45 Staying Healthy During Tough Economic Times
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Dynamic Chiropractic – February 12, 2009, Vol. 27, Issue 04

Staying Healthy During Tough Economic Times

By David Seaman, DC, MS, DABCN

Many of us are feeling the economic crunch. Money is tight and the bills continue to arrive in our mailboxes. Stressful times like these demand resiliency on our part. Interestingly, a mentally stressed state can promote systemic inflammation.1-4 Avoiding mental stressors is not likely to be easy during these times, so we must consider the importance of avoiding systemic inflammation caused by a lack of exercise and a poor diet.

Our mechanically oriented training leads us to view inflammation as a consequence of an identifiable physical injury. However, inflammation is more complex than this. We promote development of chronic, systemic subclinical inflammation by avoiding exercise and remaining sedentary.5-8 In other words, we can become chronically inflamed without physical injury. Not surprisingly, we should exercise daily to help prevent inflammation, and we must also modify our dietary habits.

Pro-Inflammatory Nutrition Is Expensive

Chronic, systemic subclinical inflammation is also promoted by subsisting on the average American diet, which is high in calories and low in fiber and nutrients. Approximately 80 percent of the calories consumed by Americans are derived from refined flour products, refined sugar, refined seed oils (concentrated source of omega-6 and trans fats) and fatty meat.9 It is now common knowledge that eating excess calories from sugar and fat leads to postprandial systemic inflammation,10 which is thought to function as in insidious promoter of heart disease, diabetes, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer's disease, obesity, hypertension, asthma, depression, inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis and cancer.7,9-12

Anti-Inflammatory Nutrition Is Inexpensive

Lean meat, fish, chicken, fruits, vegetables and nuts form the foundation of a diet that blunts a postprandial inflammatory response. This is referred to as an "anti-inflammatory diet."10 Not surprisingly, this diet is recommended to help prevent the above-mentioned pro-inflammatory diseases, the treatment of which represents a massive drain on financial resources, both personally and for businesses.7,9-12

A common argument is, "I can't afford to eat lots of fruits and vegetables," or "Healthy foods are expensive." I tend to strongly disagree with these arguments. A cup of coffee and a doughnut can cost up to $5. A bottle of 20 oz. soda costs more than $1. In contrast, a 5-pound bag of frozen carrots, broccoli and cauliflower costs $5 at Sam's Club. A 1-pound container of pre-washed organic salad greens costs about $4. A large sweet potato that can be split between two meals costs about 75 cents. While certain nuts are very expensive (macadamias, for example), many are very reasonable. Lean meats, fish and chicken are reasonably priced and can be added to the vegetables and sweet potatoes. Fresh fruit remains very reasonable and should be one of the snacks of choice.

Dark chocolate is inexpensive and can be mixed with raw nuts and raisins for a great snack or dessert. I often melt a 50-calorie piece of dark chocolate with a little coconut oil and add some nuts and raisins. I place this combination on a piece of wax/freezer paper and place it into the freezer for about 10 minutes. My reward is an anti-inflammatory candy bar.

In short, it is not more expensive to eat anti-inflammatory, if one shops wisely. Certainly, preventing the expression of chronic disease will save countless dollars and heartaches associated with the accelerated morbidity and mortality associated with pro-inflammatory living. In short, we cannot afford to eat any other way but anti-inflammatory.

Inexpensive Supplements for Health Promotion

Unlike what I once thought, nutritional supplements typically do not function as substitutes for medications, particularly when inflammatory dietary habits are maintained. There is no supplement that will lower blood pressure as consistently as medications. No supplement can influence blood sugar like Metformin. While ginger and turmeric inhibit cyclo-oxygenase, it is not with the same power as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

The key really seems to involve the adoption of an anti-inflammatory diet and taking key supplements that support the reduction of inflammation and free-radical generation. The basic supplements include a multivitamin without iron, magnesium, fish oil and vitamin D.13-19

Fortunately, the basic four supplements mentioned above are reasonably priced. The cost is approximately $60 to $80 per month, which is less than $3 per day. If a patient can only afford one supplement, vitamin D seems like the best choice because research has demonstrated that vitamin D insufficiency is pandemic. The next best financial choice for a supplement would be a multivitamin/mineral without iron. After that fish oil should be added and finally magnesium. If a fifth supplement can be afforded, probiotics are the best choice as they have a strongly anti-inflammatory effect in the gut.

If money is not at issue, additional supplements should be considered, including coenzyme Q10, lipoic acid, acetyl-L-carnitine, ginger, turmeric and garlic. These supplements help to promote ATP synthesis and reduce free radicals and inflammation.

Conclusion

While finances are tight for many due to external economic forces, we can easily make this situation a lot worse by pursuing disease expression due to a pro-inflammatory lifestyle. Medical care for pro-inflammatory diseases is extremely expensive and generally preventable by adopting an anti-inflammatory diet that is no more expensive than one that is pro-inflammatory. Key supplements can be added based on financial ability.

We should consider that paying for expensive medical care will put most of us into debt even when economic times are good. So, it makes no sense to pursue disease and expensive medical care with a pro-inflammatory lifestyle when economic times are not so good. Share this information with your patients and let them know nutrition does not need to be compromised, even when the economy is down.

References

  1. Black PH, Garbutt LD. Stress, inflammation and cardiovascular disease. J Psychosom Res 2002;52(1):1-23.
  2. Black PH. Stress and the inflammatory response: a review of neurogenic inflammation. Brain Behav Immun 2002;16(6):622-53.
  3. Black PH. The inflammatory response is an integral part of the stress response: Implications for atherosclerosis, insulin resistance, type II diabetes and metabolic syndrome X. Brain Behav Immun 2003;17(5):350-64.
  4. Black PH. The inflammatory consequences of psychologic stress: relationship to insulin resistance, obesity, atherosclerosis and diabetes mellitus, type II. Med Hypotheses 2006;67(4):879-91.
  5. Oegema TR. Molecular basis of the interaction of inflammation and exercise: keep on walking!Arth Rheum 2007;56(10):3176-9.
  6. You T, Berman DM, Ryan AS, Nicklas BJ. Effects of hypocaloric diet and exercise training on inflammation and adipocyte lipolysis in obese postmenopausal women. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2004;89:1739-46.
  7. Nicklas BJ, You T, Pahor M. Behavioral treatments for chronic systemic inflammation: effects of dietary weight loss and exercise training. Can Med Assoc J 2005;172(9):1199-209.
  8. Tjonna AE, Lee SJ, Rognmo O, et al. Aerobic interval training versus continuous moderate exercise as a treatment for the metabolic syndrome. A pilot study. Circulation 2008;118(4):346-54.
  9. Cordain L, Eaton SB, Sebastian A, et al. Origins and evolution of the Western diet: Health implications for the 21st century. Am J Clin Nutr 2005;81:341-54.
  10. O'Keefe JH, Gheewala NM, O'Keefe JO. Dietary strategies for improving post-prandial glucose, lipids, inflammation, and cardiovascular health. J Am Coll Cardiol 2008;51(3):249-55.
  11. Simopoulos AP. Omega-3 fatty acids inflammation and autoimmune diseases. J Am Coll Nutr 2002;21(6):495-505.
  12. Franco OH et al. The Polymeal: a more natural, safer, and probably tastier (than the Polypill) strategy to reduce cardiovascular disease by more than 75%. BMJ 2004;329:1447-50.
  13. Seaman DR. A sports nutrition: a biochemical view of injury care and prevention. In: Hyde TE, Gengenbach MS, Eds. Conservative Management of Sports Injuries, 2nd ed. Boston: Jones and Bartlett; 2007: pp. 1067-92.
  14. Seaman DR. Nutritional considerations in the treatment of soft tissue injuries. In: Hammer WI, Ed. Functional Soft-Tissue Examination and Treatment by Manual Methods, 3rd ed. Boston: Jones & Bartlett; 2007: pp. 717-34.
  15. Seaman DR. Nutritional considerations for pain and inflammation. In: Liebenson CL, Ed. Rehabilitation of the Spine: A Practitioner's Manual, 2nd ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 2006: pp. 728-40.
  16. Ames BN. The metabolic tune-up: metabolic harmony and disease prevention. J Nutr 2003;133(5 Suppl 1):1544-8.
  17. Ames BN. Supplements and tuning up metabolism. J Nutr 2004;134(11):3164S-8S.
  18. Ames BN. Increasing longevity by tuning up metabolism. To maximize human health and lifespan, scientists must abandon outdated models of micronutrients. EMBO Rep 2005;6:520-4.
  19. Ames BN. Low micronutrient intake may accelerate the degenerative diseases of aging through allocation of scarce micronutrients by triage. PNAS 2006;103(47):17589-94.

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