Gout - Diet can help

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Gout – Diet can help

Many of us would love to have something in common with royalty.  But getting the “Disease of Kings” is not the way to do it!  

Gout earned that title centuries ago because it was most common in people who ate rich foods – which at that time meant they were probably royalty.   Of course, you don’t have to have royal blood to have gout, but it’s still true that what you eat may have a strong impact on whether you develop the condition or not.

Gout is a type of arthritis that usually starts in the big toe, but it can attack other joints as well. While I’ve never had gout personally, I know people who have it and from the swelling, inflammation, and the way they limp, it appears really painful.

One of the problems with gout is that it may seem like nothing significant at first – just a sore toe.  But if you have gout, getting quick treatment can make a big difference in how long the pain will last.   

Some of the big risk factors for gout are being a man over the age of 40, being a woman after menopause, being obese, or having a family history of gout.  

I really believe it is important to know your family history.  Many diseases, including gout, tend to run in families.  So be sure to find out what conditions your close relatives have had so you know what you have a higher risk of contracting.   If gout runs in your family, you’ll know to get to the doctor right away if you have a sore joint on your foot.

Sometimes gout will show up, but then go away a few days later.  Other times, gout keeps coming back.  If that happens, something must be triggering it.  If you keep getting it over and over, you need to figure out why.  Some medications can trigger gout, so talk to your doctor to see if you are taking something that increases your risk.

While being overweight can add to your risk of getting gout, losing weight can sometimes cause it too.  Diets that are low in carbohydrates are naturally high in protein.  Dr. Connie Mariano, a former White House physician, told me that an important step in reducing gout is to avoid foods that are high in purines, like red meat and animal products.  So if you are at risk for gout, you’ll do better with a different way to lose weight other than a low-carb diet.

Gout is one of the oldest recorded medical disorders, which made me wonder about other ways to treat it besides Western medicines.  I turned to one of our EmpowHER doctors Dr. Maoshing Ni, a 38th generation practitioner of Chinese medicine.  He recommended several foods that you might already have in your refrigerator – including garlic and scallions – to help open up the joints and circulation.  His video on foods to ease arthritis has a recipe for a tea to loosen up your joints. 

Our gout community also has more resources to help with gout symptoms, along with a forum for people to share their story with others who have gout. For me, it always comes back to knowing your own body and listening to what it’s trying to tell you.  Knowing your family history and being aware of how the foods you eat can affect your body are both important tools you can use to protect your health.

Diet and Weight loss with Bill & Sheila


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Gout Treated with Alternative Medicine

The name of the disease is not what concerns the person who treats the patient holistically, for they are looking at the disease in the patient, not the gout. Gout is a manifestation of the disease in the patient, treating the presenting symptoms with drugs for the inflammation and pain may well relieve the symptoms temporarily, but it’s not treating the cause of the condition.

So what is the cause of gout? One might be told that some families have a predisposition to gout, and you may be told that some foods exacerbate the condition, and that’s about all that can be done if you are treated conventionally, you will also be given some prescription drugs to alleviate your pain, and to reduce inflammation. If you do nothing else to correct the cause of your gout, then it’s very unlikely you will see any improvement in your health.

You may say that since you have been taking a certain drug that you haven’t had any gout attacks, and as far as you are concerned not much else matters. Unfortunately the prescription drugs have only palliated your condition, and with constant ingestion of anti-inflammatory drugs and pain killers your gouty condition will continue to develop behind the scenes and your general health will deteriorate as a result of the drugs you are taking.

Alternative medicine, depending on what modality you have chosen, would firstly want to overhaul your diet, for a diet rich in purine foods would certainly exacerbate the condition, and may even be solely responsible for your gout.

Foods high in purines and are therefore to be avoided: Meat gravies, stocks, organ meats, shellfish, anchovies, sardines, herrings, mussels, mushrooms and asparagus. Alcohol, particularly beer is high in purines, and for that reason must be avoided. Any alcohol taken should be followed by copious amounts of water to avoid dehydration and consequent uric acid build-up. Meat, white flour, sugar, poultry, dried beans, fish, oatmeal, cauliflower, spinach and peas are moderately high in purines, and may need to be avoided.

The ideal diet should contain lots of organic fresh fruit, vegetables, whole grains, and a very important dietary addition is wheatgrass. Fruits, vegetables and juices assist the excretion of uric acid, and foods that neutralize uric acid are strawberries, cherries, and celery juice, also drink lots of filtered water. Many people have found that the addition of cherry juice to their diet has prevented further gout attacks.

You may be given herbs or homeopathic remedies for your condition; however a change in your dietary habits may be all that is needed to improve your health. What a simple answer to what could remain a lifetime problem if you may no effort to change your eating habits. If you wish to rid yourself of your gout, alternative medicine can certainly help you.