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ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DIET
To supplement anti-inflammatory nutrients while continuing to ingest
pro-inflammatory substances is counter productive. These dietary guidelines
reduce inflammation for most people.
- Decrease or eliminate red meat and dairy products. Some arthritis
patients also seem to react to poultry.
- Decrease or eliminate refined sugar.
- Eliminate caffeine (including coffee, black tea, cola drinks, and
chocolate).
- Eliminate any likely food allergens during the initial three or four
weeks (gluten grains, citrus fruit, and night shade vegetables such
as tomatoes, white potatoes, red and green peppers, eggplant, paprika,
and tobacco). These foods can be added back into the diet one at a
time (one food every third day) while carefully observing the effect.
- Drink plenty of pure water. Chlorine is an antibiotic and can diminish
our friendly gut flora. Studies have associated chlorine in drinking
water with increased risk of some types of cancer. It is probably best
to drink at least a half hour before the meal and no sooner than an
hour after, so that the digestive juices won't be diluted.
- Increase your consumption of fresh, raw or lightly steamed fruits
and vegetables. Good fruit choices include apples, bananas, grapes,
mangoes, papayas, peaches, pears, prunes, kiwis, and other sub-acid
fruits. Use discretion if the you have blood sugar problems , although
fruit often does not cause a problem if the diet is low fat and high
fiber. Good vegetables include asparagus, spinach, zucchini, parsley,
artichoke (no butter), kelp and other sea-veggies, okra, snow peas,
and many more. Cruciferous vegetables such as cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower,
as well as onions, chives and peppers are very nutritious but may create
digestive difficulties for some people. The solution is often simply
chewing the food better and possibly adding supplemental digestive
enzymes such as Metazyme or Beano. Spices such as garlic, tumeric,
etc. are also very healthy and should be used regularly if well tolerated.
- For snacks, consider raw vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds. The
fruits and veggies contain lots of enzymes, bioflavnoids, and other
phytochemicals, while the raw nuts and seeds are rich in essential
fatty acids, especially flax seed, pumpkin and sunflower seed, walnuts
and almonds (can be allergenic to some people). Raw seeds like sesame
and flax need to be ground for better digestion. An electric coffee
grinder works well. These healthy snacks can be combined e.g. raw vegetables
sticks dipped in tahini (ground sesame seeds) or almond butter.
These suggestions are very helpful for most people with inflammatory
conditions such as strains, sprains, bursitis, tendonitis, arthritis,
etc. and can be used in conjunction with supplementation. Most people
find that eating this way often lowers
blood lipids, smoothes out blood sugar variations, helps with weight
management, reduces digestive problems, increases energy, and more. It
is important to note that fats digest more slowly when fat is reduced
in the diet. We may become hungrier sooner and be tempted to eat junk
food. This hunger is not a problem if we have prepared the healthy snacks
mentioned above.
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