Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT ANTIOXIDAN­TS

- BY CARRIE DENNETT Environmen­tal Nutrition

Antioxidan­ts are a nutrition topic that’s had staying power for decades because there is actual substance behind the hype.

Antioxidan­ts neutralize free radicals — substances that occur naturally in the body but can damage cells and DNA.

“Antioxidan­ts are simply compounds that protect cells against oxidation — or the effects of free radicals — and they’re found all around us, in many types of foods and drinks,” says Ginger Hultin, a registered dietician in Seattle who’s the author of “AntiInflam­matory Diet Meal Prep” and “How to Eat to Beat Disease Cookbook.”

Hultin says the body is in constant flux and needs antioxidan­ts to help naturally quench the oxidation that occurs by simply living — breathing, metabolizi­ng, detoxing.

“These processes create natural free radical damage, and the balance is that we get antioxidan­ts from the foods we eat,” she says.

Our bodies do a pretty good job of keeping free radicals in check by producing their own antioxidan­ts — but poor diet and exposure to cigarette smoke, pollution, radiation and environmen­tal toxins can produce more free radicals than your body can handle. The resulting oxidation can accelerate aging and increase the risk of heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and cancer.

Counterint­uitively, antioxidan­ts in excess can be oxidant, and oxidation isn’t always bad, says Michelle Averill, an associate professor of occupation­al and health sciences at the University of Washington.

“It’s all a system, and we need oxidants and antioxidan­ts in balance,” she says. “When our body increases oxidants, it’s not always negative. Sometimes, oxidants are a response to something happening in our system, and it tells our body to do something.”

We sometimes refer to certain nutrients and phytochemi­cals as antioxidan­ts. It’s more accurate to say they have antioxidan­t properties. For example, vitamin C plays a role in the production of collagen, neurotrans­mitters and certain amino acids and also functions as an antioxidan­t.

“Vitamins and minerals contain antioxidan­ts — including beta-carotene and vitamins C and E — but there are actually thousands of antioxidan­t compounds,” Averill says. “For example, all the types of polyphenol­s in tea, coffee, berries or chocolate. They’ve got flavanols, proanthocy­anidins and anthocyani­ns, among many others.”

The minerals selenium and manganese have antioxidan­t properties. Averill says there could be hundreds of thousands of compounds with antioxidan­t properties.

Should you get antioxidan­ts from supplement­s? The short answer is no.

In part, that’s because there can be too much of a good thing. There was a lot of excitement about antioxidan­t supplement­s in the 1990s, until researcher­s found that large doses increased some health risks — such as increased lung cancer risk in smokers taking beta-carotene — or didn’t deliver hopedfor benefits. It’s almost impossible to get too many antioxidan­ts from food, and there’s no evidence taking antioxidan­t supplement­s works as well as eating antioxidan­t-rich food.

“It’s not that we specifical­ly take X micronutri­ent to increase antioxidan­ts in our bodies. It’s that we eat the foods that support the antioxidan­t balance in the body,” Averill says. “You can’t overcome an imbalance of antioxidan­ts and oxidants through supplement­s.”

Each antioxidan­t serves a different function and is not interchang­eable, so it’s important to get an array of antioxidan­ts, fiber, and other nutrients from food. Fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans and lentils, nuts and seeds, herbs and spices, coffee and cocoa, and green and black tea all have antioxidan­t compounds. All are plant foods.

“People would be amazed at how many antioxidan­ts they can get naturally through food,” Hultin says. “Simply eating more common foods like carrots, apples, onions or parsley, for example, can provide a wide array of potent antioxidan­ts.

Environmen­tal Nutrition is an independen­t newsletter written by experts on health and nutrition.

 ?? STOCK.ADOBE.COM ?? Food sources of natural antioxidan­ts include fruits, vegetables, nuts and cocoa powder.
STOCK.ADOBE.COM Food sources of natural antioxidan­ts include fruits, vegetables, nuts and cocoa powder.

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