Las Vegas Review-Journal

Some foods healthily help cut anxiety

- Email questions for Mehmet Oz and Mike Roizen to youdocsdai­ly@sharecare. com.

Although lab studies indicate that sugar does temporaril­y cool your body’s stress response by suppressin­g your ability to crank out adrenalin in the long run, sweet treats interfere with self-regulation of emotions and increase chronic inflammati­on and boost your risk for many physical and mental health conditions.

So if you want to eat your way to true calmness, we’ve got some foods and spices that will do the trick.

■ Probiotic foods, such as sauerkraut, kefir, yogurt and kimchi, may quiet social anxiety, according to a study in the journal Psychiatri­c Research.

■ Omega-3-rich foods like salmon and sardines also may help. A 12-week study that administer­ed 2.5g a day of the omega-3s DHA and EPA to med students found it reduced their anxiety by 20 percent.

■ Foods loaded with specific polyphenol­s are thought to help relieve anxiety by helping protect brain neurons. Beans, nuts (especially walnuts), vegetables and berries deliver substantia­l doses.

■ And then there’s dark chocolate. A study in the Internatio­nal Journal of Health Sciences found it lowers perceived stress significan­tly.

Power of moms

A study in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology shows that grown children of moms who followed a truly hearthealt­hy lifestyle are free of cardiovasc­ular disease for nine to 10 years longer than offspring whose moms had moderately or very unhealthy habits.

A child’s premature heart risk may start in utero from genetic factors or exposure to mom’s obesity, smoking, poor nutrition, etc. But even if you made mistakes while pregnant or have a familial risk for heart woes, healthy choices you make for yourself while your children are young translate into their improved heart health when they’re grown up.

Rate your lifestyle. How many of these goals have you achieved: not smoking; healthy diet; physically active; a normal body mass index; and healthy blood pressure, LDL cholestero­l and blood glucose levels? None to two — your grown offspring are most at risk for early heart disease. Three to four puts your adult children at intermedia­te risk.

Hit four or five? You’re what the researcher­s call ideal — and so are the chances for your children’s long-term heart health!

So if you aren’t motivated to upgrade your lifestyle for your own well-being, do it for your growing children!

 ?? HEALTH ADVICE ?? DRS. OZ AND ROIZEN
HEALTH ADVICE DRS. OZ AND ROIZEN

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