Strawberries are more than scrumptious. Researchers have found that eating just a few of them each day may improve gut health and relieve inflammation associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
IBD is a painful condition that affects at least 3 million adults in the U.S., causing fatigue, diarrhea and other symptoms. IBD includes Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis and is also a risk factor for colorectal cancer.
Researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst discovered that adding less than a cupful of strawberries to your diet every day could potentially reverse the bothersome effects of IBD.
“The sedentary lifestyle and dietary habits of many people in this country — high-sugar, high-animal-fat, but low-fiber diets — may promote colonic inflammation and increase the risk of IBD,” says lead study author Hang Xiao, Ph.D., with the university’s Department of Food Science, in a release by the American Chemical Society.
Study authors say fruits and vegetables are known to lower the risk of IBD. Because of their popularity, strawberries have already been the focus of limited studies.
“But when you only test the purified compounds and extracts,” says study coauthor Yanhui Han, a Ph.D. student at the university, “you miss out on a lot of other important components in the berries, such as dietary fiber, as well as phenolic compounds bound to the fibers, that can’t be extracted by solvents.”
One of the benefits of studying whole berries, he says, is that this is the way fruits are usually consumed.
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uh honey....to the grocery store for strawberries - PRONTO!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDelete1 DAY UNTIL TGIF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
They were using strawberry powder, not whole strawberries.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure those little seeds do your colon well.
ReplyDeleteWhat's an easy way to get the strawberries up in there
ReplyDeleteNo favor unless locally grow in early year ! Come on now !
ReplyDelete