Huddersfield Daily Examiner

& LIFESTYLE FOR YOUR INFLAMMATI­ON...

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INFLAMMATI­ON is one of those things the body needs – it signals the immune system to heal and repair damaged tissue, for example – but it’s also a key factor in countless diseases. While a number of things can play a role in individual inflammato­ry responses, food researcher, biochemist and author Dr Barry Sears believes diet can be a powerful tool for helping manage inflammati­on – and it’s all about balance.

By eating the right mix of protein, fat, carbohydra­tes and vitamins, people can keep their body in a unique ‘resolution zone’, he says, where genes that cause inflammati­on can be ‘silenced’ and genes that reduce it can be ‘switched on’, leading to better health.

Dr Sears, who researches the hormonal effects of food at the Inflammati­on Research Foundation in the USA, explores this further in his latest book – The Resolution Zone.

He says: “Inflammati­on is like the weather. We talk a lot about it, yet we know little about how to control it.

“We often think of inflammati­on as something to avoid. In reality, to maintain your health, you have to keep inflammati­on in a zone. You need to turn on inflammati­on to protect your body from infections and injuries, but also need to turn off inflammati­on, so it doesn’t continue to attack your body.

“There is no drug to maintain this balancing act, but your diet can.

“Treating your diet as a ‘superdrug’ keeps inflammati­on in such a zone,” Dr Sears claims.

“There’s no magic bullet in nutrition, only the constant orchestrat­ion of the hormones and genes that reduce, resolve, and finally repair the damage caused by inflammati­on.”

It’s a topic that’s cropped up a lot lately, as inflammati­on is cited as being a key factor in Covid-19 and why some people may become far more unwell than others.

While Dr Sears says an anti-inflammato­ry diet can be beneficial for many things – including pregnancy health, athletic performanc­e and fighting off illness – some experts say the notion of an ‘anti-inflammato­ry diet’ can be misleading, and striving for a healthy balance is generally better than following regimented diet plans.

“We know chronic inflammati­on can play a role in ill-health and that

Food scientist Dr Barry Sears’ latest book is all about getting the inflammati­on balance just right – via your diet. has a look about 90g of low-fat protein per meal, while males will need around 120g. Once you know how much protein you need, you can then determine the exact amount of carbohydra­tes and fat required.

A typical Zone meal might consist of about a 120g portion of chicken, fish or a plant-based meat substitute for vegans, three servings of non-starchy vegetables plus a small serving of berries for dessert, and 10ml of olive oil for fat. it can be affected by many factors, including the diet, obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure and smoking,” says Sarah Coe, a nutrition scientist with the British Nutrition Foundation (nutrition.org.uk).

“But as yet, there is a lack of scientific evidence to support an ‘anti-inflammato­ry’ diet, so we need a better understand­ing of the relationsh­ip between the foods we eat and inflammati­on.

“Diets that have been claimed to be ‘anti-inflammato­ry’ tend to be a Mediterran­ean-style diet or diets rich in particular nutrients (eg. vitamins A, C and E, selenium, zinc and omega 3s), which we can get from eating a healthy, balanced diet,” she adds.

“While the evidence isn’t there to recommend a specific diet, having a generally healthy diet and lifestyle may help to reduce levels of chronic inflammati­on, as well as having other benefits for health.”

So how does Dr Sears think people should be eating? Here are five dietary strategies for eating your way to the ‘resolution zone’...

FOLLOW AN ANTIINFLAM­MATORY DIET

“YOUR diet can either cause inflammati­on or reduce it,” says Dr Sears, who recommends the ‘Zone Diet’ – an anti-inflammato­ry diet he developed more than 25 years ago.

It’s a highly personalis­ed plan but the basic premise is to eat the right balance of low-fat protein and carbohydra­te (such as non-starchy vegetables), plus a little fruit and mono-unsaturate­d fat, like olive oil or nuts, at every meal.

Most females, he says, will need

EAT THE RIGHT AMOUNT OF FERMENTABL­E FIBRE

A PRIMARY source of diet-induced inflammati­on comes from a leaky gut, says Dr Sears.

“Your best defence is consuming adequate levels of fermentabl­e fibre to produce metabolite­s in the gut that also reduce inflammati­on,” he explains. This means at least 30g of fibre per day from non-starchy veg (primarily the ABCs: artichokes, asparagus, broccoli, cauliflowe­r, and spinach) and limited amounts of fruits (ideally berries) to maintain good gut health.

BE MINDFUL OF CALORIES

COUNTING calories is not the be all and end all of maintainin­g a healthy weight.

However, Dr Sears says it’s important to be aware of them.

“The most proven method to live longer with less chronic disease is to restrict calories without malnutriti­on. Those calories have to be balanced in protein, carbohydra­te, and fat to generate the correct levels of hormones needed to reduce inflammati­on as well as to prevent hunger and fatigue.”

This doesn’t necessaril­y mean feeling deprived of food though – for example, Zone meals can typically contain 400 calories each, yet quite a lot of volume if you have the balance of veg right. So some people may even find consuming enough food every day is actually quite tricky!

EAT MORE OMEGA-3 FATTY ACIDS

OMEGA-3 fatty acids are building blocks for the hormones that turn off inflammati­on, says Dr Sears, who explains you’ll need to eat at least 3g of good omega-3 sources per day to make enough of these hormones.

The average Brit only consumes about 150mg of omega-3 fatty acids per day, so many of us might not be getting quite enough. Oily fish, nuts and seeds are good sources.

“If you can’t turn off inflammati­on, it’s unlikely you can repair the tissue damage caused by that same inflammati­on,” says Dr Sears, who points out that unless you’re eating enough fatty fish regularly, you may need to take omega-3 supplement­s.

CONSUME MORE POLYPHENOL­S

POLYPHENOL­S are the chemicals that provide vegetables and fruits with their colouring, and Dr Sears says they also activate the genes that repair tissue damage caused by inflammati­on.

You’ll generally need to consume about 10 servings of non-starchy vegetables and fruits per day to get adequate levels of polyphenol­s, he says.

“This is why it’s challengin­g to consume all the food (you need), even though you’re restrictin­g calories,” says Dr Sears, who suggests the ‘ABCs’ and berries are among the best sources of polyphenol­s.

 ??  ?? Dr Barry Sears, left, and his new book, The Resolution Zone
Dr Barry Sears, left, and his new book, The Resolution Zone
 ??  ?? Berries help maintain a healthy gut
Berries help maintain a healthy gut
 ??  ?? Sarah Coe from the BNF
Sarah Coe from the BNF
 ??  ?? Salmon is a good source of omega 3
Salmon is a good source of omega 3

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