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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Paleo and Osteoarthritis

    Last Modified: Feb 3, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    If weโ€™re talking about diet and arthritis, the first thing to realize is that โ€œarthritisโ€ isnโ€™t just one problem. Without even going into the different classifications in children, it has several different forms just in adults. A few of the most common are:

    • Rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disease.
    • Gout, a completely different type of inflammatory arthritis that has to do with metabolism of uric acid, the bodyโ€™s primary antioxidant.
    • Osteoarthritis, generally blamed on aging or โ€œwear and tearโ€ from sports or physical work.

    There are also a few other types, like infectious arthritis, but the three above are the most common. Considering that these three types of arthritis have very different causes, the potential ways of addressing them will obviously be different.

    Since rheumatoid arthritis has an autoimmune component, anyone fighting it might be interested in Paleo approaches to autoimmune disease.

    Gout has its own article โ€“ especially if youโ€™ve been avoiding meat for fear of purines, this one might be an interesting read.

    Osteoarthritis is a little different, though, because itโ€™s usually treated as unavoidable. Itโ€™s just something you have to deal with: maybe you pushed it too hard on the soccer field in college, or you worked for 30 years as a carpet ripper and permanently damaged your hands. Take some ibuprofen and put a cold pack on it.

    If thatโ€™s really true, though, then why do people report such dramatic success stories from switching to Paleo? Changing your diet didnโ€™t rewind time and undo those 30 years of carpet ripping, so what gives? Itโ€™s hard to tell for sure, but here are some ideas and suggestions:

    Paleo and Osteoarthritis

    Weight Loss and Mechanical Stress

    One of the most obvious reasons why Paleo might help with osteoarthritis is that weight loss reduces mechanical stress on your joints. More mechanical stress on the joints means more pain from the arthritis.

    Itโ€™s pretty clear in clinical trials that if an arthritis patient is overweight to begin with, losing weight will help reduce pain โ€“ but the problem is that losing weight is extremely hard and keeping it off is even harder. In this study, for example, researchers tried to feed their study subjects (38 patients with arthritis) a special diet to see whether reducing BMI would improve symptoms, but the subjects either couldnโ€™t or wouldnโ€™t follow it.

    Since Paleo is such a painless method of weight loss, it might help arthritis sufferers just by helping them drop some extra pounds.

    Inflammation

    olive oil
    Anti-inflammatory fats like olive oil: a good idea for everyone, but especially arthritis!

    Mechanical stress isnโ€™t the only reason why weight loss can help improve arthritis, though. Thereโ€™s an even more interesting line of research that goes into all the other ways obesity affects arthritis.

    For example, the โ€œmore strain on the jointsโ€ explanation canโ€™t tell us anything about why obesity is a risk factor for arthritis in the fingers, since even a morbidly obese personโ€™s thumb doesnโ€™t weigh that much more than a thin personโ€™s. But obesity is a lot more than just extra fat tissue: it also involves systemic inflammation and usually various metabolic problems as well. It seems likely that the inflammation involved in obesity can independently contribute to arthritis โ€“ which means that the best weight-loss diet for reducing arthritis symptoms would not only be reasonably possible to stick with; it would also be anti-inflammatory.

    This also fits with everything else we know about arthritis as an inflammatory disease. Even in people of completely normal weight, arthritis is still related to inflammation. As this study explains, systemic inflammation can change gene expression and cause arthritic changes in affected joints:

    Inflammation is a major factor associated with the risk of both progression of cartilage loss and signs and symptoms of disease, including joint pain, swelling, and stiffness, indicators of synovitis.

    This could happen in obese people thanks to the inflammation involved in obesity, or in thin people thanks to inflammation from another cause (e.g. autoimmune disease, chronic stress, overexercising, or an overload of Omega-6 PUFA).

    If inflammation is important in the development of arthritis, youโ€™d expect to find that anti-inflammatory interventions improve the symptoms โ€“ and thatโ€™s exactly what happens. Even though most of the research so far has been in rats and test tubes, anti-inflammatory Omega-3 fats and antioxidants are promising as therapies for osteoarthritis.

    Diet and Arthritis: Summing it Up

    If you put the two sections above together, the conclusion is simple: an ideal diet for osteoarthritis would be anti-inflammatory, reasonably possible for a normal human being to stick to, and effective for weight loss. It would probablyโ€ฆ

    • Be low in inflammatory Omega-6 fats (soy, seed oils, and vegetable oil)
    • Be relatively high in anti-inflammatory Omega-3 fats and monounsaturated fat (fish, seafood, and olive oil)
    • Be rich in joint-nourishing nutrients like glucosamine and chondroitin.
    • Be low in refined carbohydrates, but not necessarily extremely low-carb.
    • Be nutritionally complete.
    • Allow for weight loss (if necessary) without constant ravenous hunger or anything else that would make a reasonable person quit the diet after a few weeks of suffering.

    Hey, has anyone heard of a diet like that?

    Managing Pain Without NSAIDS

    Even for someone at a healthy weight on a perfect, anti-inflammatory diet, arthritis can still be painful. Itโ€™s not because youโ€™re doing anything wrong; itโ€™s because you have a serious disease.

    Unfortunately, most peopleโ€™s first choice of pain management is some form of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), like ibuprofen. The problem with this is that ibuprofen is not doing your gut health any favors: in this study, for example, 71% of patients taking NSAIDs showed some sign of damage to the small intestine. Since gut health is so incredibly important for moderating inflammation, damaging your gut in an effort to manage an inflammatory disease like arthritis is a great way to shoot yourself in the foot.

    Just for your reference, hereโ€™s a chart of which over-the-counter painkillers are and arenโ€™t NSAIDs:

    NSAIDsNot NSAIDs
    Aspirin (Bayer)Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin)Naproxen (Aleve)Acetaminophen (Excedrin, Tylenol)

    Moderate exercise has also been shown to reduce pain and symptoms in some trials, and the familiar physical therapy standbys like hot or cold compresses are always worth a try.

    Summing it Up

    Osteoarthritis might be partly caused by previous physical stress (as in athletes), bad genes, or โ€œjust getting old.โ€ But thereโ€™s also an inflammatory component that makes it a prime target for potential diet therapies.

    Itโ€™s important to note that none of this can โ€œcureโ€ arthritis: arthritis has no cure. But what it does have are effective management strategies โ€“ and diet is definitely worth a try.

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