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Hello Health Champions Today i'm going to talk  about inflammation and the foods that may or may  
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  • 00:00

    Hello Health Champions. Today i'm going to talk  about inflammation and the foods that may or may  

  • 00:06

    not cause inflammation. And the reason i say  may or may not is that people will react very  

  • 00:14

    very differently to different foods so it makes no  sense to talk about foods causing reactions unless  

  • 00:22

    we first understand a little bit about what those  inflammatory reactions are inflammation is exactly  

  • 00:30

    what it sounds like it's a flame it's something  that hot red swollen and painful and we need to  

  • 00:38

    understand it's an immune response that it's your  immune system getting into action for some reason  

  • 00:46

    and this is something that's not happening to the  body it's not the food causing the inflammation  

  • 00:53

    but it's something that's done by the body  it's the body responding it's interpreting  

  • 00:59

    and reacting to that food and this could be a  local inflammation or it could be systemic and  

  • 01:07

    we'll talk about both of those kinds and number  10 on the list is dairy a lot of people love dairy  

  • 01:13

    it's a very popular food especially if you're  going low carb you're reducing carbs to reduce  

  • 01:20

    inflammation from insulin resistance but if  you are sensitive to dairy now you're just  

  • 01:25

    trading one type of inflammation for another so  it could backfire that way so it all depends on  

  • 01:32

    if you are sensitive to that same thing with  lectins and oxalates there's a lot of talk about  

  • 01:39

    that people ask me all the time are lectins  bad for you should i eat spinach because of  

  • 01:45

    all the oxalate well it depends on if you have  a sensitivity and it's not that easy to figure  

  • 01:53

    this out you can run some blood tests but a lot  of it is going to have to be trial and error  

  • 01:58

    if everything is working if you're getting  healthier then you're probably doing fine  

  • 02:03

    but if you're still having some inflammation if  you have some aches and pains if you hit plateaus  

  • 02:09

    and your weight loss if you're having some issue  then you want to start thinking about these things  

  • 02:15

    so what are lectins and oxalates well they're  plant defenses lectins are compounds produced by  

  • 02:23

    plants so they can defend themselves from getting  eaten and dairy again has a lectin called casein  

  • 02:32

    we have a very popular group of plants of  vegetables called nightshades and while these  

  • 02:39

    foods are fantastic for most people like tomato  potato eggplant bell pepper and if you notice  

  • 02:47

    the dots that means the list goes on and on and  on these are just examples these foods could be  

  • 02:54

    fantastic for most people but if you are sensitive  to lectins then the lectins create inflammation  

  • 03:04

    then they're not good for you same thing  with legumes there's probably even more  

  • 03:10

    people that have trouble with them legumes  have lectins in lentils beans peanuts etc  

  • 03:19

    and most grains especially the popular  ones wheat rice and oats also have lectins  

  • 03:26

    so part of the reason that people get healthier  when they cut this stuff out especially the grains  

  • 03:32

    is that they're reducing their carbohydrate load  they're reducing the insulin but another part  

  • 03:39

    can be that they're also cutting out some lectins  causing inflammation oxalates are another thing  

  • 03:46

    that can cause inflammation they're mostly  associated with the formation of stones especially  

  • 03:52

    in the kidneys so kidney stones can be some  of the most excruciating back pain you've ever  

  • 03:58

    experienced and spinach tops the list but we have  rhubarb soy beets buckwheat almonds potatoes and  

  • 04:06

    navy beans and there's lots of other foods that  have oxalates as well again a lot of people will  

  • 04:13

    do just fine but if you have a tendency to make  stone or if you are susceptible to these causing  

  • 04:21

    irritation then they will cause inflammation as  well in that person and when i go over the foods  

  • 04:28

    i'm going to talk about two basic categories of  food on the one hand it's foods that are bad for  

  • 04:35

    certain individuals like in a crowd there might  be one person reacting very severely to peanuts  

  • 04:43

    or shrimp or something like that and these are of  course known as food allergies and it could range  

  • 04:50

    anywhere from an anaphylactic shock like some  people could just smell peanuts and they could die  

  • 04:57

    if they didn't get treatment other people might  have symptoms that could be acute or delayed  

  • 05:04

    some people eat a food and within five minutes  they have a reaction they feel bad other people  

  • 05:11

    would have a delayed reaction of three four  five days a delayed hypersensitivity reaction  

  • 05:18

    and now it's very difficult to relate the symptom  to the food that they ate and there are tests that  

  • 05:25

    you can have but they're kind of expensive and  there's just way too many things that they find  

  • 05:30

    so it's always better just to kind of try to  improve your overall digestion i think and the  

  • 05:37

    healthier you get the better you'll be able to  tolerate a lot of these things it could also be  

  • 05:43

    that it's creating a little bit of inflammation  but that you're asymptomatic and then  

  • 05:50

    you would never know but it still sort of adds  up over time the bottom line though is that this  

  • 05:56

    again is not something that the food does to your  body it's an interpretation that your body makes  

  • 06:03

    about the food and then there are foods that  are basically universally bad they're bad for  

  • 06:09

    everybody and these would be foods that  cause insulin resistance because insulin  

  • 06:15

    resistance will increase inflammation in the body  a chronic low-grade inflammation foods that cause  

  • 06:23

    oxidative stress that create reactive oxygen  species and free radicals they create inflammation  

  • 06:32

    and it could be either that the food provokes that  response in the body or it could be that the food  

  • 06:38

    itself has been oxidized so you're introducing a  lot of oxidative material in the body it could be  

  • 06:47

    that the oils have a very high omega 6 to 3 ratio  ideally historically this should be about a one to  

  • 06:56

    one or maybe we can push it to about a three or a  four to one but most diets today if you're eating  

  • 07:04

    modern standard food you're gonna get about  a 20 to one ratio which is highly promoting  

  • 07:12

    inflammation so these are things that  these are foods that affect everyone  

  • 07:18

    to a degree but again their differences so one  person could be extremely sensitive just one  

  • 07:25

    little bit will totally overwhelm their system and  someone else will still be affected but it takes  

  • 07:31

    50 60 years before they get sick and then they're  still not as as sick as the other person the  

  • 07:37

    problem with these are also that they're not  going to cause as strong a reaction it's not  

  • 07:42

    like a food that you eat and five minutes later  you know that something happened these are more  

  • 07:49

    silent it's a very low grade chronic inflammation  and you're not really aware that it's going on  

  • 07:56

    and that's why so many people have it and so  many people are affected because it's part of  

  • 08:01

    our lifestyle it becomes chronic and it goes on  year after year but if inflammation is so bad  

  • 08:08

    why does the body create it because it is a  natural necessary part of healing and anytime you  

  • 08:16

    have a trauma or infection the body goes through  certain phases in response so the acute phase  

  • 08:23

    is right when something happens when you  have some tissue damage or an acute infection  

  • 08:28

    then the body goes to seal off that area so  it's just like the police at a crime scene they  

  • 08:34

    fence off the area to protect that area and that's  exactly what the body does first it reduces the  

  • 08:42

    blood flow so you'll stop the bleeding and then  as it stabilizes it increases the swelling and you  

  • 08:48

    have migration of white blood cells and increased  circulation and metabolism so you can bring more  

  • 08:55

    activity to that area so it gets all red and hot  and this should only last for hours two days maybe  

  • 09:03

    three to four days at the most then the body  should shift it should be done with that part  

  • 09:08

    and it should start healing proliferation means  making new cells so you break down the old cells  

  • 09:16

    you make new cells and that's how healing takes  place and this can go on depending on the size  

  • 09:22

    and the extent of the injury could go on for days  or weeks or even months like if you break a bone  

  • 09:29

    it could take two three months to heal that but  then everything is kind of intact and together  

  • 09:37

    and then the body goes into remodeling and now  it kind of smooths off the edges and cleans it up  

  • 09:43

    and tries to get it as close to 100 as it can  and this could go for weeks or even up to a year  

  • 09:51

    and then we hope that after all that the issue  has been resolved that we're back exactly  

  • 09:58

    like we were before the injury and for the  most part if we have a small cut on the skin  

  • 10:04

    then it will go back to a hundred percent but  larger injuries they rarely go all the way back  

  • 10:11

    so they don't quite get resolved or if it's a  systemic inflammation and it's because we keep  

  • 10:20

    reintroducing it's part of our lifestyle we keep  putting in the things causing the inflammation now  

  • 10:27

    the body also can't resolve it so non-resolved  inflammation is basically the cause of all our  

  • 10:34

    problems today chronic low-grade inflammation is  associated with cardiovascular disease with cancer  

  • 10:41

    with dementia and the list goes on and on we can  also have latent infections causing inflammation  

  • 10:48

    when you get an infection you fight it off but you  don't get rid of it a hundred percent just like 99  

  • 10:55

    and you still have some pathogens that go  high in the corners they're just waiting for  

  • 11:01

    an opportunity when you get a little bit stressed  and your immune system goes down now they pop up  

  • 11:07

    and now you have infections that come and go come  and go and it seems like you just never quite  

  • 11:13

    get rid of them like Lyme's disease  and Epstein-Barr and things like that  

  • 11:17

    and also old chronic injuries where you  injure something and there's a little residual  

  • 11:24

    inflammation you don't quite get the full range  of motion and the strength back in that body part  

  • 11:30

    and of course you could have a combination of all  of these so you could have an old chronic injury  

  • 11:36

    that's made worse by a low-grade inflammation from  food habits but basically all disease that we're  

  • 11:45

    talking about is a result of inflammation that  is not resolved and when i say disease i'm not  

  • 11:52

    talking about a cut on the finger your body heals  that that's just part of what the body can do  

  • 11:59

    if you get a cold or you get a covet infection  or the flu when you recover your body has just  

  • 12:06

    done what it's supposed to do that wasn't really  a disease disease is when a trauma happens when a  

  • 12:13

    challenge happens and it lingers and your body  can't quite get rid of it that's disease and  

  • 12:19

    virtually all of that is non-resolved inflammation  so the first foods mentioned here are bad for you  

  • 12:27

    if you're sensitive to them people ask me are  is dairy bad are lectins bad not for everybody  

  • 12:34

    they're bad for you if you react to them because  then they cause inflammation some more foods that  

  • 12:40

    affect a lot of people they're very very common  allergens are soy corn wheat gluten and grains so  

  • 12:49

    we're not just talking the wheat with the gluten  we're talking rice and barley and rye and oats and  

  • 12:57

    so forth because they affect people in different  ways wheat is probably the worst especially modern  

  • 13:03

    wheat but a lot of people are sensitive to grains  and they cause immune reactions but just like corn  

  • 13:12

    they're also a grain they're high in starch and  sugar so they will also affect insulin resistance  

  • 13:19

    number five on the list is alcohol and alcohol you  don't really have an immune reaction to it per se  

  • 13:27

    but it does absolutely affect insulin resistance  both because in many ways alcohol acts as a sugar  

  • 13:34

    but also because alcohol is a tremendous burden  on the liver so together with fructose alcohol is  

  • 13:42

    the factor that mostly creates a fatty liver and  promotes insulin resistance and then of course  

  • 13:49

    alcohol is also a form of toxin it will create  oxidative stress and reactive oxygen species  

  • 13:57

    number four is sugar sugar of course is 50  fructose so that's almost as bad as alcohol  

  • 14:04

    on the liver then the glucose triggers insulin  that promotes insulin resistance and of course  

  • 14:12

    we also have a tremendous amount of toxic effects  and reactive oxygen species the glucose can  

  • 14:20

    destroy blood vessels it leaks out into tissues  and causing swelling so we can get a lot of tissue  

  • 14:28

    trauma also from sugar number three on the list  is seed oil and now we're getting into the really  

  • 14:35

    really bad stuff when it comes to inflammation  because first of all you can't have an allergic  

  • 14:42

    reaction to it because they're made from things  that are very common allergens like corn and soy  

  • 14:48

    but then we get into the things that are  universally bad that these seed oils they promote  

  • 14:54

    insulin resistance even though they don't trigger  insulin per se they fit into insulin receptors and  

  • 15:02

    kind of change the balance of that whole system  but maybe the worst part about the seed oils is  

  • 15:09

    that they are so harshly processed they are super  heated they are produced under high pressure  

  • 15:18

    and in order to get almost 100 of the fat  out of those seeds and beans and grains  

  • 15:26

    like corn is a grain then they use solvents  because you can't just squeeze and get oil  

  • 15:34

    out of corn you have to use solvents and then  with all this harsh processing these oils get  

  • 15:40

    very very toxic and very very highly oxidized they  taste terrible so now they have to bleach them  

  • 15:48

    and deodorize them and de-gum them and clean them  up in all sorts of ways so that you could even  

  • 15:55

    tolerate the stuff but all of these damaged  molecules all that oxidative stress is still  

  • 16:02

    in the oil and you're introducing that into your  body and this is probably the biggest reason  

  • 16:08

    why seed oils are so bad for you but as if all  that wasn't bad enough sea dogs are even going to  

  • 16:15

    check that last box because it's extremely high in  omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids and that shifts the  

  • 16:24

    metabolic pathways the inflammatory pathways in  the body so we're promoting the pro-inflammatory  

  • 16:32

    from that perspective as well and number two on  the list is trans fats so what they do now that's  

  • 16:40

    how they made margarine that's how they make  frying oils that will be more tolerant to heat  

  • 16:47

    is they start off with the seed oil but then  they mess with it even more now they change the  

  • 16:53

    molecule further on purpose they hydrogenate it  they saturate it so again all of the factors that  

  • 17:01

    relate to seed oil are now true for trans fats  as well but in addition to that we've changed the  

  • 17:07

    molecule further so now it does additional damage  to your cell membranes and to the communication in  

  • 17:14

    the body and now you're wondering what's going  to top the list how can you get any worse than  

  • 17:20

    checking all the boxes and then messing further  with it as trans fats well the answer is by  

  • 17:28

    combining virtually everything on the board and  it's called fast food because fast food is high in  

  • 17:36

    grains it's high in corn and soy it's very often  has lectins often dairy and then to top it off  

  • 17:44

    virtually all of that food even if it's not fried  they still use these seed oils and if it's fried  

  • 17:51

    that makes it even worse and of course they're  very high in sugar alcohol is basically the only  

  • 17:57

    thing that you don't routinely find in fast food  so we're checking all the boxes combining most of  

  • 18:05

    the worst of the entire board here. If you enjoyed  this video you're going to love that one, and if  

  • 18:11

    you truly want to master health by understanding  how the body really works make sure you subscribe,  

  • 18:16

    hit that bell, and turn on all the notifications  so you never miss a life-saving video

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The example sentences of LECTINS in videos (2 in total of 5)

so adverb what wh-pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present lectins noun, plural and coordinating conjunction oxalates noun, plural well adverb they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present plant noun, singular or mass defenses noun, plural lectins noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present compounds noun, plural produced verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction
grain noun, singular or mass has verb, 3rd person singular present also adverb been verb, past participle shown verb, past participle to to be verb, base form extremely adverb high adjective in preposition or subordinating conjunction things noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction phytic proper noun, singular acid noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction lectins noun, plural as preposition or subordinating conjunction well adverb

Definition and meaning of LECTINS

What does "lectins mean?"

/ˈlektən/

noun
any of class of proteins which bind specifically to certain sugars and so cause agglutination of particular cell types.
other
Any of several plant glycoproteins that act like specific antibodies but are not antibodies in that they are not evoked by an antigenic stimulus.