Sunday, March 3, 2013

Gout Diet

A Gout Diet Need Not Be Boring!
Will a gout sufferer  be able to stick to a diet that brings no relief?Will the relief found last a while or will the poor gout patient be stuck with a tasteless boring diet for the rest of his life . I think the best people to ask are the experts.Who better than the Mayo clinic.I found this nice article that will answer most of your questions.

"Gout Diet: What's allowed, What's Not

By Mayo Clinic staff
 http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gout-diet/MY01137

Definition

Gout, a painful form of arthritis, has long been associated with diet, particularly overindulgence in meat, seafood and alcohol. As a result, gout treatment used to include severe dietary restrictions, which made the gout diet hard to stick to. Fortunately, newer medications to treat gout have reduced the need for such a strict diet.
Newer diet recommendations resemble a healthy-eating plan recommended for most people. Besides helping you maintain a healthy weight and avoid several chronic diseases, this diet may contribute to better overall management of your gout.

Purpose

Gout occurs when high levels of uric acid in your blood cause crystals to form and accumulate around a joint. Your body produces uric acid when it breaks down purines. Purines occur naturally in your body, but you also get them from eating certain foods, such as organ meats, anchovies, herring, asparagus and mushrooms.
A gout diet helps to control the production and elimination of uric acid, which may help prevent gout attacks or reduce their severity. The diet isn't a treatment for gout, but may help you control your attacks. Obesity also is a risk factor for gout, so losing weight can help you lower your risk of attacks.

Diet details

A gout diet reduces your intake of foods that are high in purines, such as animal products, which helps control your body's production of uric acid. The diet also limits alcohol, particularly beer, which has been linked to gout attacks. If you're overweight or obese, lose weight. However, avoid fasting and rapid weight loss because these can promote a gout attack. Drink plenty of fluids to help flush uric acid from your body. Also avoid high-protein weight-loss diets, which can cause you to produce too much uric acid (hyperuricemia).
To follow the diet:
  • Limit meat, poultry and fish. Animal proteins are high in purine. Avoid or severely limit high-purine foods, such as organ meats, herring, anchovies and mackerel. Red meat (beef, pork and lamb), fatty fish and seafood (tuna, shrimp, lobster and scallops) are associated with increased risk of gout. Because all meat, poultry and fish contain purines, limit your intake to 4 to 6 ounces (113 to 170 grams) daily.
  • Cut back on fat. Saturated fat lowers the body's ability to eliminate uric acid. Choosing plant-based protein, such as beans and legumes, and low-fat or fat-free dairy products will help you cut down the amount of saturated fat in your diet. High-fat meals also contribute to obesity, which is linked to gout.
  • Limit or avoid alcohol. Alcohol interferes with the elimination of uric acid from your body. Drinking beer, in particular, has been linked to gout attacks. If you're having an attack, avoid all alcohol. However, when you're not having an attack, drinking one or two 5-ounce (148-milliliter) servings a day of wine is not likely to increase your risk.
  • Limit or avoid foods sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup. Fructose is the only carbohydrate known to increase uric acid. It is best to avoid beverages sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup, such as soft drinks or juice drinks. Juices that are 100 percent fruit juice do not seem to stimulate uric acid production as much.
  • Choose complex carbohydrates. Eat more whole grains and fruits and vegetables and fewer refined carbohydrates, such as white bread, cakes and candy.
  • Choose low-fat or fat-free dairy products. Some studies have shown that low-fat dairy products can help reduce the risk of gout.
  • Drink plenty of fluids, particularly water. Fluids can help remove uric acid from your body. Aim for 8 to 16 glasses a day. A glass is 8 ounces (237 milliliter). There's also some evidence that drinking four to six cups of coffee a day lowers gout risk in men.
A sample menu
Here's a look at what you might eat during a typical day on a gout diet:
Breakfast
  • Whole-grain, unsweetened cereal with skim or low-fat milk, topped with fresh fruit
  • Whole-wheat toast with trans-free margarine
  • 100 percent fruit juice
  • Coffee
Lunch
  • Lean meat, poultry or fish (2 to 3 ounces) sandwich on whole-wheat bread, with lettuce, tomato and low-fat spread
  • Carrot and celery sticks, side salad or vegetable soup
  • Fresh fruit, such as apple, orange or pear
  • Skim or low-fat milk
Dinner
  • Baked or roasted chicken (2 to 3 ounces)
  • Steamed vegetables
  • Baked potato with low-fat sour cream
  • Green salad with tomatoes and low-fat dressing
  • Fresh fruit, such as berries or melon
  • Nonalcoholic beverage, such as water or tea
Snacks can be added to this menu as long as you make healthy choices — such as fruits, vegetables and whole grains, and occasional nuts — and you are at a healthy weight or stay within your calorie limit.

Results

Following a gout diet can help you limit your body's uric acid production and increase its elimination. It's not likely to lower the uric acid concentration in your blood enough to treat your gout without medication, but it may help decrease the number of attacks and limit their severity.
Following the gout diet and limiting your calories — particularly if you also add in moderate daily exercise, such as brisk walking — can also improve your overall health by helping you achieve and maintain a healthy weight.

Risks

The gout diet isn't that different from the healthy-eating patterns recommended by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Thus, the risks of following the diet are few, if any."

 Article from: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/gout-diet/MY01137


As you can see from the above article,by just making small changes to your  diet ,you might just feel the pain relief that you are hoping for.

Friday, March 1, 2013

EU approves Novartis Drug For Gout

There is a new gout drug on the market.It has just been released by Novartis.it is aimed at people with extreme arthritis (gout is a form of arthritis)where other treatments have not worked.Read the full article here:
http://news.yahoo.com/eu-approves-novartis-drug-gout-063546895--finance.html




" EU approves Novartis drug for gout



ZURICH (Reuters) - The European Commission has approved Novartis' drug Ilaris for patients with an often painful form of inflammatory arthritis, the drugmaker said on Friday.
Novartis said the EU had approved the drug also known as ACZ885 for patients with acute gouty arthritis who could not tolerate other treatment options.
Ilaris, which blocks a protein called interleukin-1 beta that is thought to increase inflammation, is already sold for treating cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes, a rare inflammatory disorder.
In 2011, U.S. health regulators rejected Ilaris for use in gout over concerns about side effects."
(Reporting by Caroline Copley)
 http://news.yahoo.com/eu-approves-novartis-drug-gout-063546895--finance.html

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Gout Diet : What Really Works?

Will a gout sufferer keep up a diet if it not giving relief?What type of foods

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Gout Cures That Work.

Tophaceous Gout of the Hand
Tophaceous Gout of the Hand (Photo credit: ex_magician)
A gout sufferer's quest in finding a gout cure that works ,can be a daunting task.When I started this blog I was doing the research for a client of mine who stated : "I have pain all over, in all my joints and sometimes I have so much pain that I don't want to get out of bed."  This post I will list a few resources that you can look at .I hope that you find a cure for gout that works for you!


 

 1 "Details Of The Best Diet For Gout

The British Society of Rheumatology has issued guidelines for the management of gout.
Gout is a common disease, and you would think by now that a common treatment strategy would have emerged. However, it appears that there is a lack of consensus in the exact treatment methodology that should be adopted, and investigation into how gout is treated in practice strongly suggests there is great deal of variability. Read More :  http://www.remedyforgout.org/best-diet-for-gout/"

 

2" Is There a Cure for Gout?

Gout is intensely painful and has been referred to as the most painful type of arthritis. People who experience a gout attack often can't tolerate a bedsheet brushing lightly against their foot.

Because of the intensity of the pain, gout patients would do just about anything to prevent another gout attack. They want to know what cures gout. Learn more in Is There a Gout Cure?"
Read more: http://arthritis.about.com/b/2013/02/18/is-there-a-cure-for-gout.htm



3"The Top ”Home” Remedies For Gout

  http://www.greatultrabooks.com/gout-home-remedies/

 

1) Drink less alcohol. Regrettably, if you like a drink, but you don’t like the pain of gout, then you are going to have to drink less alcohol. The worst offenders are beers and stouts, which are full of purines; a glass or two of wine a day should be all right. Whisky has a bad reputation, too, but the truth is you’ll be able to establish a correlation between drinking alcohol and how quickly you get a gout attack, especially if you keep a diary. Even so, cutting down on the booze is the simplest remedy for gout of all — and one of the most effective.
2) Consume less sugar, whether as simple sugar like glucose and fructose, or refined carbohydrates like white flour bakery products, sweets and candies. The body can’t cope — and indeed isn’t designed to cope — with the massive influx of sugar that we subject it to every day. It tests our body’s ability to control sugar levels to the limit, can induce a degree of insulin resistance, and results in fat being laid down around our abdomens.
3) Increase your intake of complex carbohydrates from vegetables and fruit. You’ll find that this satisfies your appetite for longer, and this food places less stress and strain on your hormonal system than simple sugars; it also protects your pancreas and adrenals, possibly even reducing the risk of Type II diabetes.
4) Another simple gout remedy is to reduce the amount of purine-containing protein in your diet. Generally speaking this means less meat, fish, and in particular shellfish. Once again, it’s a simple remedy for gout, and provided you maintain a food diary that enables you to link the consumption of certain foods with the onset of a gout attack, working out what you can and cannot eat “safely” need not be a chore.
5) Drink plenty of water. We hear this advice so often, don’t we? But we hear it for a good reason! Drinking lots of water reduces the level of toxins and impurities in your bloodstream, and in particular reduces the amount of uric acid in your blood, and therefore reduces the chance of a gout attack.
6) Cherries. Ah yes, cherries. You see this recommended all over the Internet as a traditional gout remedy which works well, and so I investigated whether or not there’s any truth in the idea. The theory is that the anthocyanins in cherries inhibit the activity of xanthine oxidase, the enzyme associated with the production of uric acid. There’s actually quite a lot of evidence to suggest that the pigmented compounds in many fruits and vegetables have an impact on the metabolic pathways that are responsible for gout. Rather than quote a whole load of references to you, I’ll just give you this one. In essence, what this report demonstrates is that urinary urate increases quite dramatically after eating cherries, while plasma urate decreases, but to a much lesser extent. In short, though, there’s definitely a marked trend towards decreased inflammatory responses in humans after the consumption of cherries, so it does look as though this may be a very useful home remedy for gout. Further evidence about the anti-inflammatory properties of cherries can be found here."
Read more: http://www.greatultrabooks.com/gout-home-remedies/

As you can see solid advice from fellow gout sufferers.The thing is with "cures for gout" you sometimes feel as if you do not want to make the effort to try something new.Well as the saying goes "only an insane person will keep on doing the same thing over and over AND  expect the results to be different." Or something to that effect. Start somewhere:drink more water for example,eat less meat etc , see for yourself on a scale from 1-10 how much your pain has decreased.Hope you feel better soon!

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, February 11, 2013

Gout Is A Pain In The ... Foot

Just researching the subject matter of gout in foot has made me realize that this problem is wide spread.What causes gout and why does it mainly manifest in the big toe or the feet? I found this article that explains this in terms  that are easily understood.
                            Gout In Foot.

Denis Kilcommons: Gout has left me like Richard III


"GOUT came in the night. It spiked my big toe.
I don’t know why it has returned. I have kept my intake of venison and flagons of port to a minimum. But it is back.
Possibly it felt like a holiday. Perhaps my left hallux (that’s big toe) has become a timeshare among the gout community.
“Pleasant destination for a short vacation that nestles in the Pennine hills. A digital extremity only occasionally used; almost virgin territory to explore and inflame. No venison or port, but plenty of red meat and beer. Accommodation is in just the one toe, so is suitable for a singleton with expansion plans or young couple looking for a weekend of pain and pleasure.”
I’m not sure whether it’s a singleton or the young couple that has arrived but it throbs non-stop. It’s not just the limp and the uncertainty of whether it will get worse. It’s the incongruity of putting on training shoes, because they are the most comfortable, with an affliction that makes me drag my foot like a bad Richard III impression.
Gout is a type of arthritis caused by the build-up of excess uric acid in the body which can cause crystals to form in the joints. It is most common in the big toe, but can develop in any joint. Men are more prone than women to gout and can get it from the age of 30. The incidence increases with age.
Bad diet, being overweight and drinking too much alcohol or fizzy drinks can cause it. Extra fluid can flush out the crystals. Sadly, that means water and not beer. I’m not overweight and I don’t drink to excess. Perhaps I shall cut down on chips. After all, having them for breakfast is a tad extreme.
The annoying thing about gout is that it doesn’t come with an outward sign of affliction so people who don’t know you are suffering, just think you're a miserable so-and-so. Sprain your wrist and you get a bandage. Break your leg and you get a plaster. But gout? It just sits under your sock smirking.
Perhaps the NHS could issue a lapel badge for sufferers showing a nail being driven into a toe.
In the meantime, I am moving my foot as little as possible and sleeping with it outside the duvet. If we get another cold snap, maybe the toe will drop off with frostbite. And when it is at its throbbing worst that does not seem like a bad idea.
Eventually, my unwanted lodger will, of course, just sneak away in the night, without a by your leave or a thank you note and probably with dishes left unwashed in the sink.
I just hope the singleton or young couple at presently in possession of my big toe don’t write a glowing review of their holiday on the gout equivalent of Wish You Were Here.

Is Gout A Laughing Matter?

Frontispice of "Two Treatises, The one, M...
Frontispice of "Two Treatises, The one, Medical, Of the Gout, And its Nature more narrowly search’d into than hitherto, together with a new way or discharging the same. " This book was written by the Dutch clergyman Hermann Buschoff (ca. 1622-1674) who lived in Batavia. It introduced the new remedy Moxa to Europe. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Gout: Nothing to even smile about here  let alone plain old LOL.

The sufferers of gout seldom have sympathy coming their way.I reckon the main reason being ignorance. Most people do not have a clue about the real causes of gout ,and just as you will get no sympathy when you have a hangover,most people equate gout to a drinking spree .
I found this very informative article from a guy who has suffered for more than 12 years because of his gout.


 

 

 

"Gout's no laughing matter. So why don't GPs take it seriously?

By Jo Waters
|

The one thing that really makes postman Neil Pert’s blood boil are the sniggers and jokes his gout provokes.
Neil has suffered from gout for 12 years, and last year had to transfer to a desk job because he can’t stand on his feet for longer than an hour without pain.
‘I’m crippled by it, and had to have three months off work because the pain was so excruciating.
My ankles and feet are particularly badly affected, and when I’m having an attack I can’t bear any weight on them,’ says 44-year-old Neil, who lives in Clydebank, Glasgow, with his wife Jennifer, 46, an assistant shop manager, and their daughter Hannah, 11.‘Yet I’m frequently teased about my gout.
'My GP’s attitude seems to be that it’s all self-inflicted, even though I haven’t had alcohol or eaten rich foods for years, while colleagues think I use it to get out of work.’
A spotlight was thrown on severe gout recently following the story that Mark Cahill, a former publican from Yorkshire, underwent a hand transplant after his hand was paralysed following a gout attack that had led to an infection.
Although such cases are thankfully rare, doctors say they are seeing increasing numbers of patients with extreme gout and joint damage.
Hospital admissions have doubled in a decade to 4,400 cases per year, according to a recent study of GP practice records.

But experts say much of the misery  of gout is entirely avoidable — with the right treatment.
Gout is a form of arthritis that causes sudden and very severe attacks of pain and swelling in the joints.
It’s caused by excessive amounts of uric acid in the blood, which forms needle-like crystals in and around the joints, most commonly in the foot (particularly the big toe), but also the knees, fingers, forearms and elbows.
The crystals form in the extremities, as the body temperature there is slightly cooler (crystals grow at lower temperatures).
Uric acid also accumulates in the kidneys, forming kidney stones.
Uric acid is a chemical produced when the body breaks down purines (compounds found in certain foods including red meat).
It’s normally excreted by the kidneys, but some people don’t clear it as well.
High levels of purines are also linked to a rich diet, or as a side-effect of medicines such as diuretics prescribed for high blood pressure.
Read More  Here:

Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Gout Diet Recipes

Looking for gout diet recipes that will relieve your gout symptoms and not taste like sawdust?

 I found these fantastic article with many ideas for a gout diet that will not make your symptoms worse.  Tasty recipe ideas are hard to come by .Not anymore!

"13 Great Recipes If You Have Gout"

 http://www.health.com/health/gallery/0,,20448271,00.html
Gout shouldn’t keep you from enjoying your food. Stick to low-purine fare, like that in the following recipes, to have a tasty meal without triggering an attack or making a flare-up worse.
man-gout-eating
Credit: Corbis
prev1 of 15

Gout-friendly meals

By Alyssa Sparacino
Too much bread or alcohol can be a problem if you have gout, a condition in which uric-acid crystals form in the joints, causing pain, swelling, and inflammation.

Add purine-rich foods—such as seafood and red meat—to the list and it can seem hard to find something you can eat. (Purine gets broken down into uric acid in the body.)

Still, gout shouldn’t keep you from enjoying your food. Stick to low-purine fare, like that in the following recipes, to have a tasty meal without triggering an attack or making a flare-up worse."

 Read more Here:http://www.health.com/health/gallery/0,,20448271,00.html

  Here are some more resources : Look a Gout Diet Recipe Cookbook!


 

l
Gout, Diet for Gout, Recipes, Anti Gout Menus & Meal Plans, Meal ...
MyFoodMyHealth: Online tools to manage a diet for Gout: meal planner, 100's of recipes, printable shopping lists and more...
www.myfoodmyhealth.com/Meal-Plans-Diets/.../Gout.php
Gout diet: What's allowed, what's not - MayoClinic.com
A gout diet isn't a treatment for gout, but it may help you control your attacks. ... Free weekly e-newsletter; Mayo Clinic expertise; Recipes, tools and other helpful ...
www.mayoclinic.com/health/gout-diet/MY01137
Gout Recipes
Gout Recipes that include Salads, Dressings and other condiments. When making your Gout diet work, you should include fresh vegetables whenever possible.
www.gout-aware.com/Gout-recipes.html
LOOKING for: gout recipes - Special Diet Recipes Forum - GardenWeb
This is the place to share recipes for those on restricted diets due to diabetes, gout and other health conditions.
ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load/.../msg0600385230309.html

 Related articles

Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Gout Triggers :Sleep Apnea

Can Gout be Triggered By Sleep Apnea? 

 Someone sent me this stunning article about a little known trigger of gout namely sleep Apnea.If you, like many others still battle painful gout attacks this (to me )revelation ,might just be the break through that you have been looking for.

 

  Curing Gout — My Personal Discovery

Guess what! I stumbled on a way to cure my gout! It happened when I cured my sleep apnea!

   (Note from Joe: I stumbled across this article while searching Google for sleep apnea information for a friend. I found it very interesting that this person cured his gout by curing his sleep apnea - using a very unique "home remedy" involving Wiffle balls, of all things!

 I thought I'd pass this along to you... I don't know who this person is that wrote it - he gave no name or reference or copyright information... but it certainly wouldn't hurt to try this remedy in hopes to cure your gout - because, like he says, you don't have to worry about what you eat, but only how you sleep). What’s The Connection? A gout attack is caused when uric acid reaches such high concentration in the blood that it precipitates as monosodium urate crystals which then become deposited in a joint, often causing severe and widespread pain and inflammation in that joint and the area surrounding it. Sleep apnea (literally, absence of breathing) in adults occurs when the tissues around the soft palate and the pharynx have become flabby usually due to age and/or obesity, so that they relax during sleep sufficiently to close off the air passage to the lungs. Usually, after many seconds of apnea the reduction of oxygen to the brain causes an unconscious response that jolts the sleeper to open the airway so that breathing is restored, at least until the next apnea episode occurs a short while later. Almost everyone who has sleep apnea is also a snorer, but not all snorers have sleep apnea. Sleep apnea in particular and sleep disorders in general have been recognized as problems by the medical profession only in the last few decades. Much more remains to be learned. So what could be the connection between sleep apnea and gout? I asked every physician I came in contact with that question, including my rheumatologist (joint disease specialist). All were clueless. But I trusted my own observation that my gout disappeared immediately and completely as a direct result of my sleep apnea cure. As of this writing I have been gout free for over sixteen months, except for one event, which I will describe later. Before my sleep apnea cure I would have gout attacks every few weeks, with varying degrees of severity, over a period of at least fifteen years. After realizing the connection between my gout and sleep apnea, and that no doctors recognized the connection, I began researching as much information as I could about these conditions. I was able to piece together information from articles in medical journals that confirm the connection. This information was first published around 1990, but nobody pieced it together until now. I sure wish that I had known about it years ago, so that my gout would have alerted me to resolve my sleep apnea before it led to any serious problems. For everyone else's benefit, I have included a list of references to those medical journal items at the end of this article, as well as one that I wrote recently to synopsize this information for doctors. In layman’s language, they describe how reduction of oxygen in the blood, which results from sleep apnea, has been shown to cause the cells in the body to begin to disintegrate and generate an excess of uric acid in the blood. Drinking alcohol has a similar effect on the cells, but it may be even more pronounced in causing gout by the fact that alcohol helps to induce sleep apnea. In some people, including me, the excess uric acid precipitates to cause a gout attack (and maybe uric acid kidney stones as well.) Other evidence that further corroborates their connection is that the typical (with some exceptions) profile of the person who first experiences either gout or sleep apnea is the same—MOM (middle-aged, overweight, male). Second, sleep apnea and gout are both far more common in women after menopause than before menopause. In addition, a large neck circumference is associated with both gout and sleep apnea. The most important piece of evidence, though, is that the onset of a gout attack commonly occurs when the gout sufferer is asleep. That was always my own experience as well. I don’t know how commonplace this connection is in other people. One other person has posted a web message at www.sleepnet.com/apnea81/messages/648.html about his gout disappearing when he resolved his obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Former U.S. President Taft is known to have had gout and is now reputed to have had sleep apnea, because his own journals record him frequently falling asleep at meetings. But sleep apnea was not known in Taft’s time. Of the four acquaintances of mine who have been diagnosed with sleep apnea, none has ever had gout. (None of us is obese either, even though sleep apnea is much more common in obese people.) In fact, the percentage of people that have gout is much smaller than the percentage that have sleep apnea. Thus, it is clear to me that there is not a one-to-one correspondence between gout and sleep apnea or obesity. Yet to be determined is how high a percentage of gout sufferers also have sleep apnea, and vice versa. Some gout sufferers test high for uric acid in their blood. My tests were always normal, and maybe that is a factor that distinguishes those with the sleep apnea connection from those with a different underlying cause for their gout. Medical science needs to conduct some epidemiological studies to answer these questions. How I Discovered My Sleep Apnea My discovery of sleep apnea occurred because of an astute physician who was treating me in the hospital for another ailment, and he knew that sleep apnea was implicated in that ailment. In the presence of my wife, he asked if I snore. Before I could respond, she jumped in quickly with a passionate and animated description of my snoring. Then the doctor turned his questioning to her, and he paid as much attention to me as he did to the furniture. He next asked her if it ever seems like I stop breathing in my sleep, and she replied affirmatively. I am extremely grateful that my wife was there to answer that question. I knew that I had been accused of snoring, and I begrudgingly accepted that as fact. I thought I knew what sleep apnea was, but if anyone were to ask me if I had it, I would have said no. My limited knowledge of sleep apnea was that people who had it would nod off during the day, and even fall asleep while driving. Since I didn’t have those symptoms, I thought that I didn’t have sleep apnea. I now know that a person can have sleep apnea without those symptoms. This physician arranged a consultation for me with a pulmonologist (lungs)/sleep specialist who had me tested overnight with a monitoring device called a pulse oximeter. This machine had a cable attached to a sensor that slips over a finger, and illuminates it like ET’s finger. It is not uncomfortable to be connected to it. It measures both the pulse rate and the blood’s oxygen saturation percentage. The machine that was attached to me was able to print out a reading every few minutes on a thermal paper tape so that my overnight readings were recorded for examination in the morning. The first sign of a possible sleep apnea problem is to see if overnight the oxygen saturation level ever dips below 90%. Mine dipped down to 80%. I was recommended to have further, more extensive testing as an outpatient in the hospital’s sleep lab. But to me the problem was clear, and worrisome. How I Cured My Sleep Apnea At the sleep lab I was attached to many types of sensors all over my head and body to monitor many things overnight, including sleep apnea. I found out in that test that my blood oxygen saturation level had dipped as low as 88%. It was still below the 90% target, but I wondered why it was so much higher than the 80% measured in the hospital. In my investigation of sleep apnea, I learned that an effective remedy for some people is to avoid sleeping on one’s back, since in that position the airway is more likely to become closed. It just so happened that when I went to the sleep lab I was engaged in a bout with sciatica that was more painful when I slept on my back, so I tried not to sleep that way. Previously in the hospital, however, I didn’t have the sciatica pain, and I purposely slept on my back to avoid disturbing my IV drip. While I was in the hospital I had a gout attack. I subsequently learned that gout sufferers are more likely to have an attack in the hospital than at home. I now know why. There are established methods to allow sleep apneacs to avoid sleeping on their backs. One method is to insert a tennis ball in a sock and pin the sock to the back of one’s pajama tops. The idea of this method is to arouse the sleeper by the ball’s discomfort if he ever turns over onto his back. Since I don’t like to wear pajama tops, I cut two slits in a tennis ball through which I slipped an elastic belt. When I went to bed I buckled the belt around my torso with the ball in the back. In order to test the effectiveness of my method, I rented a tape-printout pulse oximeter from a medical supply company for $50 (not covered by my health insurance) to use for several nights in my own bed. With the ball, my lowest reading was 94%. I tested without the ball one night and found several times when my percentage dropped to 87%, even though I tried to sleep lying always on my side. During subsequent use of my belt and tennis ball method, I found that I would occasionally awaken lying on my back with the ball pushed aside. I upgraded my method to straddle my spine using the belt with two tennis balls, one of which I jokingly labeled "Venus" and the second of which I labeled "Serena". Since then I introduced a second upgrade by replacing the tennis balls by Wiffle® perforated plastic softballs*. Compared to the slitted tennis balls, the Wiffle® balls are larger, less compressible, lighter weight, come with the slits built into them, and dry faster after washing. The one time that I suffered a gout attack with the balls in place, I awakened to find my neck turned so that my body was lying on its side and my head on its back, my wife was complaining about my excessively loud snoring, and my foot was screaming with the searing pain of gout. I know that avoiding sleeping on one’s back is not sufficient to prevent apnea for many sleep apneacs. There are other methods that are much less user friendly, such as a pressurized CPAP mask or even surgery. The ball method is the simplest and most user-friendly one that I know, and I could demonstrate its effectiveness for me by my own testing. And I continue to demonstrate its effectiveness by remaining cured of gout. In order to mitigate my gout, my physicians had advised me to avoid eating foods with high purine content. Following that advice produced at best minimal benefit for me. The foods that I used to avoid, I now eat with relish, and I have had no gout attacks. What matters is not how I eat, but how I sleep. Epilogue It is now more than 18 months after I first cured my sleep apnea by using the ball method to keep me from sleeping on my back. For the past four weeks I have tried sleeping without a net, so to speak, to see if I had trained myself well enough to stay off my back without the balls. It worked - no gout. I just rented a pulse oximeter again for four nights to see if the numbers were good. They're great! Recommendation If you suffer from gout, check with your doctor about getting tested for sleep apnea. If your doctor needs convincing, provide him or her with the list of references below. Based on my own doctor's new results from screening his gout patients for sleep apnea, it appears that almost everyone with gout also has sleep apnea. While overcoming your gout is important to achieve, overcoming your sleep apnea is even more important because sleep apnea can have life-threatening consequences over the long term, such as high blood pressure, heart arrhythmia, heart attack, stroke, diabetes, and even sudden death, as happened with former football great Reggie White. Overcoming your sleep apnea not only will stop your gout, but it also will greatly reduce your risk of future development of these life-threatening diseases. Heed the alarm that your gout is screaming at you! *WIFFLE is a registered trademark owned by The Wiffle Ball, Inc., Shelton, CT, and is used with the written permission of that company. 

 

 References [1] Abrams B. Gout Is an Indicator of Sleep Apnea, Journal SLEEP Feb 2005;28(2):275. [2] Grum CM. Cells in Crisis: Cellular Bioenergenics and Inadequate Oxygenation in the Intensive Care Unit, Chest 1992;102(2):329-30. [3] Hasday JD, Grum CM. Nocturnal Increase of Urinary Uric Acid:Creatine Ratio: a Biological Correlate of Sleep-Associated Hypoxemia, American Review of Respiratory Diseases 1987;135:534-38. [4] McKeon, JL.,et al “Urinary Uric Acid with Obstructive Sleep Apnea,” American Review of Respiratory Diseases 142 (1), 1990, pp. 8-13. [5] Sahebjani, H., “Changes in Urinary Uric Acid Excretion in Obstructive Sleep Apnea Before and After Therapy with Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure,” Chest 113(6), 1998, pp. 1604-1608. [6] Saito, H., et al, “Tissue Hypoxia in Sleep Apnea Syndrome as Assessed by Uric Acid and Adenosine,” Chest 121 (55), November 1, 2002, pp. 1686-1694. [7] Schafer, H., et al, “Body Fat Distribution, Serum Leptin, and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Men with Obstructive Sleep Apnea (Clinical Investigations),” Chest, Sept. 2002, pp. 829-839. [8] Silverberg, DS., et al, “Treating Obstructive Sleep Apnea Improves Essential Hypertension and Quality of Life,” American Family Physician, Jan. 15, 2002, pp. 229-240. [9] Brown, LK., “A Waist Is a Terrible Thing to Mind: Central Obesity, the Metabolic Syndrome, and Sleep Apnea Hypopnea Syndrome (editorial),” Chest, Sept. 2002, pp. 774-778. [10] Khokhar, N., “Hyperuricemia and Gout in Secondary Polycythemia Due to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease,” Journal of Rheumatology 7(1), Jan.-Feb. 1980, pp.114-116. [11] Khokhar, N., “Gouty Arthritis in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease,” Archives of Internal Medicine 142(4), Apr. 1982,  

Gout Triggers: Food.

Foods That Trigger Gout:

If you only knew which foods triggered another painful gout attack you could avoid them!
There is a whole list of foods that are "purine rich foods". Some are obvious no -no's and other might surprise you.
Foods That Trigger Gout.

Foods that trigger gout include:

Shellfish like mussels,prawns,crayfish.
Fish : sardines,anchovies,herring, mackerel.
Mushrooms,
Meat gravies and broths,
Peanuts,
Asparagus,
White flour,
Sugar products, 
Caffeine
Dried beans and Lentils,
Cakes and Pies,
Spinach,
Yeast Products,
Alcohol,
Organ Meats:kidney , liver.
 Meat!Avoid all meat including poultry.


8 Gout-Causing Foods - Health.com
If you're prone to gout, the foods you eat, and don't eat, play a key role in keeping your joints pain-free. Here are eight foods to avoid.
www.health.com/health/gallery/0,,20448674,00.html
Get to Know Your Gout Triggers
If you know you have gout, you should try to stay away from these gout triggers. Foods -- Foods that are high in a substance called purines can raise the uric acid ...
arthritis.webmd.com/features/gout-triggers
Foods that Cause Gout - Buzzle
Jan 10, 2013 ... Gout is a type of arthritis characterized by joint inflammation and pain, arising due to an excess of uric acid in blood and synovial fluid.
www.buzzle.com/articles/foods-that-cause-gout.html
What are Some Foods That Cause Gout?
Jan 1, 2013 ... Most of the foods that cause gout contain a lot of purine. This includes most red meat, fatty white meats, whole milk, and even...
www.wisegeek.org/what-are-some-foods-that-cause-gout.htm
Foods That Trigger Gout | LIVESTRONG.COM
Mar 28, 2011 ... Foods That Trigger Gout. Gout is a form of arthritis that is caused by a chemical called uric acid. Under normal circumstances, uric acid gets ...
www.livestrong.com/article/28218-foods-trigger-gout/
 



Gout Triggers:Obesity

 Obesity As A Gout Trigger:

If you are reading this post you are most likely looking for a cure for your gout.There is a correlation between obesity and gout! The chances of being obese and having gout are very high ,as you will read in the following articles that I found.Gout and obesity go hand in hand.
Why? The answer is simple : Obesity is an condition of extreme acidity in the body,therefore increasing the uric acid levels and aggravating and even causing gout .Gout in the obese person can be extremely painful because of the added weight, the pain experienced feels as if they are walking on glass!


Gout and obesity go hand in hand.


Here are the articles that I found :

Gout and Obesity
Someone with obesity is four times as likely to develop gout.
gouteducation.org/patient/living-with-gout/gout-and-obesity/
Obesity: A Major Risk Factor For Gout | Obesity
Mar 16, 2009 ... Among the many risk factors of gout such as lifestyle factors, sex, age etc. people who are obese are at high risk of getting gout.
obesity.ygoy.com/2009/.../obesity-a-major-risk-factor-for-gou...
More Americans developing gout; obesity blamed | Reuters
Aug 31, 2011 ... NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A growing number of Americans are being diagnosed with the painful form of arthritis known as gout -- thanks in ...
www.reuters.com/.../us-gout-obesity-idUSTRE77U5BG20110...
Recent Developments in Diet and Gout: The Impact of Obesity on Gout
A review on recent developments on diet and gout and their implications for clinical practice, including how we advise patients on appropriate diets and ...
www.medscape.com/viewarticle/524766_2
Obesity and Gout - Arthritis
If you're looking to prevent gout, learn about the connection between obesity and gout and how your diet, food choices and exercise can play a part in ...
www.arthritistoday.org/conditions/gout/.../obesity-and-gout.ph...

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Herbs For Gout Treatment

Usually when someone reaches the stage that they are looking at herbs for gout treatment, they have explored all the other avenues to relieve gout pain!

Devil's Claw :
  If you are looking at long term relief of gout pain"Devil's Claw"is definitely one of the herbs that I can recommend. It relieves pain and is anti inflammatory.Devil's claw contains chemicals that stimulate circulation and carry away inflammatory chemicals from the affected areas.
To relieve gout pain enteric coated capsules have to be taken. there is a specific waythat you must take it: An hour before meals ! The reason for this is that the pain relieving chemicals are activated by intestinal bacteria.For that reason it is also less effective after a bout of antibiotic treatment. The effect of the antibiotics can last up to 2 weeks.
Contra indications: Devil's Claw relaxes arterial tension  and thus lowers blood pressure.This can reduce the force of the heartbeat and slow the pulse.Therefor it should be avoided by people with congestive heart failure.Do not use devil's Claw if you havan ulcer or you are pregnant or breast feeding.

 Celery Seed And Stalks:
I found this  site that describes how to use the various celery seed products:

Source: http://www.umm.edu/altmed/articles/celery-seed-000231.htm#ixzz2IhvKhuBt
Follow us: @UMMC on Twitter | MedCenter on Facebook
Celery seed oil capsules or tablets: 1 - 2 capsules or tablets 3 times a day, as directed by your health care provider.
Celery seed extract: 1/4 to 1/2 tsp 3 times a day, or as directed by your health care provider. Always take with plenty of juice or with water at mealtime, unless instructed otherwise.
Whole celery seeds: Prepare a tea by pouring one cup boiling water over one teaspoon (1 - 3 g) of freshly crushed seeds. Steep for 10 - 20 minutes before straining and drinking. Drink 3 times a day.



The Celery plant:

The celery plant itself is very useful to combat the symptoms of gout.The Phtalides found in celery are the miracle workers.The substance 3nB (3-n-Butylpthalide is the factor in celery that gives celery its distinctive smell and taste (Phthalides are also found in lovage and walnuts).But why does it work?
 Like the flavonoid anthocyanidins that is found in cherries, 3nB  inhibits xanthine oxidase.This enzyme is involved in  the production of uric acid in the liver. Celery also contains the flavonoids luteolin and apigenin.These flavanoids have anti inflammatory abilities . Luteolin and apigenin also plays a role in pain relief.
 The alkalizing mineral potassium is also found in celery. 100 Grams of raw celery contains a wopping  260 mg of potassium.The more alkaline the body the less gout pain will be experienced.



Celery Seed Conquers Gout Pain - The People's Pharmacy®
Sep 21, 2009 ... Q. I began taking celery seed extract capsules six months ago for gout. Within a day, all foot pain was gone. A blood test six weeks later showed ...
www.peoplespharmacy.com/.../celery-seed-conquers-gout-pai...

 Celery Works Great for Inflammation, Gout, Cancer, and High Blood ...
Sep 10, 2008 ... (NaturalNews) A nutrient found in celery has been shown highly effective against inflammation and cancer. Luteolin is a bioflavonoid also ...
www.naturalnews.com/024135_cancer_celery_inflammation.h...

 Gout Natural Remedies - Celery Seeds - YouTube
http://www.cure-gout-now.com/vid/4 Things to take to ease gout symptoms - Part 1 Celery Seeds.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKQiuseSaZ0


As you can see from the above resources, celery is a very popular gout treatment.
Please take the time to read them and also watch the video!

Some More" Herbs For Gout Treatment "Resources:
Herbs: gout treatment, uric acid crystals, local health food store
Jun 27, 2005 ... Gout if left untreated (conventionally or naturally) can lead to kidney ... If you would like information on natural and herbal remedies for human ...
en.allexperts.com/q/Herbs-720/gout-treatment.htm
Herbs For Gout Herbal Remedies
Natural Home Herbal Remedies ... Herbal gout remedies concentrate detoxification to reduce levels of uric acid, while relieving the ... Herbal Treatments for Gout ...
www.anniesremedy.com/chart_remedy.php?tag=gout
Herbs and Herbal Supplements for Natural Gout Treatment
Herbs for natural gout treatment focus on underlying causes of gout; which holistic practitioners often view as a lifestyle illness. Any herbal remedy for gout ...
www.herbal-supplement-resource.com/natural-gout-treatment....
Gout Herbal Remedies - Alleviate gout symptoms naturally
Dec 30, 2010 ... In his book "Jude's Herbal Home Remedies," Jude Todd recommends drinking black currant leaf herbal tea as a natural gout treatment.
www.naturalnews.com/030866_herbal_remedies_gout.html
Gout Remedy Choices - Alternative - Natural - Herbal - Home ...
Information on natural gout remedy choices. Info on alternative gout treatment options. Information on the various herbs and herbal remedy choices for gout.
arthritis.about.com/.../Gout_Remedy_Alternative_Natural_Her...

  Cured My Gout With Herbs - 5 Gout Herbal Remedies
Jun 21, 2009 ... I recently was reading one of the hundreds of emails I get in my inbox and the subject said, "I cured my gout with herbs." I was immediately ...
ezinearticles.com/?I-Cured-My-Gout-With-Herbs...

Natural Remedies For Gout

Natural Remedies For Gout.

 

 

 There is a huge move from medical solutions ,to natural remedies.The reasons being:   any drugs taken will have side effects.Drugs are a short term solution to the problem. Natural  Gout Remedies offer just that:lifestyle changes with no side effects!  

 The natural remedies for gout usually include the following lifestyle changes:

The use of cherries in alleviating gout . The use of this natural remedy for gout can be found from a study as far back as 1950 .When 12 patients consumed about a pound of cherries daily,it was found that their uric acid levels dropped back to normal.Their pain levels dropped with it and their movement without pain improved with it.

Drinking a lot of water helps the body remove uric acid from the bloodstream.

A natural remedy for an  acute attack of gout may involve bed rest.

Immobilization of the affected part and local application of a heat pad and cold compresses.

  A low purine diet.  A diet that excludes organ meat like liver and  kidney.Cutting out the following: alcohol,poultry, fish, rich pastries, and fried foods. To promote uric acid clearance by the kidneys, individuals with gout will usually be encouraged to drink water with lemon added.

Here are some very useful resources for finding more natural remedies for gout:


Five Steps to Natural Gout Treatment
Put a stop to the excruciating pain of a gout attack by understanding its real cause. Learn these ...
articles.mercola.com/.../five-steps-to-overcoming-gout-naturall...
3 Easy To Use Home Remedies For Gout | Gout Revolution Diet
A great resource providing 3 easy to implement home remedies for gout plus the truth about how best to utilize gout home remedies in your attempt to reduce ...
goutrevolution.com/3-home-remedies-for-gout/
 Discovery Health "Home Remedies for Gout"
Learn about natural home remedies that can keep away gout, a painful affliction caused by the buildup of uric acid in the blood.
health.howstuffworks.com/home-remedies-for-gout.htm

 Natural Treatment of Gout - Dr. Weil
Find more articles and information on the treatment of gout from Dr. Andrew Weil, your trusted health advisor.
www.drweil.com/drw/u/ART00368/Gout.html

Gout Natural Cures That Work - 5 Easy Steps - YouTube
http://www.goutremoval.com The only way to truly be gout free is to completely eliminate the ...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1EZT8fMTUw

Related articles
Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Cherries For Gout

Cherries For Gout.

Cherries for gout  is a natural remedy that is suggested for all gout sufferers.The reason why cherries is such a successful aid for gout pain relief ,is that it neutralizes the gout forming substances. Cherry juice is used all over Europe as a bona fide treatment for gout.The cherries are rich in anthocyanidin which lower and or normalize uric acid levels.It is  generally acccepted that cherries also contain anti inflammatory compounds.Cherries can be consumed either fresh or frozen.225 Grams of cherries per day will prevent gout attacks.Cherry extracts or tablets will work just as well when cherries are not in season.To make the cherry consumption more interesting try these juice recipes:

Cherry Juice for Gout

Juice 1 apple
8 oz of prunes
and 8 oz of cherries
Consume 3 times a day.

Vegetables that lower uric acid levels can also be added to the cherries. Here is a potent  gout fighter:

8 oz of cherries
Half an English cucumber
3 sticks of celery
Make fresh bathes 3 times a day and drink!

Cherries and apples also make a palatable gout  remedy.

Juice 8 oz of cherries
and 2 apples. Drink  fresh juices as soon as possible for the best effect.


Here are also other Cherries for Gout articles that I found :



Cherries And Gout - The GoutWife'sadinwhich lower uric acid levels. View
Cherries and gout - there has been and proanthocy a lot of debate about them lately. Does eating cherries cure your gout - or is it all a bunch of old wives tales? The connection ...
www.squidoo.com/cherriesandgout
Cherries May Cut Gout Pain - ABC News
Sep 28, 2012 ... A Boston University study found eating up to a cup and a half of cherries within 48 hours of a gout attack lowers recurrence by 35 percent.
abcnews.go.com/Health/cherries-cut-gout-pain/story?id...
Can Eating Cherries Prevent Gout Attacks? - Forbes
Nov 30, 2012 ... Cherries (Photo credit: sk8geek) Based on a recent study in the Journal Arthritis & Rheumatism, patients with gout were less likely to ...
www.forbes.com/.../can-eating-cherries-prevent-gout-attacks/
Cherries For Gout Review
Oct 8, 2012 ... Cherries For Gout Review shows you the benefits of cherries and cherry products like cherry concentrate, cherry extract and cherry juice in ...
cherriesforgout.com/
Cherries May Cut Risk of Gout Flare-ups
Nov 11, 2010 ... People with gout may potentially cut in half their risk of recurrent attacks by eating about 20 cherries a day, preliminary research suggests.
arthritis.webmd.com/.../cherries-may-cut-risk-of-gout-flare-up...

Enhanced by Zemanta