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Drs. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Mike Roizen
Dr. Mehmet Oz is host of the popular TV show “The Dr. Oz Show.” He is a professor in the Department of Surgery at Columbia University and directs the Cardiovascular Institute and Complementary Medicine Program and New York-Presbyterian Hospital.

Dr. Mike Roizen is chief medical officer at the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute, an award-winning author, and has been the doctor to eight Nobel Prize winners and more than 100 Fortune 500 CEOs.

Dr. Mehmet Oz,Dr. Mike Roizen

Tags: inflammation | immunity | blood sugar | Dr. Oz

Eating to Tame Inflammation

Dr. Mehmet Oz, M.D. and Dr. Mike Roizen, M.D. By Tuesday, 06 November 2018 10:42 AM EST Current | Bio | Archive

When you have a kitchen fire, you might grab a fire extinguisher, but you wouldn't crank up Spotify.

Well, maybe the day's coming when you would. Students from George Mason University have invented a deep bass sonic blaster that uses sound waves to put out fires. The technology knocks out flames in small, confined spaces.

It would be great if that kind of gizmo could get rid of chronic inflammation in your cells.

Inflammation is a result of your body's immune response when it's called on to heal a wound or defeat a virus. It's why your sprained ankle swells or you form a scab.

And after your immune warrior cells win their war, inflammation normally fades away.

But what if the immune system can't win the war because your body is under attack from chronically elevated blood sugar, a constant flow of stress hormones, or belly fat?

Then inflammation persists and becomes as damaging to your organs and cells as California's 300,000-acre Mendocino Complex fire — and nearly as hard to put out.

In Dr. Roizen’s upcoming book, "What to Eat When," you can discover effective ways to tame that inflammation. Here are a few tips:

1. Don't eat sugar-added or processed foods, especially at night. Inflammation increases while you're at rest.

2. Eat a plant-centered diet with lean animal proteins, which means no red meat. Get prebiotic fiber from 100 percent whole grains and produce.

3. Aim for 60 minutes of daily physical activity daily. Walking counts, but getting hot and sweaty cools off inflammation more quickly.

© 2023 NewsmaxHealth. All rights reserved.


Dr-Oz
Inflammation is a result of your body's immune response when it's called on to heal a wound or defeat a virus. It's why your sprained ankle swells or you form a scab.
inflammation, immunity, blood sugar, Dr. Oz
258
2018-42-06
Tuesday, 06 November 2018 10:42 AM
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