The superfood with the highest ORAC score

The ORAC, or Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity, is an index that shows the amount of antioxidants in a single food source. It has become an important indicator of a fruit or vegetable’s ability to eliminate free radicals that damage cells in the human body.

Free radicals
Imagine rust forming on metal. As rust eats away the surface, the metal erodes and eventually becomes unusable. This is how free radicals attack our body - they weaken our cells, organs, tissue and other important parts, leading to diseases such as cancer, heart ailments, osteoarthritis and dementia.

The ORAC scale
The ORAC test identifies and measures important antioxidants in a food source. Foods with a high ORAC score can raise the antioxidant levels in the blood by up to 25 percent. Doctors recommend that we consume fruits and vegetables with a total ORAC score of 1,750 per day.

Different plants have different levels of antioxidants. You may consume five kinds of fruits and get only 1,300 ORAC units. Yet a handful of blueberries can give you an ORAC score of 9,000 per 100 grams. The USDA’s recommended level of ORAC units is 3,000 to 5,000 daily.

Acai tops the ORAC list
Strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, cranberries and pomegranates score high on the ORAC index. But no single food source comes close to the ORAC score of the acai berry from Brazil.

A new research published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry shows that the acai has the highest ORAC antioxidant value of any food.

Compared to blackberries (53), pomegranates (105), and blueberries (92), acai has an amazing ORAC score of 1,027 per gram. Some samples of freeze-dried acai even turned out ORAC results of up to 50,000.

While these figures are impressive, they do not apply to all acai. Acai berries that have been frozen, spray dried or air dried have a lower ORAC score because many of the phytochemicals, enzymes and nutrients of the acai fruit are lost in the procedure.

To achieve the highest ORAC values, buy only acai products that are properly freeze-dried.

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Arthritis

Arthritis
Definition
Arthritis is a group of chronic conditions characterized
by joint inflammation. It is one of the leading causes
of disability in people older than 55 years. There
are more than 100 types of arthritis, with osteoarthritis
and rheumatoid arthritis among the most prominent.
Although the various forms of arthritis are quite different
from each other, they produce common symptoms
which include sore, stiff, inflamed, and painful joints.
There are different causes for arthritis; for some types
theses are not even fully explored. Rheumatoid arthritis
is an autoimmune disorder in which the immune system
begins to act abnormally. Osteoarthritis occurs following
trauma or infection of the joint, or as a result of
aging. Usually, the first line of treatment is medication
to reduce inflammation, swelling, and pain. The medication
is often supported by physical therapy that might
reduce the rate of deterioration of the joints. Surgery is
only applied for the most severe cases.

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Arthritis

Arthritis
Definition
Arthritis is a group of chronic conditions characterized
by joint inflammation. It is one of the leading causes
of disability in people older than 55 years. There
are more than 100 types of arthritis, with osteoarthritis
and rheumatoid arthritis among the most prominent.
Although the various forms of arthritis are quite different
from each other, they produce common symptoms
which include sore, stiff, inflamed, and painful joints.
There are different causes for arthritis; for some types
theses are not even fully explored. Rheumatoid arthritis
is an autoimmune disorder in which the immune system
begins to act abnormally. Osteoarthritis occurs following
trauma or infection of the joint, or as a result of
aging. Usually, the first line of treatment is medication
to reduce inflammation, swelling, and pain. The medication
is often supported by physical therapy that might
reduce the rate of deterioration of the joints. Surgery is
only applied for the most severe cases.

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Osteoarthritis And Foods That Help

It is a well known fact that ‘we are what we eat’. Food not only affects us physically, but psychologically as well. However, researchers are now looking into the effects of food on chronic ailments like osteoarthritis, only to find that food plays a vital role in dealing with this ailment. Here’s more on this newly developing field of study.

Osteoarthritis or Degenerative Joint Disease (DJD) is the wear and tear of our joints caused by the breakdown of cartilage in them. Cartilage, which is a hard but slippery tissue between joints, is more of a cushion for the bones which form the joints. It not only avoids direct friction between the bones but, also helps to absorb shock, allowing them to move smoothly over each other, as it is composed of 65-80% water, collagen, proteoglycans and chondrocytes.

This is what happens when you suffer from osteoarthritis –
• Cartilage loss is there.
• Joints begin to deteriorate due to constant rubbing of bones with each other.
• Fluid accumulates in the joints.
• Structural changes and bony overgrowths can be seen around the joint.
• Patient suffers chronic pain.
• Problem can affect the joints of fingers, hips, knees, feet and spine too.
• Severe symptoms might lead to loss of mobility in the patient or disability.

With over 21 million Americans living with the disease, commonly seen in elderly people above the age of 65 years, researchers are now delving into different ways of tackling the problem to gain more control over it, the most recent one being dietary changes for osteoarthritis.

There are various factors which pave way for a person to develop osteoarthritis, like – obesity, vitamin C deficiency, low bone mineral density and vitamin D deficiency. Thus keeping these in mind dieticians suggest some additions and subtractions in your diet to avoid and also keep under control this ailment.

Some dietary changes to keep osteoarthritis at bay -

Foods to avoid -

• Reduce the consumption of fatty foods in your daily intake as the more weight your body has to carry, greater is the burden on the joints and greater the risk.
• Identify the inflammatory elements of your diet by eliminating all short listed ones from the food you consume. Reintroduce them one by one, noting your body’s reactions to them. This would help you identify the culprit food items, which you need to remove at the earliest.
• Common inflammatory foods are – wheat, potato, pepper, egg plant, tobacco, tomatoes etc. you need to stay away from them for about a month and then start reintroducing.
• Elimination of dairy products and animal food has proven to help many. Thus staying on a vegetarian diet would be best for high risk patients.
• Research has shown that periodic fasting has helped show improvement for arthritis patients. It helps to cleanse and restore the digestive system and kidneys, relaxes the mind and nervous system and is good for the well being of the body as whole.
• Lifestyle changes involving elimination of alcohol, smoking, tobacco, coffee, fats, sugar and excessive salt, are now known as ways to overcome the problem at best.

Foods to add -
• Vitamin C is known to develop cartilage, thus foods rich in the vitamin should be deliberately had on a regular basis, in addition to tablets. Some foods are citrus fruits etc.
• Vitamin D helps to decrease the narrowing of joint spacing, thus a daily supplement of the Vit-D tablet is a must for osteoarthritis patients.
• Osteoarthritis symptoms are said to show a slowdown with foods rich in glucosamine and chondroitin.
• In general eating green leafy vegetables, carrots, avocado, sea weeds, fish, soy products, sprouts, oats, barley, rice, millet, and fish like salmons, tuna, sardines etc, help patients suffering from the disease and also help to overcome the above mentioned deficiencies.
• Regular intake of calcium supplements is a must.
• Lifestyle changes like weight reduction, exercising and diet control, not only help reduce weight, they also help people with low bone mineral density.

So eat healthy and live healthy!

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More light on the ’sunshine vitamin’

Hardly a week goes by, it seems, without a press release regarding a new vitamin D study appearing in my email box.

For example:

“Men with Low Vitamin D May Have Increased Risk of Heart Attack”
“Study Links Vitamin D to Colon Cancer Survival”
“Vitamin D Inadequacy May Exacerbate Chronic Pain”
“Low Vitamin D Levels May Worsen Osteoarthritis of the Knee”
“Low Levels of Vitamin D Associated with Depression in Older Adults”
“Study Links Vitamin D, Type 1 Diabetes”
“Vitamin D Linked to Reduced Mortality Rate in Chronic Kidney Disease”

Then, last Friday, came the uber-vitamin D press release:

“Low Vitamin D Levels Pose Large Threat to Health”

That study, published this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine, found a 26 percent increase in risk of early death from any cause among people with inadequate levels of vitamin D.

What’s going on? Why this sudden (or so it seems) interest in the “sunshine vitamin”? (The nickname comes from the fact that the vitamin is produced in the skin from sunlight.) And what are health consumers – especially here in Minnesota, where the low angle of the winter sun makes it difficult to sustain adequate vitamin D levels – to make of it all?

Old interest, new connections
Despite the current flurry of studies, research into vitamin D’s multipronged impact on human health “is not all that new,” said Kurt Kennel, M.D., an assistant professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. Scientists have known since the 1970s that vitamin D’s effect on the body went beyond regulating calcium and helping to build strong bones.

Much of the past research, however, was confined to the laboratory. In recent years, thanks to better ways of assaying (or measuring) vitamin D in the body, scientists have been able to give it a more clinical face, linking it to the risk of developing different diseases.

In addition, aging baby boomers have developed a deep and personal interest in the bone-weakening disease osteoporosis.

“That put vitamin D on the map,” said Kennel.

A misnomer
To understand vitamin D’s ubiquitous role in the body, we need to stop thinking of it as a traditional vitamin.

“If we named it today, we’d call it a hormone,” said Kennel.

Like insulin, adrenaline, estrogen and other hormones, vitamin D is produced by a body organ (in this case, the skin). It’s then carried through the body by a fluid (blood) to other organs and tissues (the heart, brain, breasts, kidneys, muscles, and so on). At each of these destinations, vitamin D adeptly attaches itself to receptors on the DNA of genes in the cells’ nuclei.

As we’re now learning, the resulting effects appear to be remarkably beneficial, possibly protecting against heart disease, kidney disease, diabetes, osteoporosis, multiple sclerosis, certain types of cancers (including breast, lung and colon) and other major illnesses and conditions.

The latest study
In the newly published study – considered the most compelling evidence of vitamin D’s overall health benefits to date – a team of John Hopkins researchers analyzed vitamin D levels in more than 13,000 men and women aged 20 and older who participated in a large ongoing health survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The data was collected between 1988 and 1994.

To ensure comparable results, vitamin D levels were surveyed during the summer among participants living in northern states and during the winter among those in southern states.

All participants were tracked until Dec. 31, 2000, by which time 1,806 had died. Those whose vitamin D levels had been the lowest (less than 17.8 nanograms per milliliter of blood) had a 26 percent increased rate of death from any cause compared to those with the highest vitamin D levels (above 50 nanograms per milliliter).

Cardiovascular disease seemed to be the major factor in these deaths, although the study wasn’t able to determine with scientific certainty a cause-effect relationship between low vitamin D levels and heart attacks and strokes.

“In the past few months, several other papers have confirmed that low vitamin D levels are associated with increased risk of heart attacks and strokes,” said Erin Michos, M.D., one of the study’s lead investigators.

In fact, earlier this year, Michos and her team showed an 80 percent increased risk of peripheral artery disease among people with vitamin D deficiency.

It may not be long before vitamin D deficiency is added to the long list of risk factors for heart disease, she said.

What’s a consumer to do?
Vitamin D deficiency is, by some accounts, reaching epidemic proportions. A review article published in The New England Journal of Medicine last year reported that up to 50 percent of children and adults in the United States have insufficient levels (less than 20 nanograms per milliliter).

“Vitamin D deficiency is getting a lot more common because we’re getting more obese and sedentary, and we’re spending less time in the sun,” said Michos.

People who are over the age of 50, who have dark skin, or who wear clothing that covers most of their skin are also at increased risk. (The last two reasons, said Kennel, are partly why Minnesota’s Somali immigrants have higher-than-average rates of vitamin D deficiency.)

Both Kennel and Michos recommend that people boost their vitamin D levels by eating salmon, mackerel and other fatty fish and fortified dairy products. (Years ago, vitamin D used to be added to beer, but, alas, no longer.) You can also take cod-liver oil (yes, just as your great-grandparents did) and/or vitamin supplements.

Federal guidelines currently recommend that adults get 200 to 600 international units (IU) of vitamin D daily. Those recommendations are currently under review, said Kennel, and will most likely be upped.

The National Osteoporosis Society already recommends 800 to 1,000 IU to people aged 50 and older. And the Canadian Cancer Society, citing Canada’s northern latitude, recommends that adults living there take 1,000 IU of vitamin D daily during fall and winter.

Currently, most experts put the safe upper limit of vitamin D from supplementary sources at 2,000 IU per day. But that number, too, may be increased.

Out in the noonday sun
The best way to get vitamin D, of course, is to spend time in the sun. In a single 10-minute midday outing, your skin will produce about 10,000 IU.

Fortunately, your skin won’t let you overdose on vitamin D from the sun. But spending unprotected time in the sun increases your risk of skin cancer, which has also reached epidemic proportions in the United States.

“Unfortunately, the time of the day the dermatologist wants you to be out – the morning and the evening – is the worst time for your body to make vitamin D,” said Kennel.

If you think you’re at increased risk for vitamin D deficiency, talk with your physician about having your blood levels of the vitamin checked. You’ll then have a better idea of whether you need supplements.

And remember: Although the recent findings about vitamin D are intriguing and promising, the benefits are not yet proven.

Studies of other nutrients and hormones – vitamin E, vitamin A, and estrogen, to name a few – were also found to benefit the heart in observational studies. But when it came time for the clinical trials, not only did they fail to prevent heart disease, they actually increased the risk.

Stay tuned.

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Vitamin D is helpful, but it’s possible to overdose

DEAR DR. DONOHUE: I am a 76-year-old female. Until December 2005, I thought I was in fairly decent health. That’s when I suffered a fractured hip. I didn’t fall, just sort of slipped down. I have recovered and feel great, and I exercise. Last April, my doctor prescribed 50,000 IU vitamin D once a week. I have been taking it ever since. I get lots of sun. I also take 600 mg of calcium with 200 IU vitamin D twice a day. And I take one multivitamin a day, a Centrum Silver. My doctor wants me to consider taking Fosamax. What’s going on? I worry about getting too much vitamin D. How does a person know how much is too much?

— T.W.

Most adults get too little vitamin D. The official recommendation for daily vitamin D intake is 200 IU for those from 19 to 50, 400 IU for those between 51 and 70, and 600 IU for those 71 and older. Many experts believe these recommendations are insufficient and that the daily dose should be 800 IU to 1,000 IU. Vitamin D enhances calcium absorption and plays a critical role, therefore, in keeping bones strong and in preventing fractures. There are hints that vitamin D prevents osteoarthritis, lessens the risk of prostate cancer and helps prevent diabetes and heart disease. Time will tell if all this is true. The stuff about bones is true.

We get vitamin D when sunlight strikes the skin. It turns a substance in the skin known as a “provitamin” into vitamin D. Ten minutes of sunlight on the face and arms, three times a week to daily, is all the sunlight needed for this conversion. Older people’s skin is not so efficient in making the vitamin, and those living in northern latitudes can’t depend on sunlight conversion in the winter months.

From your weekly 50,000 IU tablet, you get about 7,000 IU of the vitamin daily. Centrum Silver has 500 IU. You get another 400 IU with your daily calcium tablets. So your daily intake is around 8,000 IU. Too much vitamin D can be a problem. It can damage the kidneys and can actually draw calcium from the bones. The upper daily limit is set at 10,000 IU. You haven’t crossed the border, but you’re in its neighborhood. The 50,000 IU tablet can correct a vitamin D deficiency in six to eight weeks. I’d say you’ve made that correction. Ask your doctor about stopping this high-dose vitamin therapy. If there is a question about the adequacy of your body store of vitamin D, a blood test can determine if it is too low, too high or just right.

DEAR DR. DONOHUE: Our 21-year-old daughter has been diagnosed with peripheral neuropathy. Her finger turned a shade of blue. She went to the emergency room and got the diagnosis there. What kind of doctor should we consult to determine if this is her condition?

— V.C.

Your family doesn’t have a history of having peripheral neuropathy, right? So let’s remove all the genetic causes of it from consideration.

Twenty-one is young to come down with it. It’s more of an older person’s illness. People with diabetes and a few other diseases also are targets for it, but your daughter is in otherwise good health.

A blue finger isn’t a usual sign. Your daughter should see a neurologist or a vascular specialist to confirm this diagnosis, which appears a bit strange to me.

Readers may write to Dr. Donohue or request an order form of available health newsletters at P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. Readers may also order health newsletters from www.rbmamall.com.

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Put an End to Osteoarthritis Wear and Tear with Exomine

Osteoarthritis can be an extremely debilitating condition to suffer from, and unfortunately there is no cure as of yet. Finding a form of therapy that works for you is vital to managing pain and regaining the ability to become active again. Exomine, an all natural supplement, can be part of that therapy for you. Using Exomine can get this condition under control before letting it affect your ability to perform work and even simple daily routines. Even if osteoarthritis already hinders your ability to accomplish tasks, Exomine can help provide you with a new life. Continue Reading…

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