Is this proof food can be better at fighting disease?
When youâre diagnosed with a chronic condition, treatment is usually medical â" drugs or surgery, for instance. Youâll probably be advised to improve your diet, but often with little, or no, advice on how to do it.
But, increasingly, evidence suggests that diet should be more than just a part of the treatment package, it should be seen as integral â" sometimes working as well as, if not better than, medication.
For instance, a landmark seven-year study last year suggested a Mediterranean-style diet may be better at treating heart disease than statins.
Increasingly, evidence suggests that diet can work as well as, if not better than, medication
The research, led by Professor Giovanni de Gaetano of the Neuromed Institute in Pozzilli, Italy, found that heart patients whose diet was rich in vegetables, nuts, fish and olive oil, cut their risk of a premature death by 37 per cent (compared with 18 per cent for statins, according to previous research).
âOf course, doctors will continue to prescribe drugs such as statins but we canât look at drugs as the only way of [saving lives],â said Professor de Gaetano.
Another study, published in the Lancet in 2014, compared diet and exercise with the drug metformin for diabetes and found lifestyle was more effective in preventing development of diabetes in those at high risk.
Yet many doctors seem unaware of dietâs posit ive effect. âThere is little or no training at medical school or postgraduate level on the impact of nutrition on health,â says Dr Aseem Malhotra, a consultant cardiologist at the Lister Hospital in Stevenage. He was one of a group of doctors who recently called on the Medical Schools Council and the General Medical Council to address this.
âDoctors need to know about the impact evidence-based lifestyle interventions such as diet can have on chronic conditions,â he says. âThe healing power of diet has been underplayed and, unlike drugs, doesnât have side-effects. If it was a pill, any company that manufactured it would make billions because the effect is so good.â
Itâs not simply that switching to healthier eating and losing weight makes the difference â" but it seems specific foods may also have a particular âhealingâ effect in certain conditions.
Here, we speak t o five patients who say swapping to disease-specific diets has transformed their health.
NOTE: Speak to your doctor before changing your diet and do not stop taking your medication without medical advice.
MY FAMILY NO LONGER LIVE IN FEAR OF MY MS
THE DIET: The Overcoming MS (OMS) programme
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a serious neurological condition characterised by symptoms such as problems with vision and mobility. Treatment usually involves managing symptoms and trying to slow its progression.Â
This diet was developed by Professor George Jelinek, a neuroepidemiologist at the University of Melbourne, following his own MS diagnosis. He is symptom fre e, 18 years after being diagnosed.
It involves giving up meat, dairy and other foods high in saturated fats in favour of a plant-based wholefood diet with seafood and 20 to 30ml a day of omega-3s, ideally from flaxseed oil plus vitamin D (and up to 15 minutes of sunlight five times a week).
Lifestyle changes include exercise and meditation to reduce stress. More than a dozen papers, including one in the Journal of Nutritional Neuroscience in 2015, have found the programme can improve physical and mental health. But Dr Eli Silber, a consultant at Kingâs College Hospital, London, says: âThere havenât been properly controlled large-scale trials to support it.â
THE PATIENT: Nicole Green, 45, a hospital manager, lives in Ipswich with her husband, Dave, 50, a dock worker and their four children, aged 13 to 25.
Iâv e been on a roller-coaster with my health since being diagnosed nine years ago. I have relapsing and remitting MS â" new symptoms appear or old ones return for anything from a few hours to days. The diagnosis was a terrible shock, especially as my children were young. As well as the unpredictability, the worst thing was being told there was no cure.
Nicole Green, 45, a hospital manager from Ipswich, suffers from relapsing and remitting MS
Iâd have a relapse about once a year when my eyesight would be really poor and my mobility so bad Iâd be confined to a wheelchair. I could be off work for months.
Even when I went into remission, the cumulative damage meant the vision in my left eye has been permanently affected â" itâs like looking out of an opaque window.
Iâd read about diet and MS, but as a vegetarian for ten years, how much healthier could I be? But after a massive relapse two-and-a-half years ago, where for a few months my vision went almost completely in both eyes and I was so weak I couldnât even lift a kettle, I was desperate.
Thatâs when I heard about Professor Jelinekâs diet. I didnât feel I needed to tell my own doctor: it wasnâ t as if I was giving up my medication.
I began eating fish â" a struggle as a vegetarian. It was also really hard giving up cheese. But the difference has been massive: within weeks I was able to do Pilates and Aqua Fit regularly. I now do five exercise classes a week because I have the energy and mobility.
I was thrilled when I had a brain scan last September and it showed no new disease compared to previous scans.
My doctors suggest this could be the medication, but thereâs no doubt in my mind itâs this diet thatâs changed my life: I havenât had a relapse since.
My family no longer lives with the fear of the next relapse and wondering what damage itâll cause: we can have a normal life again.
overcomingms.org/recovery-program/
I DITCHED GARLIC AND MELON to BEAT IBS
THE DIET: Low FODMAP
Irritable Bowel Syndrome affects an estimated nine million Britons, with symptoms such as bloating, abdominal pain and diarrhoea or constipation. Patients are typically offered antispasmodic drugs and told to eat more fibre.
The low FODMAP diet was devised in 2012 by scientists at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, who found that IBS symptoms could be triggered by sugars known as fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols (or FODMAPs).
These are found in foods such as wheat products, garlic, dairy, and fruit and vegetables including onions, leeks, cabbage, celery, apples, pears, peaches and plums.Th ese sugars are poorly absorbed in some peopleâs small intestine and ferment, triggering symptoms.
âLow FODMAP is becoming a standard diet for people with IBS, especially those with bloating as a predominant symptom,â explains Dr Steven Mann, a consultant gastroenterologist at the Royal Free Hospital, London.
âIt has an effect on other symptoms, but less so. Itâs restrictive, so the usual advice is to do it for six to eight weeks and then gradually reintroduce foods to see which have an effect. Most people with IBS have multiple intolerances: this finds specific triggers. I recommend the diet to my patients.â
THE PATIENT: Hannah Crossland-Scott, 29, an administrator, lives in Camberley, Surrey with husband, Mitchell, 27, who works in telecommunications, and sons Jesse, three and Leo, 18 months.
Hannah Crossland-Scott, 29, an administrator from Camberley, Surrey, has suffered from IBS since she was 14
Iâve suffered with terrible IBS since I was 14 â" it would rule my life. A flare-up could happen up to twice a week, causing stomach ache and terrible bloating. Iâd have to cancel plans, to be near a loo. I was prescribed different antispasmodic medication which didnât really help. I was also told by one doctor to look at my lifestyle â" but I already had a healthy, balanced diet and exercised.
Then about two years ago another GP, who had IBS, told me about the low FODMAP diet.
The diet was terribly restrictive, but it was astonishing â" within a week Iâd noticed improvements and now I rarely get a flare-up if I avoid my trigger foods, such as dairy, onions, garlic and melon, or anything with gluten. If I do get a flare-up, say on e a month, itâs usually because Iâm stressed.
I now have the confidence to go out and make plans when I want.
CHICKPEAS CUT MY CHOLESTEROLÂ
THE DIET: Eat Your Way to Lower Cholesterol
This was developed by nutritionist Ian Marber and Dr Laura Corr, a cardiologist at Guyâs and St Thomasâ NHS Foundation Trust.
The standard advice for high cholesterol is to reduce saturated fat and red meat and follow a Mediterranean diet. The Marber and Corr approach is based on healthy eating but includes daily consumption of six foods that have been shown to lower cholesterol: soya, healthy oil such as olive oil, fibre (bran or pulses), oats, nuts and foods fortified with plant sterols, compounds thought to lower cholesterol by m imicking it and competing with it for absorption into the body from the gut.
The daily doses to be taken are specific: two tablespoons of virgin olive oil, 20 almonds and 30g of soya products.
The authors say all these food groups are backed by scientific evidence. âWe donât have a huge amount of evidence that diets like this will make you live longer â" unlike statins where there is hard evidence that they can reduce heart attack or stroke,â warns Dr Julian Strange, an interventional consultant cardiologist at the Bristol Heart institute.
âBut the diet may help you lower cholesterol. However, it should never be an excuse not to take statins â" rather it should be part of the process.â
THE PATIENT: Bill Rogers, 52, a retired civil servant, lives in West Wycombe with his wife, Helen, 52 and has two children .
About two years ago I went to see my GP as I was having giddy spells. Iâm a fit guy â" using a rowing machine at home for 20 minutes every day and I did a lot of walking â" but blood tests showed my cholesterol was 7.1 (âhealthyâ is below 5).
Bill Rogers, 52, a retired civil servant from West Wycombe, was diagnosed with high cholesterol two yeras ago
The doctor wanted to put me on statins, but I really didnât want to start taking drugs.
My wife found Dr Laura Carr and Ian Marberâs diet and I decided there was no harm in trying it for a few months before deciding what to do next. My GP said I was okay to try it for three months.
It was a bit of an education, eating foods Iâd never tried such as chickpeas, soya and sweet potatoes. I also started doing things like putting olive oil instead of butter in my sandwiches â" which took some getting used to.
But after three months my cholesterol was down to 4.2. My doctor said it must be a fluke, but I continued and a few months later it was still only 4.4.
It did rise aga in last October, to 5.7, but Iâd been on holiday and let myself go a bit. Last month it was 4.6. Iâm thrilled. My doctor says I donât need statins provided my cholesterol stays this way.
MY SEIZURES ARE UNDER CONTROLÂ
THE DIET: The ketogenic diet
This diet, devised in the Twenties by a U.S. doctor, is a high-fat, low-carb approach based on the idea that swapping the bodyâs energy source from carbs to fats can reduce seizures.
The typical ketogenic diet is about ratio, eating 3 to 4g of fat for every 1g of carbohydrate and protein. It includes high-fat foods such as butter, heavy whipping cream, mayonnaise, and oils. Itâs much more restrictive than standard low-carb diets, and much higher in fat and lower in protein.
âThe ketogenic diet has been a proven form of treatment for children who donât respond to epilepsy medication,â explains Dr Manny Bagary, a consultant epileptologist and neuropsychiatrist at Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation.
âIt hasnât traditionally been used by adults since there havenât yet been large enough randomised clinical trials to prove its effectiveness for them, but thereâs no reason why adults whose condition doesnât respond to seizure medication shouldnât try this diet, under the supervision of their doctor.â
THE PATIENT: Kasam Parker, 49, a social care facilitator, lives in Birmingham with his wife, Najma, 47, and their daughters aged 18 and 21.
Kasam Parker, 49, a social care facilitator from Birmingham, has suffered from epilepsy since the age of 23Â
Epilepsy can take over your life as seizures are so unpredictable. Since my first at 23 Iâve had them at work, home and out with the family. I can feel giddy for around 24 hours afterwards. Iâve also broken my shoulder, fractured my nose, had cuts to my face and once hit my head so hard I briefly lost my memory.
Thereâs no pattern, either â" I could have a seizure every week or month. It didnât help that over the years I developed a tolerance to different medications.
It was an awful way to live. Then two years ago, I read online about the ketogenic diet. I felt I had nothing to lose and my doctor said I could do it, provided it was under a dieticianâs supervision.
I divide my carbohydrate â" ar ound 30g a day â" into 5g blocks, a spoonful of cereal at breakfast and then a mouthful of bread or potatoes at lunch or dinner, and I eat lots of eggs and soya milk.
Itâs been difficult, but in two years Iâve had only two seizures â" the last was eight months ago.
I want other people to know you can take control with epilepsy.
TheVoiceForEpilepsy.co.uk
MY BLOOD SUGAR IS BACK TO NORMAL
THE DIET: The Low Carb Programme
The official advice to diabetes patients is to ensure starchy carbohydrates, such as rice and potatoes, feature heavily in every meal and keep fats to a minimum.
The Low Carb Programme, launched in 2 015 by the website diabetes.co.uk, is part of a growing movement to tackle diabetes by cutting back on carbs to control blood sugar levels.
âThis Low Carb Programme has been shown to be effective in the short term with weight reduction and blood glucose control,â says Dr Dushyant Sharma, a consultant diabetologist at the Royal Liverpool Hospital. âBut we donât have enough evidence for how well it could control diabetes in the long term.â
THE PATIENT: Graham Hogben, 66, a retired mental health nurse, lives in Scarborough with his wife Sue, 63. He has one child and four stepchildren.
Graham Hogben, 66, a retired mental health nurse from Scarborough, has type 2 diabetes
I never for a moment thought someone like me would get type 2 diabetes: I was slim, ate healthily and exercised â" and had no obvious symptoms. But eight years ago, I was feeling tired and a blood test confirmed it was diabetes. My GP said it could be down to family history â" my mum and grandmother had type 2.
Medication didnât seem to help and after two years there was talk about putting me on insulin. My wife came across the Low Carbohydrate Programme 18 months ago.
I decided to have a go. I used to eat a lot of bread, potatoes and pasta, but swapped to lots of meat and fish. Iâd snack on green olives or cheese, rather than crisps.
Within a week my blood sugar dropped, from between 14 to 18 mmol/L down to 6 to 8 (normal is 4 to 7).
My latest reading was 5.5 and Iâve also lost 3st. My medication â" Gliclazide â" has been halved and my diabetes nurse, who was sceptical, is astonished.
I didnât realise how sluggish and unwell I felt: now I walk 40 to 50 miles a week and have a new spring in my step. In fact, Iâve never felt better.
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