Flu fighters play well at dinner table

ARUBI

Inactive
Flu fighters play well at dinner table

Stephanie Shapiro
Baltimore Sun
Nov. 17, 2004 11:44 AM

Stick to the food pyramid.

Eat a rainbow range of foods.

Love thy garlic. advertisement




Food scientists, holistic healers and practitioners of folk medicine may differ in their approach to sound nutrition. When it comes to staying healthy in flu season, though, they share a basic belief: Flu, a viral infection, cannot be prevented, but it may be discouraged by eating foods that enhance the immune system. The same holds true for that other viral scourge, the common cold.

Whether or not you receive a flu shot this season, a healthy diet can only improve your chances of avoiding the nasty bug that causes discomfort at the very least and, in the most extreme cases, death. The United States records 36,000 deaths from flu annually.

"I'm not aware of a strong relationship between a person's diet and the ability to ward off viruses such as the flu, other than a general overall healthy diet to help boost your immune system," says Mark Kantor, associate professor in the nutrition and food science department of the University of Maryland.

If you want to actively work at skipping the flu, start with Kantor's common-sense suggestion: Eat "lots of fruits and vegetables and whole grains and go easy on the fats and sweets." Then, pay extra attention to the role certain foods and nutrients play in strengthening the body's defense system.

A recent study of elderly individuals found, for example, that vitamins E, B-6 and B-12 "might help boost the body's ammunition against cold and flu," according to a press release from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University.

"Healthy, nutrient-dense foods are the key to boosting the immune system at every level," says Cindy Heroux, a registered dietitian in Orlando, Fla., and author of "The Manual That Should Have Come With Your Body" (Speaking of Wellness, 2003, $14.95).

Adequate protein, (to form antibodies), vitamin B-6 and B-12, as well as vitamins A, C, E, folate (added to fortified cereals), iron, zinc and pantothenic acid found in mushrooms, peanuts and eggs are "the basic nutrients that support your immune system," Heroux says.

For Elena Michaels, a naturopath in Santa Clarita, Calif., a flu-busting meal is as simple as preparing "homemade vegetable soup in a big kettle, with chicken or vegetable broth." Add celery, sweet potatoes, onions and garlic "and it can last all week," Michaels says. "It's very preventive and supports the immune system."

Steering clear of influenza is not about "just taking a multi-vitamin," says Gretchen Heilman, a Charles Village, Md., holistic health counselor. "A whole array of vitamins can be found in foods of all different colors," she says.

"To keep it simple, I tell people to really eat the whole rainbow." With color-coded eating, you're sure to consume a healthy range of cancer-fighting antioxidants and flavonoids (chemical compounds found in certain fruit, vegetables, teas, wines, nuts, seeds and roots that are antioxidants, she says).

Vitamin A is "very important to the immune system," says Mary Ellen Camire, a food scientist at the University of Maine. Choose squash, spinach, sweet potatoes, vegetables in the dark-orange and dark-green range, she says, adding that they're widely available this time of year.

Nancy Childs, a professor of food marketing at Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia, is big on orange juice for its high vitamin C content, while Heilman cautions against juice with too much sugar, which, she says, "depresses your immune system."

Heroux discourages consuming large quantities of sugar at the expense of other nutrients people may need.

Flu phobics also may try to front-load their diet with servings of "functional foods," which have been found to lower the risk of certain diseases beyond fulfilling basic nutritional needs.

Garlic, an herb used medicinally since antiquity, "has been shown to have antibiotic and antiviral properties," Heroux says. "You need to eat about two raw cloves a day to get maximum benefit." Although garlic is most effective in its raw state, "you can take it in supplement form, freeze-dried in capsules," Heroux says. By cooking garlic, "you deactivate some of the enzymes," she says.

Kantor, a member of the Institute of Food Technologists in Chicago, also says, "how you cook a food can affect what kinds of biochemicals it has," making it difficult to gauge the potency of cooked garlic.

Yogurt with active or live cultures is another functional food that experts are praising for its ability to promote gastrointestinal health. Friendly bacteria, known as probiotics, can "help to protect the body's defensive barriers by discouraging the growth of infectious bacteria," Heroux says.

Yakult, popular in Asia and Europe, as well as DanActive, available in the United States, are yogurt drinks power-packed with beneficial bacteria. But any yogurt that contains live or active culture is also effective.

"I'm very big on the fermented products," says Camire. "Having those bacteria in our bodies does stimulate our immune system. It helps us to ward off food poisoning and seems to help out the immune system overall."

Other foods with beneficial immune properties that may surpass basic nutritional elements include shellfish, which contains selenium, and salmon, which is rich in Omega 3 fatty acids, critical for activating disease-fighting T-cells. Black and green tea are also thought to bolster T-cell production.

Shiitake mushrooms have been used in Japan and China for centuries as an immune booster. More recent studies support their effectiveness in combating colds, flu and other maladies. Reishi mushrooms, ginger, onions and blueberries are also thought to have immune-enhancing properties.

Above all, says Heroux, stay hydrated. Fluids are "really important just to keep the body healthy." Not only do water and other liquids "help flush everything through the system," they prevent nasal passages from drying out, Heroux says, adding that dried-out passages make one more susceptible to invasion by cold or flu viruses.

Water works best, the nutritionist says, followed by herbal teas, regular tea, coffee, fruit juices and other drinks diluted with water and milk.

If the flu still knocks you out, chicken soup remains the ultimate comfort food, even if its legendary curative powers have not been definitively proven. Its steamy broth relieves a congested nose and sinuses, as does a dose of cayenne or chile peppers. And if you make a soup chockablock with carrots, garlic and onions, you're also shoring up your immune system for the next flu season.

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1117health-fludiet17-ON.html#
 

Herbmountain

Inactive
Good post! Especially the fermented foods line. Did you know in almost every country except ours, some kind of fermented food is eaten prior to a meal? Saur foods, yogert, meso and such are eaten to start the digestive process. It causes the body to release enzymes from the stomach, mouth, pancreas, liver to help digest the foods. Even smelling the foods being cooked starts this digestive process.

The active ingredient that is released from fresh garlic is allicin. This is the potent antibiotic that kills off bacteria and viruses. I like to eat horseradish as well. If you are the least bit cold, this warms you right up. I love the fact that diet is being addressed here. Now for exercise?
 

ARUBI

Inactive
NBC5.com

Want To Beat The Flu? Exercise
Researchers To Conduct Study
POSTED: 3:07 PM CST November 11, 2004
UPDATED: 3:10 PM CST November 11, 2004



CHICAGO -- University of Illinois researchers say they believe there is a very easy way to avoid getting the flu -- exercise.

NBC5 HealthWatch reporter Nesita Kwan said the researchers are going to try to prove that theory with a study on the Champaign-Urbana campus. They said they hope to find that simple workouts can jump start the immune system to fight off the flu. They said it has already worked in mice.

"They were inoculated with a lethal dose of influenza, and lo and behold, we could protect mice," said researcher Jeffrey Woods. "The mice that exercised we actually protected."

Proven ways to minimize the risk of getting the flu are regular hand washing -- and if you're in a high-risk category, getting a flu shot.
 

ARUBI

Inactive
Flu and exercise; Colds and exercise



Question:
Can exercise help you avoid colds and flus?

Answer:
Yes. At least one study suggests that regular exercise can cut in half the number of days a person suffers from colds and the flu. Exercise stimulates the disease-fighting white blood cells in the body to move from the organs into the bloodstream. Overall, you can improve your immune system by eating a proper diet, getting sufficient rest, reducing stress, and exercising regularly. This will decrease your chances of getting a cold or the flu.

Update Date: 5/17/2003
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002083.htm
 

ARUBI

Inactive
Posted on Fri, Nov. 26, 2004




RON TARVER
Barbara Dively, a piano teacher and mother of three, talks about her huge collection of homeopathic remedies and textbooks (in the foreground) in the kitchen of her Lansdale home.


One winter about 20 years ago, as Barbara Dively prepared to pay for an armful of pills, lozenges, and other flu provisions at her Plymouth Meeting drugstore, the pharmacist brushed it all aside.

"You only need one thing," he told her. It was something Dively had never heard of, but which has been the sole flu remedy in her family medicine chest ever since: Oscillococcinum, Oscillo for short, a best-seller in France and an increasingly popular brand here.

It's made from the liver and heart of Anas barbariae, the Muscovy duck, otherwise known for its lean and flavorful meat. "We thought it was crazy, but it worked for flu," said Dively, 63, of Lansdale.

As the flu season rolls in and the vaccine shortage continues, over-the-counter Oscillo is just one of many possible flu-fighting alternatives being explored by consumers. Possibilities include echinacea and zinc, garlic and Vitamin C, and a legion of other substances whose fans are many and passionate.

It's a confusing morass of products and therapies, many considered mainstream in other parts of the world but as yet unproven by Western scientific standards. Federal regulators don't vouch for their effectiveness, either.

Still, the appetite grows. For flu and many other illnesses, more and more Americans want to treat themselves - and do it with remedies that replace or augment conventional Western ones.

Oscillo, which one independent analysis found short-circuited the flu by just a few hours, is a homeopathic remedy. Like Dolicoccil, Airborne and Hyland's, other flu treatments derived from duck organs, it is part of a therapeutic system developed in the late 1700s by Samuel Hahnemann.

It was for Hahnemann, a German physician lionized by his followers and vilified by established medical interests, that the Homeopathic Medical College of Pennsylvania was renamed in 1869.

(For more than four decades, Hahnemann University Hospital in Philadelphia and its medical school, now part of Drexel University College of Medicine, have been allopathic - traditional - institutions.)

Homeopathy uses small doses of plant, animal or mineral substances to stimulate self-healing. It is based on the principle of similars - like cures like - which means that a substance that can cause certain symptoms in a healthy person can cure similar symptoms in an unhealthy person.

In the case of Oscillo, the Muscovy duck's heart and liver are thought to be reservoirs for the flu virus.

Although many conventional doctors still find Hahnemann's notions implausible, homeopathy had a prominent place in 19th-century health care and is now part of the renewed interest - among doctors, as well as consumers - in complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). Also in that category are herbal remedies, diet supplements, acupuncture, chiropractic, massage and yoga, traditional Chinese medicine, and natural therapies.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported earlier this year that 36 percent of 31,000 Americans surveyed said they had used some form of CAM during the previous year. Most sought relief from back and neck problems, colds, joint pain or depression - and most used conventional treatments, too.

CAM spending is estimated at $36 billion to $47 billion a year, which sends CAM critics such as Stephen Barrett into orbit.

The retired Allentown psychiatrist, who runs the Web site Quackwatch.org, calls alternative medicine for flu and all else "quack nonsense." "There are some heavy-duty claims that are fraudulent as hell," he said, "and I don't believe any of it."

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration treats over-the-counter vitamins, minerals and herbs as foods, not drugs, and does not vouch for their efficacy or quality. If a product's claims are proved false or misleading, however, or the product is deemed unsafe, the agency can pull it from the market - as it did earlier this month with Double Deers Formula brand Expellin Extract (Concentrated) and Cardioflex, herbal supplements from China.

Homeopathic remedies are regulated as drugs, but held to a lesser standard than conventional medicines.

Dively, who in 20 years has gone from student to teacher of homeopathy, responds serenely to the naysayers. "Once you have a few of these healing experiences," she said, "you don't really care what other people think."

Although Dively, her husband, John, and three grown children have used conventional medicines, they prefer homeopathy for just about everything - arnica for swollen ankles, ruta for blown-out knees, tarantula cubensis for spider bites, bryonia for arthritis and anas barbariae, Oscillo's active ingredient, at the first sign of flu.

The Divelys swear by them all, although there appear to be no scientific studies of any of them except Oscillo.

The independent Cochrane Collaboration, which evaluates the evidence behind health claims, reviewed seven studies of Oscillo and concluded that it cannot prevent flu but that it can slightly shorten its duration - by 0.28 days or 6.7 hours. The nonprofit Cochrane called the data "promising" but said most of the studies were too small and the evidence too weak to support Oscillo as a "first-line treatment" of flu.

Boiron, Oscillo's French manufacturer, with U.S. corporate headquarters in Newtown Square, said studies show that 63 percent of patients who took its product at the outset had fewer chills and headaches, lower fever, and less stiffness and pain within 48 hours.

Boiron does not claim that Oscillo prevents flu, said spokeswoman Alissa Gould, who estimated that U.S. sales of Oscillo, the company's flagship product, would hit $15.4 million this year, a 27 percent hike over last year.

The back-and-forth over Oscillo is typical of the debate over alternative remedies, which mainstream medical researchers are beginning to study more closely.

Among them is Philippe Szapary, an internist and assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, who is looking at dietary supplements and cardiovascular disease.

Some alternative treatments do work, Szapary said, such as ginkgo biloba for blocked leg arteries and fish oil for heart disease in certain high-risk groups. But the field is very complex for researchers, to say nothing of consumers, who must evaluate a universe of confusing information to decide what works.

"It's mind-boggling," he said.

Alternative Remedies

Some popular alternative remedies for cold, flu and upper-respiratory infection:

Echinacea: Most studies report positive results in early treatment of cold and flu. But there are three different commonly used species of the plant, each available in many forms, and the studies so far have not been very well designed. Overall, the results have been convincing enough that the German government has endorsed the use of Echinacea purpurea as soon as symptoms begin. Be aware that the herb is not recommended for long-term use and that it failed to help children with respiratory infections in one very large, well-designed trial.

Zinc:As a lozenge or nasal gel, zinc may act directly in the throat or nose to reduce the duration of the common cold. Be aware that high doses of zinc can have adverse effects and there have been unconfirmed reports of loss of smell resulting from zinc nasal gel.

Garlic: There is evidence that regular use of garlic may help prevent colds. Be aware that there are more than 200 chemicals in garlic and some may interfere with other medications.

Vitamin C: Although not firmly established by clinical trials, Vitamin C's antioxidant activity may help boost immune function and may make some people feel better. Be aware that there are no conclusive data on large doses of Vitamin C preventing colds or reducing the severity or duration of symptoms and that Vitamin C may affect other drugs you are taking.

Sources: www.consumerlab.com, www.cochrane.org and www.webmd.com

For more information

www.consumerlab.com: independent test results, health and product information.

http://nccam.nih.gov: National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at the National Institutes of Health, for information on complementary and alternative medicine and research.

www.quackwatch.org: health-related frauds and fads.

www.cochrane.org: science-based reviews of clinical trials.

www.cfsan.fda.gov or 1-888-723-3366: Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, for information on supplement safety and labeling.
 
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