How to Treat Gout With Diet

in #health7 years ago (edited)

The Washington State Fruit Commission, our largest cherry producer, can fund reviews that cherry-pick studies on the anti-inflammatory effects of cherries in a petri dish and animal models. But what we’ve needed are human studies. For example, if we stuff the human equivalent of up to a thousand cups of cherries down the throats of rats, it appears to have an anti-inflammatory effect, but we could never eat that many. (In fact, if we tried, it could end badly. One poor guy who ate 500 cherries whole—without spitting out the pits—ended up fatally obstructing his colon.)

A decade ago, we didn’t have many human studies, but thankfully, now we do. A study published in The Journal of Nutrition had men and women eat about 45 cherries a day for a month (I wouldn’t mind being part of that study!). The researchers found a 25% drop in C-reactive protein levels (a marker of inflammation), as well as an inflammatory protein with an inelegant acronym RANTES (“Regulated on, Activation, Normal, T cell, Expressed, and Secreted”). Even a month after the study ended, there appeared to be residual anti-inflammatory benefit from the cherry fest.

These subjects were all healthy, with low levels of inflammation to begin with, but a follow-up study, highlighted in the video, Gout Treatment with a Cherry on Top, on folks with higher levels found similar results for C-reactive protein and for a number of other markers for chronic inflammatory diseases. Do cherries, then, help people who actually have a chronic inflammatory disease?

Back in 1950, in an obscure Texas medical journal, “observations made by responsible physicians” suggested that in a dozen patients with gout, eating half a pound of fresh or canned cherries helped prevent flares of gout. But the issue had never seriously been tested, until recently. Gout is an excruciatingly painful inflammatory arthritis caused by the crystallization of uric acid within joints. Based on the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007–2008, the prevalence of gout in the US is estimated to be 3.9% among US adults, which translates into 8.3 million people.

Hundreds of gout sufferers were studied, and cherry intake was associated with a 35% lower risk of gout attacks, with over half the risk gone at three servings measured over a two day period (about 16 cherries a day). That’s the kind of efficacy the researchers saw with a low-purine diet (uric acid is a break-down product of purines). This same research group found that purine intake of animal origin increased the odds for recurrent gout attacks by nearly five-fold. Heavy alcohol consumption isn’t a good idea either.

There are some high-purine non-animal foods, like mushrooms and asparagus, but the researchers found no significant link to plant sources of purines. So, the researchers recommended eliminating meat and seafood from the diet. This may decrease risk substantially, and adding cherries on top may decrease risk of gout attacks even further. Same thing with the leading drug: allopurinol works, but adding produce appears to work even better.

Often, dietary changes and cherries may be all patients have, as doctors are hesitant to prescribe uric acid-lowering drugs like allopurinol due to rare but serious side-effects.

In addition to fighting inflammation, cherries may also lower uric acid levels. Within five hours of eating a big bowl of cherries, uric acid levels in the blood significantly drop. At the same time, antioxidant levels in the blood go up. So, is it just an antioxidant effect? Would other fruit work just as well? No. Researchers tried grapes, strawberries, and kiwi fruit, and none significantly lowered uric acid levels, supporting a specific anti-gout effect of cherries.

There are some new gout drugs out now, costing up to $2,000 per dose and carry a “risk of toxicity that may be avoided by using nonpharmacologic treatments or prevention in the first place.” Given the potential harms and high costs, attention ought to be directed to dietary modification, reducing alcohol and meat intake, particularly sardines and organ meats. “If life serves up a bowl of cherries (consumed on a regular basis), the risk of a recurrent gout attack may be meaningfully reduced.”

Written By Michael Greger M.D. FACLM
Image Credit: Valdemar Fishmen / Flickr. This image has been modified.

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This was a great article @hyphy. Thanks at least for providing your source.

Thanks! There is a lot of information about how your diet impacts your health that most people don't know about. I didn't at first. Then I found dr. Greger and his information changed my life and health for the better. I think it should be common knowledge for everybody. I will always give credits to dr Greger and his awesome team

However @hyphy, it would be more awesome if we create our own original contents for Steemit to surpass google and other search engines in the future. Thanks for the effort and at least giving credits to your source.

Yea @steemitdigest in a utopia that would be the case. But instead what I found out in the couple of days I am on here is that it's just 1 big ass kissing contest. All the people with high level profiles only kiss each others ass and up vote and re-share without even reading the articles. Some even use software to automatically up vote posts of other people with high profiles. When I read about steemit I thought it was a wonderful idea but it turned out quite the opposite. In 1 year time it became a prefect copy of the real world. By the elite for the elite with only 1 interest > SELF interest. Maybe if you are lucky and did enough ass licking you manage to get a high level profile and you reserved yourself a seat in the ass kissing circle.

How would you surpass google if you don't offer all the content google has plus more?
I post a very informative article which potentially can save lives. I give all the credits to the writer, with links to the original article. In a instant cheetah cries about finding the article online. The link it gives isn't even the original article but also a copy. Most people not even going to read the article once they see the cheetah comment.

Home made electric car for my kid, powered by a drill, this original article is obviously way more informative then the article I copied and it definitely needs to be resteemed cause it will improve many people's life (and the value of your steemit account). I think I got the hang of the way it works around here.

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As a chronic gout sufferer, I found that changes in diet had very little effect on my gout attacks, but what did work was Allopurenol. I've been taking it for 11 years, and have only had 1 attack in the last decade -- when I got lazy about taking it for a few weeks.

@dfletch Did you try go vegan? Whole foods plant based?

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