Guest guest Posted December 18, 2004 Report Share Posted December 18, 2004 The Green Pharmacy for Osteoporosis JoAnn Guest Dec 17, 2004 16:05 PST ========================================================== The Green Pharmacy for Osteoporosis JoAnn Guest Aug 05, 2002 12:47 PDT If you’re looking to consume more nutrients that help prevent Osteoporosis, here are the plant foods I’d suggest. Cabbage: Boron helps raise estrogen levels in the blood, and estrogen helps preserve bone. In my database, cabbage ranks highest in boron content among leafy vegetables with 145 parts per million (ppm) on a dry-weight basis. I eat a lot of coleslaw, and it’s easy to combine cabbage with high-calcium broccoli, kale, beans and organic tofu in salads and steamed vegetable dishes. Cabbage is also a key ingredient in my Bone-strengthening Broth. Dandelion: Speaking of boron, dandelion shoots run a close second to cabbage, with 125 ppm. Dandelion also has more than 20,000 ppm of calcium, meaning that just ten grams (just under seven tablespoons) of dried dandelion shoots could provide more than 1 mg of boron and 200 mgs of calcium. Dandelion is also a fair source of silicon, which some studies suggest also helps strengthen bone. Pigweed: On a dry weight basis, pigweed leaves are one of our best vegetable sources of calcium, at 5.3 percent. This means that a small serving of steamed leaves provides a hearty 500 mgs of calcium. Other good plant sources of calcium in descending order of potency include broad beans, watercress, licorice, marjoram, savory, red clover shoots, thyme, Chinese cabbages (bok choy), basil, celery root, dandelion root, and purslane. Avocado: As one reputed vegetable source of vitamin D, avocados can help the body turn calcium into bone. I suggest mashing an avocado into nonfat organic cottage cheese or organic yogurt so you get your calcium and some vitamin D at the same time. Avocadoes are also rich in heart healthy vitamin E. Soybean: (Glycine max) and other beans) Vegetarian and Japanese women have a lower incidence of osteoporosis and fractures than Western women who eat our traditional high protein diets. The reason, according to James Anderson, M.D. of the University of Kentucky College of medicine in Lexington, appears to be that Western diet meat-eaters 'excrete' more calcium in their urine. Beans are a good source of protein, but they cause less calcium loss in the urine than meat. In addition, soybeans and other beans contain " genistein " , a plant estrogen (phytoestrogen) that acts like the female sex hormone in the body. Pharmaceutical estrogen replacement (HRT) increases the 'risk' of breast cancer. Genistein from beans has never shown to increase cancer risk, and I’d be willing to bet that a diet rich in beans would strengthen bone and prevent heart disease better than estrogen pills. Organic Black Pepper: According to my database, black pepper contains four anti-osteoporosis compounds. If you like pepper, you might consider sprinkling it generously on your avocado or bean soup or salad, assuming that every little bit helps. Horsetail: French research suggests that silicon helps prevent osteoporosis and can be used to treat bone fractures. Horsetail is among the richest plant sources of this mineral, in the form of the compound " monosilicic acid " , which the body can readily use. Aging and low estrogen levels decrease the body’s ability to absorb " silicon " . Some people recommend up to nine 350 mg capsules daily. You should use this herb only in combination with a holistic practitioner. If you’re advised to use horsetail tea, add a teaspoon of pure natural sucanat or turbinado sugar to the water along with the dried herb. The natural sugar will pull more silicon out of the plant. Bring it to a boil, then let it simmer for about three hours. Strain out the leaves, then let the tea cool before drinking. Parsley: That dark green garnish, which is so often thrown away, instead of eaten, is generously endowed with 'boron'. It would take about three ounces of dried parsley to provide the three mgs deemed that is useful in osteoporosis. That’s more than most people want to consume, but every sprig helps. In my database, parsley is also among the highest food sources of 'fluorine', another bone strengthener. Freshen your breath, while you save your bones by routinely eating every sprig of parsley garnish on your plate in restaurants. I have nothing against calcium supplements but I firmly believe that everyone should get as much calcium as possible from their foods. It’s not only possible to do this, it’s better for your bones, because the mineral strength of bone depends on more than calcium. For calcium to actually strengthen bones, it must be continued with several other nutrients that few experts seem to talk about. You also need magnesium, boron, zinc, vitamin D and vitamin A. You can get all of these nutrients in supplements, but I prefer to get them the way Nature intended—packaged all together in food! The other news about osteoporosis that few people know is that high-protein diets " leach " calcium from bones. Nutrition experts I rely on suggest that people at risk for osteoporosis " limit " their protein intake to no more than one gram of protein per kilogram of body weight, which translates into around two to three ounces of protein— on the order of one Amish chicken breast or one Laura’s Lean beef hamburger (which is hormone and antibiotic-free) daily for the average woman. Most Americans eat considerably more protein than this, running a risk of calcium " loss " even if they consume a lot of the mineral. Currently, this disease costs the United States some six billion a year! My wife Peggy, who is under 65 and diagnosed with osteoporosis is doing well on this diet. James A. Dukes Ph.D. From “The Green Pharmacy” _________________ JoAnn Guest mrsjo- DietaryTi- www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes AIM Barleygreen " Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future " http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html Send a seasonal email greeting and help others. Do good. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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