Minimally processed food that is sodium-free or low sodium, if the need arises, you can put 1/8 teaspoon (0.63ml) of salt (which contains a little less than 300mg of sodium) in the palm of your hand and then sprinkle on the food in a few pinches. A high sodium diet can trigger the immune system to initiate an inflammatory response even when there is actually no damage or infection present. Chronic inflammation will eventually develop if a high sodium diet remains constant.
Bacteria is sensitive to dietary sodium because it can cause dysbiosis. The human microbiome is home to trillions of microorganisms that live on and inside our bodies. Our microbiome is composed of both good and bad bacteria that create a healthy balance in the body.
A disrupted oral microbiome caused by a high sodium diet usually leads to cavities and gum disease. Sodium can disrupt your intestinal microbiome and cause intestinal permeability (aka a leaky gut). This may lead, not only to chronic intestinal inflammation, but systemic as well.
The gut microbiome also helps to regulate your blood pressure. Therefore, a disrupted microbiome resulting from a high sodium diet may have a negative effect on your blood pressure. You see, gut bacteria produce certain chemicals that can normalize and or keep blood pressure normal. For more on dietary sodium.
● Fructose is fruit sugar and is also part of the following: honey (21-43% fructose), maple syrup (50% fructose), agave syrup (70-90% fructose), white and brown table sugar (50% fructose), high-fructose corn syrup (55% fructose) and invert sugar syrup (50% fructose). Invert sugar syrup is an added ingredient in almost all syrups. Yet, for some strange reason, it is most often not listed as an ingredient.
Fructose is useless to the body and the cause of chronic and acute inflammation. It’s a poison in the guise of a simple sugar. The major sources of fructose in our daily diet are sugar-sweetened beverages, fruits, UPFs and QSR foods.
You can indulge in dried or fresh fruits that are part of the main course at events like birthdays, weddings, holidays etc… – avoid between events. Do not eat dried or fresh fruits separately as a snack anytime.
To my knowledge, there are two food sources of sugar that are fructose-free. They are corn sugar and brown rice syrup, both easily accessible online. All vegetables contain fructose, but in comparison to fruits the amount is minimal, so vegetables are okay anytime.
Fructose can only be broken down by your liver cells. The breakdown of fructose stimulates the overproduction of purines by the liver cells. To dispose of excess purine molecules, liver cells will break down the purines to produce a waste product called uric acid (UA). Uric acid is then released into your bloodstream to be filtered by the kidneys and excreted in the urine.
Uric acid is normally released by the liver into your blood in controlled amounts. The problem starts when that controlled amount gets out of control due to excess fructose consumption. Fructose starts a chain reaction in your liver that ends in the buildup of high levels of UA in your blood.
Now, low levels of UA in your blood isn’t a bad thing. Uric acid is a powerful antioxidant and a scavenger of free radicals in our body. Free radicals cause the body to prematurely age.
High levels of uric acid in the blood produce the formation of needle-shaped crystals called urate crystals. These crystals will deposit in your joints and cause inflammation. Urate crystals can also deposit in your cornea, sclera and iris of your eyes. Resulting in Astigmatism (an abnormally shaped cornea). This can cause nearsightedness or farsightedness.
Whether in or on your joints or eyes, urate crystals may eventually accumulate and form deposits called tophi. They are visible firm lumps that form under the skin or in joints that appear to onlookers as a physical deformity. Tophi (plural for tophus) can put you at risk of developing other health problems.