Thoughts for Food

 From time to time I’ll be compiling lists of foods for various health concerns and posting them.  I hope you find them interesting but do remember that you should never radically alter your diet without first discussing your current health with your MD or acupuncturist, or both!

The Anti-Flu Diet

Looking for ways to reduce your chance of getting flu this season?  A study, published by The American Physiological Society found that mice were significantly less likely to contract flu when given quercetin, a powerful antioxidant found in a variety of fruits and vegetables.  According to the study’s authors, the research also indicated that high consumption of quercetin resulted in catching fewer colds.

So, what are the best quercetin rich foods that you can load up on? Quercetin is found in red onions, grapes, blueberries, tea, broccoli and red wine. Red onions are one of the best quercetin rich foods as they have approximately four times the quercetin of most other produce. Eat them raw or cooked.

Foods for Fertility

Black Beans:  According to Oriental medicine, the energy of the Kidney system is important for reproduction and fertility enhancement often starts with the Kidneys. A good example of a food that nourishes the Kidneys and promotes fertility is black beans.

From an Eastern perspective, black beans are warming in nature.  They are thought to tonify the Kidney Qi and nourish Yin and Blood. From a Western perspective, black beans are an excellent source of protein, folate, iron and fiber and are rich in antioxidants. Research published in the November 2003 issue of Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry indicates that black beans are as rich in antioxidant compounds called anthocyanins as grapes and cranberries, fruits long considered antioxidant superstars.

When researchers analyzed different types of beans, they found that, the darker the bean’s seed coat, the higher its level of antioxidant activity. Gram for gram, black beans were found to have the most antioxidant activity, followed in descending order by red, brown, yellow, and white beans.

Overall, the level of antioxidants found in black beans in this study is approximately 10 times that found in an equivalent amount of oranges, and comparable to that found in an equivalent amount of grapes or cranberries.

Foods for Seasonal Allergies

Ginger: Ginger is a natural antihistamine and decongestant. It may provide some relief from IUergy symptoms by dilating constricted bronchial tubes.

Apples: Some foods, including apples, contain the f1avanoid, quercetin that can cross-react with tree pollen. Quercetin can reduce allergic reactions by having an antihistamine effect. It also decreases inflammation. Quercetin occurs naturally in certain foods, such as apples (with the skin on), berries, red grapes, red onions, capers, and black tea.

Carrots: Carotenoids are a family of plant pigments that include beta carotene. A lack of carotenoids in the diet is thought to promote inflammation in your airways. Good Sources of carotenoids include apricots, carrots, pumpkin, sweet potato, spinach, kale, butternut squash, and collard greens.

Omega·3: Omega-3 essential fatty acids can counter the formation of chemicals that cause inflammation of the air passages. Good natural sources include flaxseed oil and salmon.

Yogurt: Food sensitivities seem to be connected with seasonal allergies. In a study conducted at the University of California, patients who were fed 18 to 24 ounces of yogurt a day experienced a decline in their environmental allergic symptoms by 90 percent.

Fiber: A healthy and active colon can decrease food sensitivity, which, in turn, can lighten the burden on your immune system and may reduce the impact of seasonal allergies. For maximum colon health, increase the fiber in your diet.

Cancer Fighting Veggies

Widely considered to be one of the healthier food choices are the cruciferous vegetables. Included in this family of vegetables are broccoli, cauliflower, radishes, Brussels sprouts, kale, cabbage, and bok choy. Cruciferous vegetables are high in vitamins, fiber, and potent anticancer phytochemicals.

According to the American Institute for Cancer, there is solid evidence that links cruciferous vegetables and protection against cancer.  Studies have shown that this vegetable group has the ability to stop the growth of cancer cells for tumors in the breast, uterine lining, lung, colon, liver and cervix. And studies that track the diets of people over time have found that diets high in cruciferous vegetables are linked to lower rates of prostate cancer.

It is recommended that we eat 3-5 servings of cruciferous vegetables per week. It’s best to eat these veggies raw or only lightly steamed so they retain their cancer fighting phytochemicals.

Cruciferous Vegetables

  • Beet greens
  • Bok choy
  • Broccoli
  • Brussels sprouts
  • Cabbage
  • Cauliflower
  • Chinese cabbage
  • Collard greens
  • Daikon
  • Horseradish
  • Kale
  • Kohlrabi
  • Mustard greens
  • Radishes
  • Rutabaga
  • Swiss chard
  • Turnips
  • Watercress

Tree Good, Fire Bad

Buffy the Vampire Slayer said it (Okay, according to an anonymous reader Buffy actually said ‘Fire bad, Tree pretty’.  Thanks for keeping me honest mystery reader) and in a week like we’ve just experienced, that lizard-brain level is where we’re all operating.  With no wind, smoke from the “Station Fire” just sat over the Angeles National Forest.  And then, following the physics of “what goes up must come down” it rained ash.  Day after day after day.  In my office in Tarzana, ash was covering the parking lot and the smoke was overpowering the A/C’s ability to keep the smell out.  It was hot and dry and dusty and all-in-all a miserable week.

 So – why post THAT on this blog.  It’s not news to anyone in the area and the weather has changed, the fire is moving east and the ash is retreating.

I’m addressing this because of the huge affect this fire had, and is continuing to have, on my patients.  Several patients have come in for musculoskeletal appointments and have ended up getting treatments for respiratory complaints (and the musculoskeletal treatments too – that’s one of the powers of Traditional Oriental Medicine, I can do both at once!).  They’ve been physically and mentally tired, almost feeling they were coming down with something but with no specific symptoms.  This is due to their Qi not circulating well throughout their bodies.

In Traditional Oriental Medicine (T.O.M.) the Lungs govern Qi and respiration.  They’re responsible for inhaling Qi from the atmosphere, combining it with the Qi received from food and spreading the resultant useable Qi throughout the entire body.  The Lungs are called the tender organ because they are the most external organs and they connect the body to the outside world.  The Lungs are easily attacked by external pathogenic factors, in this case smoky, ashy, hot air.  When the air we’re taking in is poor quality, we tire easily.  Of course, when we’re breathing good air and eating garbage we get tired easily, but that’s another discussion.

Anyone with allergies/asthma or COPD should have a plan in place for fire season as should people with cardiac disease.  The easiest to follow recommendation is to stay inside with windows and doors closed, and run the A/C to filter out the gunk.  But even people with no cardio-pulmonary disease need to take care not to exhaust themselves.  The impact of the smoke is insidious and it would be easy to ignore the body’s signals to SLOW DOWN but it is very important to take it easy.

T.O.M. states that anytime the seasons change we need to take care to slow down and reflect on what our bodies are going through.  Add in a natural disaster and everyone can really benefit from some meditativetime.  I suggest doing something positive for yourself, especially something you’ve been putting off.  Go get a massage, visit a healthcare practitioner, read that book you’ve been putting off, go out to a special meal with friends or loved ones.  Whatever it is, take this time to slow down.  It will allow your body to adjust to the season change as well as recovering from the fire.

T.O.M. also has a long list of foods that are beneficial for the Lung system.  Some simple foods you may want to consider adding into your diet right now include apples, especially the sour ones like pippins; yogurt; tofu, tempeh and soybeans; rose hip tea; black tea; honey and barley malt.  For a more complete recommendation, make an appointment to see me or your local practitioner of Traditional Oriental Medicine.

For specific smoke related information, visit this page on the US Department of Agriculture Forest Service’s website:  Wildland Fire Smoke.  And for those of you in fire-prone areas, here’s a goldmine of information:  InciWeb Incident Information System

Catching Up on My Reading

This month’s (March 2009) UC Berkeley Wellness Letter has some wonderful common sense comments on constipation and colon health, including the surprising results of the study published in the 2005 American Journal of Gastroenterology which shows that “stimulants did not harm the colon”.  You can read the whole article in my office if you’re interested. 

The Wellness Letter also suggests, in their Wellness made easy column, “If you get headaches, consider acupuncture”.  More and more research, it seems, is showing that acupuncture can help with headaches – something practitioners and patients of acupuncture and Traditional Oriental Medicine have know for centuries.  If you get headaches, come on in and give it a try.

From the other side of the  aisle, as it were, come these suggestions and articles from this month’s (March 2009) Environmental Nutrition newsletter:

  • If you’re tired of only bad news about food and diet, EN suggests you check out www.biteofthebest.com, a site by food critic and nutritionist Bonnie Tandy Leblang and her two sons.
  • Gum chewing may help with focus, stress, weight loss and dental health.
  • An eye-opening look at coffee, which EN suggest may have many health perks
  • A revisit of the benefits of spinach with a spinach frittata recipe

If you don’t subscribe, you may review EN in my office.