination, diarrhea (or decreased bowel movements), mild weakness and even a change in your breath odor.
Ingredient list for the lemonade cleanse:
  • Grade B maple syrup (Do not use grade A or pancake maple syrup!)
  • Large bag of fresh lemons or limes (Do not use juice from concentrate.)
  • Cayenne spice (You may already have in the kitchen.)
  • 6 water bottles (16 ounces each) so you can prepare several at once and store in refrigerator for the day
Directions:
Nearly fill up each bottle with water and add in juice from one fresh-squeezed lemon or lime to each, along with grade B maple syrup (to taste) and cayenne pepper (a pinch, then increase, if so desired, for flavor). Higher cayenne amounts stimulate more cleansing.
You can vary the amounts of citrus juice, maple syrup and cayenne for taste and effect. For lunch or dinner consider using hot water (like a soup broth) with increased cayenne to get a powerful spice taste. Drink six to 12 of these full bottles per day, but consume no solid food. Expect your hunger to decrease substantially after the third day.
Liquid cleansing is best done when there are no extra physical, emotional or mental demands upon you. It’s a time to stay warm and relaxed. Plan to make plenty of time for yourself so you can meditate, read, relax and focus on healing your body during these days. It is said that for every day of your liquid cleanse that you are dealing with some external stress and not allowing yourself time to focus on cleansing, you extend the time required to detoxify by an additional one-half day.
How long should you stay on the liquid cleanse? The answer depends upon your cleansing experience, physical strength and condition, mental attitude, level of chronically stored toxic chemicals, work schedule, and age.
How should you successfully end your cleanse? It is best to begin by consuming fruit juice (usually orange juice, tomato juice, watermelon juice or vegetable broth) but just half a glass to start. After an hour, try another half glass.
Then consume just small amounts of juice every hour the first day. The second day, start juicing for as many days as you were on the liquid cleanse. Finally, proceed to fruit smoothies and add in nuts, eggs, sprouted grains or other foods before proceeding back to solid foods. Solid raw or steamed veggies, a small salad and light salad dressing, and fresh fruits (low-glycemic) are your best first solid foods at this point. The high-glycemic fruits include bananas, pineapples, mangos, raisins and dates.
Bowel Health After Cleansing
What about the long-term health of your bowel? I’ll give you some important clues on how to maintain a healthy gut and, thus, lower your risk for chronic inflammatory diseases.
We know that dietary fiber serves as valuable food for healthy bacteria in our gut. These bacteria nourish the cells of the gut lining with the nutrients they produce (short chain fatty acids butyrate and propionate). The healthy bacteria also keep unhealthy (inflammatory) bacteria to a minimum.
Inulin is a very important dietary soluble fiber. This carbohydrate is indigestible by mouth and stomach enzymes, but metabolized by colonic micro flora. It acts as a fertilizer (or prebiotic) for healthy bacteria. If taken (as a supplement or in foods) along with probiotics, it is known to improve immune function, mineral bioavailability and lipid metabolism. It has been shown to reduce the risk of intestinal infections, constipation, non-insulin dependent diabetes, obesity, osteoporosis and colon cancer. [4]
Good sources of inulin include root vegetables. It is included in asparagus, bananas, burdock root, chicory root, dandelion root, garlic, jicama root, Jerusalem artichokes, leeks, onions and wild yam. Other important prebiotic fiber foods are barley, oats and apples.
Yet another way to maintain a healthy bowel wall and keep chronic systemic inflammation away is by consuming fermented milk (kefir), plain yogurt or fermented cabbage (sauerkraut, kimchee).
A Harvard study [5] published this year compared animal-protein diets to plant-based diets and found that animal meats and cheese increased the abundance of bile-tolerant microorganisms such as Bilophila wadsworthia, previously shown to trigger inflammatory bowel disease [6] plus fungi and even viruses. It makes me want to be careful with how much animal protein I include in my diet.
To feeling good,
Michael Cutler, M.D.
Easy Health Options 

[1] Hightower JM, Moore D. “Mercury levels in high-end consumers of fish,” in Environmental Health Perspectives, 111 (4), 2003, pp. 604-608.
[2] Guallar E, Sanz-Gallardo MI, van’t Veer P, Bode P, Aro A, Gomez-Aracena J, Kark JD, Riemersma RA, Martin-Moreno JM, Kok FJ. Heavy Metals and Myocardial Infarction Study Group. “Mercury, fish oils, and the risk of myocardial infarction,” in New England Journal of Medicine, 347 (22), 2002, pp. 1747-54.
[3] Dirtu AC, Geens T, Dirinck E, Malarvannan G, Neels H, Van Gaal L, Jorens PG, Covaci A. Phthalate metabolites in obese individuals undergoing weight loss: Urinary levels and estimation of the phthalates daily intake. Environ Int.2013 Sep;59:344-53.
[4] Roberfroid MB. Functional foods: concepts and application to inulin and oligofructose. Br J Nutr. 2002 May;87 Suppl 2:S139-43.
[5] David LA, Maurice CF, Carmody RN, et al. Diet rapidly and reproducibly alters the human gut microbiome.Nature. 2014 Jan 23;505(7484):559-63.
[6] Devkota, S. et al. Dietary-fat-induced taurocholic acid promotes pathobiont expansion and colitis in Il10−/− mice.Nature 2012; 487, 104–108.

http://easyhealthoptions.com/detox-category/eliminate-constipation-part-4/


Monday, 3 December 2012

Could Asparagus Be the Next Cure For Cancer?



2 December 2012

Asparagus as a cancer cure is not as bizarre as it sounds. Scientists around the world have been discovering the power of antioxidant-rich nutrition in the fight against chronic illness and disease.
This flavorful vegetable is one of the most powerful.

There are more than 300 varieties of asparagus – Asparagus Officinalis is the variety most commonly grown and eaten in the United States – but less than 20 are edible. Asparagus shoots resemble spears with small florets at the top and are green or purple in color.

The more purple a bunch of asparagus health benefits that it has, the sweeter its taste. The best time of year to buy asparagus is in the spring and early summer – it should be consumed within two days of purchase.
asparagus health benefits
Asparagus has been grown as a food source for more than 2000 years but it is still one of the least popular vegetables! A shorter growing season keeps the price higher than more typical vegetables such as broccoli and spinach, but the nutrients in asparagus make it crucial to cancer prevention.

Is the Cure for Cancer in Asparagus?

Scientists believe that chronic inflammation is the root cause of not only cancer but many other diseases. Heart disease, arthritis, diabetes, Alzheimer’s and autoimmune diseases are among those linked to inflammation.

Consuming foods with naturally high anti-inflammatory properties lowers the risk of inflammation getting out of control and possibly leading to disease.
Folate: The Key Cancer Prevention Nutrient in Asparagus
Asparagus health benefits has shown great promise in the fight against breast, colon, lung, prostate, ovarian and other cancers.

The known cancer-fighting properties of the nutrient folate, found in asparagus, were discovered when patients diagnosed with the disease were found to be folate-deficient, according to the American Cancer Society.

Women who drink alcohol regularly tend to have low folate levels and are at higher risk for breast cancer. Adding dietary folate to your nutrition helps reduce risks associated with alcohol.

Folate regulates cell division – cancer is the result of damaged cells dividing again and again. Folate, along with its synthetic cousin folic acid, prevents cellular mutations.

Additional research needs to be conducted and human trials established before scientists can say definitively that asparagus is a cancer cure; adding folate to your diet now means this powerhouse nutrient can work to protect your DNA and prevent cancer before it starts.

Asparagus health benefits is a natural anti-inflammatory and anti-depressant.

An Overlooked Super Food

Many aspects of asparagus health benefits are simply overlooked perhaps because it’s either too expensive or because people are turned off by its effect on urine.

Many people report a strong smell in their urine following consumption of asparagus, but scientists can find no cause for the odor. They are certain, however, that it is not an adverse reaction – there is no danger associated with the strange odor.

Asparagus and Heart Health

66% of the recommended daily allowance (RDA) of folate is contained in one cup of asparagus.
Folate is critical to heart health because it regulates homocysteine levels – an amino acid found in the blood that is caused by eating too much meat and not getting enough folate in your diet.

A study conducted in Norway linked high levels of homocysteine to strokes and heart attacks that resulted in death. Folate breaks down homocysteine and keeps it from forming fatty deposits in the arteries.

As a great source of vitamin K, asparagus health benefits prevents the buildup of calcium in the cardiovascular system, a proven cause of heart disease. Vitamin K also strengthens bones.

Diuretic, Detoxifier and Digestive Aid

Asparagus works well as a natural diuretic for the treatment of water retention related to PMS.

It increases urine output, which helps to prevent and treat bladder, urinary tract and kidney infections. The potassium, folate, glutathione and vitamin K in asparagus have also been shown to lower the risk of kidney stones.

The carbohydrate called inulin in asparagus prevents the growth of bad gut bacteria and stimulates the growth of good gut bacteria. Asparagus health benefits is also high in fiber, which stabilizes digestion, makes you feel fuller faster and prevents constipation.

According to the UCLA Medical Center, asparagus is naturally low in calories, salt-free and contains no fat or cholesterol, making it ideal for detoxification. Every cup of asparagus is packed with potassium, which has been found to minimize fat deposits in the belly.

Bone Health

Asparagus is the number one source for vitamin K – containing almost 70% of the RDA in a single cup. Vitamin K keeps bones strong and repairs damage, preventing the risk of osteoporosis and osteoarthritis.
Folate and Vitamin K Aren’t the Only Heroes in Asparagus:
    Vitamin A is abundant in asparagus and protects vision, bone development and growth.
    Tryptophan is pivotal to the synthesis of serotonin – a mood-enhancing hormone. Low levels of tryptophan in those with cancer can lead to increased feelings of depression and hopelessness.
    Vitamin B2 metabolizes fat and carbohydrates in your body but is also crucial for normal cell growth.
As more research is done, more evidence that asparagus health benefits is a cancer cure will likely be forthcoming. In the meantime, there are so many other ways this vegetable can boost your health and fight disease.

The next time you pass it in your supermarket produce section, stop and give those stems a chance!

Further Related Reading:



 http://undergroundhealthreporter.com/asparagus-health-benefits