Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
General
GeneralCardiologyVisionDentistryPharmacyLaboratoryNutritionAlternative
Diseases and Disorders
AIDSAlzheimer'sArthritisAsthmaCancerBreast CancerDiabetesEpilepsyGlaucomaHepatitisHerpesLupusProstate BPHProstate CancerProstatitisSinusitisTinnitus

Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Arthritis / March 2005

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

Arthritis Diet

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
sheila@arthritispharmacy.com - 08 Mar 2005 10:37 GMT
ARTHRITIS DIET

Medical literature contains many documented cases of how diet
modification/following an arthritis diet can improve inflammatory
arthritis. One of the ways that people who suffer from arthritis can
improve their health is by changing their diet. Studies have shown that
a high cholesterol and high fat diet may contribute to the problem.
Hence a general diet plan was designed to prevent arthritis from
occurring in the first place and to relive the pain for those already
afflicted. It's not a strict diet, but more like a list of foods to
avoid and foods that may be beneficial.

The arthritis diet includes certain foods that you can eat and are
beneficial to you. These are--
- Fruit
In particular those high in Vitamin C, like blackberries, strawberries,
raspberries, kiwi fruit, peaches, mango, cantaloupe melon and
anti-inflammatory fruits like apples.

- Vegetables
In particular vegetables high in Vitamin A (beta-carotene) and Vitamin
C. Carrots, squash, sweet potato, spinach, kale, collard greens,
broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts.

- Oily Fish
Rich omega-3 essential fatty acids and high in Vitamin E, like salmon,
mackerel, sardines, herring, tuna and trout.

- Nuts and Seeds
Rich in omega-3 essential fatty acids and high in Vitamin E. Unsalted
nuts, like walnuts, brazil nuts and almonds, and seeds like sunflower,
linseeds and pumpkin seeds.

- Pulses and Grains
Including lentils, chick peas (garbanzo beans), brown rice, whole wheat
bread.

- Anti-Inflammatory Foods
Turmeric, ginger, garlic and apples.

- Milk, cheese and yogurt

Foods to avoid in the arthritis diet--
- Red meat (beef, lamb, pork).

- Cow's milk, cheese and yoghurt.

- Brown and white wheat flour, bran.(Do not use any produce where wheat
starch, edible
starch, cereal binder, cereal filler or cereal protein are listed as
ingredients.)

- Citrus fruit, fruit covered in wax, such as imported apples.

- Dry roasted nuts.

- Sugar and foods containing sugar. Syrup, treacle and honey.

- Coffee, decaffeinated coffee, cocoa, tea, alcohol.

- Salt, pepper, vinegar.

- Butter and margarine - use as little as possible.

- Chocolate

- sugar

- caffeine

- citrus

- salt

- red meat

- dairy products

- additives

- soft drinks

- flour

- nightshades (examples below)

- eggplants

- red peppers

- tomatoes

- white potatoes

- tobacco

Seven Guidelines for a Healthy arthritis Diet
1) Eat a variety of foods
2) Maintain ideal weight
3) Avoid too much fat and cholesterol
4) Avoid too much sugar
5) Eat foods with enough starch and fiber
6) Avoid too much sodium
7) Drink alcohol in moderation

For more information on Arthritis you can logon to
www.arthritispharmacy.com

Regards
sheila@arthritispharmacy.com
DeeTee and Bob Taggart - 08 Mar 2005 14:13 GMT
I can die healthy, or I can die happy.  I'm not gonna make myself crazy
watching every bite that goes into my mouth.  Want some chocolate?

DeeTee (tongue firmly in cheek)
________________________________
DeeTee and Bob Taggart
http://www.marykay.com/dtaggart3
http://mysite.verizon.net/vze8fwov/
________________________________
> ARTHRITIS DIET
>
[quoted text clipped - 106 lines]
> Regards
> sheila@arthritispharmacy.com
Tennessee Tony - 08 Mar 2005 16:32 GMT
> I can die healthy, or I can die happy.  I'm not gonna make myself crazy
> watching every bite that goes into my mouth.  Want some chocolate?
>
> DeeTee (tongue firmly in cheek)

Can I have her chocolate?

Tony
Smokie Darling (Annie) - 08 Mar 2005 16:41 GMT
> I can die healthy, or I can die happy.  I'm not gonna make myself crazy
> watching every bite that goes into my mouth.  Want some chocolate?

Ooh, I just luuuv you!

Got the same email on the RA yahoo group.  I wrote there that I do
better on a low carb diet, because that lady did the study on RA and
found that it creates it's own carbohydrate, and now I can't find the
article (I think it was saved to my old computer).  Seems to work for
me, even having a free day to eat whatever I want.  Ah well...  Have
some extra chocolate with you?  I'll be sure to reimburse you.

Smokie Darling (Annie)

> DeeTee (tongue firmly in cheek)
> ________________________________
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> ________________________________
> > ARTHRITIS DIET
Gwen Love - 08 Mar 2005 20:42 GMT
DeeTee, my sentiments exactly.
Gwen (Not tongue in cheek!)

> I can die healthy, or I can die happy.  I'm not gonna make myself crazy
> watching every bite that goes into my mouth.  Want some chocolate?
[quoted text clipped - 115 lines]
> > Regards
> > sheila@arthritispharmacy.com
Renee D. - 08 Mar 2005 22:55 GMT
I'm taking this more seriously than I would have several months ago.
Two months of severe pain kicking in have made me determined to be more
careful.   Just two rules  --  NO brocolli, and limited chocolate.
Sunday binges?   Sounds good to me!

Renee

"There is no end of things in the heart."
Michael Connelly
Jo Firey - 08 Mar 2005 17:24 GMT
Don't ya love it when they can't make up their minds?  It always helps
people to tell them whatever they do is going to be wrong.  Now do I finish
eating my whole wheat toast or get rid of it?

And of course I know my coffee isn't good for me.  But without it, it isn't
worth getting up in the morning.  Now where did I hide the 70% Lindt
Chocolate Bar?  This has become my memory exercise.  Have to hide it from
Steven, but not so well I can't find it.  It's embarrassing to have to ask
the kids to help my find things I hid from them.

Jo
> ARTHRITIS DIET
>
[quoted text clipped - 106 lines]
> Regards
> sheila@arthritispharmacy.com
firechief - 08 Mar 2005 23:17 GMT
sheila from OZ wrote:

> ARTHRITIS DIET
>
> Medical literature

Name it.  Come on, name it.

UNPROVEN REMEDIES and DIET TREATMENTS

Many unproven remedies are based on diet.  Although
good nutrition is important for everyone, especially people
with health problems, NO DIET has been proven to cause,
prevent or cure any of the rheumatic diseases.

Nor after hunfreds or careful medical research studies,
has diet ever been shown to make the symptoms better
or worse in any form of arthritis except gout.

Aside from gout, the most sensible advice about diet
and arthritis is people should eat balanced meals, and
those who are overweight should lose weight carefully.

UNDERSTANDING ARTHRITIS
The Arthritis Foundation

... Multitasking environment:  Bathroom with reading material.
RoseB - 09 Mar 2005 00:44 GMT
Basically I believe that we are all individuals and for some people
some foods may a rigger, while for others those same foods are fine. I
used to be a perpetual dieter and at one time never  had any wheat
products or potatoes in the house. I basically ate vegetables and fish
or chicken. That was the time when my RA was at its very worst-
somwhere in the first 15 years of the disease. About 7 or so years ago
I found out I had severe osteoporosis and that I needed to do
something about it. I stopped dieting, started eating a greater
variety of foods, put on weight (too much) but felt and looked
healthier than I had in the past when i was too thin.

I think that diet is only one piece of the puzzle.
    Rose   @}>->--
    Being educated means that rather than fearing the unknown, one seeks to understand it. RB

    Please remove "Ima" to reply.
Jo Firey - 09 Mar 2005 01:04 GMT
<sheila@arthritispharmacy.com> wrote in message
> The arthritis diet includes certain foods that you can eat and are

********beneficial to you.*********

>These are-
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> - Milk, cheese and yogurt

*********Foods to avoid*********
> in the arthritis diet--
>
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> - flour

This is the kind of contradictory nonsense that gives the notion of dietary
control a bad name.

Jo
Kimmy - 09 Mar 2005 03:06 GMT
thank you Jo - I thought it was just me not getting it ;)

Kimmy
RoseB - 09 Mar 2005 03:39 GMT
>thank you Jo - I thought it was just me not getting it ;)
>
>Kimmy

Well there is a difference.
You can not have yogurt but you need to avoid yoghurt.
Sorry.
LOL
    Rose   @}>->--
    Being educated means that rather than fearing the unknown, one seeks to understand it. RB

    Please remove "Ima" to reply.
RoseB - 09 Mar 2005 03:40 GMT
>thank you Jo - I thought it was just me not getting it ;)
>
>Kimmy

Well there is a difference.
You can have yogurt but you need to avoid yoghurt.
Sorry.
LOL

    Rose   @}>->--
    Being educated means that rather than fearing the unknown, one seeks to understand it. RB

    Please remove "Ima" to reply.
d'huit - 09 Mar 2005 17:02 GMT
>>thank you Jo - I thought it was just me not getting it ;)
>>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
>     Rose   @}>->--

LOL!  i don't like it when my yog hurts, but then i don't know anybody who
likes it when their yog hurts either.<veg>
kate

>     Being educated means that rather than fearing the unknown, one seeks
> to understand it. RB
>
>     Please remove "Ima" to reply.
spodosaurus - 09 Mar 2005 16:21 GMT
<snip>

These are the same spammers that posted that complete crap about
exercise where they clearly demonstrated their ignorance on the matter.
I suspect that this post was more of the same.

Signature

spammage trappage: replace fishies_ with yahoo

I'm going to die rather sooner than I'd like. I tried to protect my
neighbours from crime, and became the victim of it. Complications in
hospital following this resulted in a serious illness. I now need a bone
marrow transplant. Many people around the world are waiting for a marrow
transplant, too. Please volunteer to be a marrow donor:
http://www.abmdr.org.au/
http://www.marrow.org/

 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.