This section is from the book "Encyclopedia Of Diet. A Treatise on the Food Question", by Eugene Christian. Also available from Amazon: Encyclopedia of Diet.
The primary cause of gout is faulty metabolism; behind this, however, are other causes. The metabolic process is rendered faulty or incomplete by the over-ingestion of heavy starchy foods. This excess of starch, which the body is not able to appropriate or use, becomes easily crystallized by the excess of acid which is always present when too much starch is consumed. The crystallizing process is often augmented by the eating of fruit-acids such as grapefruit, lemons, oranges, pineapples, and other citrus-fruits. In addition to these causes the uric acid residual in meat and in the yolk of eggs is an important factor in the causation of gouty or rheumatic conditions.
The earlier symptoms of gout are nervousness, irritability, and sometimes insomnia. In the second stages, shooting pains through the fingers and toes are experienced, and later a swelling or a slight inflammation of these terminals. After this acute condition has existed for perhaps a year, the pain may cease and the joints may begin to swell. Knots are also often formed, especially upon the hands, and sometimes upon the feet.
The remedy for these disorders may be said to lie wholly within the realm of diet, exercise and oxidation, supplemented by a liberal superficial application of heat, such as Turkish and electric light baths.
In all cases of rheumatism and gout, the following should be omitted:
All acid fruits, such as,
Grapefruit
Lemons
Limes
Oranges Pineapples
Eggs
Red meats
Starchy foods (Carbohydrate class)
The diet should be confined to -
Fish and white meat of fowl Fresh vegetables Nuts Salads
Sweet and non-acid fruits (See Lesson VIII (Foods Of Vegetable Origin), p. 313)
How to prevent the active principle of rheumatism
If the diet were confined wholly to green salads, fresh vegetables and white meats, it would remove the causes of these disorders, and inasmuch as Nature is always striving to create perfect health, the cause being removed, she would begin at once to apply the remedy, by removing the congested mass of undissolved calcareous matter, atom by atom. Thus the active principle of rheumatism would disappear.
Natural perspiration vs. artificial in the treatment of rheumatism.
Where the joints have become enlarged, the best that can be done is to render them flexible. It is almost impossible to take out of them all the accumulated deposits, and to reduce them to their natural or normal size.
In addition to the above-named restrictive diet, the patient should be given sufficient exercise each day to generate enough heat to cause perspiration. It is well to remember that one drop of perspiration forced out of the body by activity is worth a dozen drawn out of the body by the application of superficial heat, such as the Turkish bath. Natural perspiration should come from exercise (muscular friction). This is the method designed by Nature to throw poisonous substances to the surface in the form of sweat, thereby demolishing the old cell and making a place for the new. The Turkish bath and massage is the lazy man's method of cheating
Nature, and cannot possibly bring as good results as can obedience to the natural law of motion.
All acid fruits -
Grapefruit
Lemons
Limes
Oranges
Pineapples Coffee Eggs
Liquors, wines, beers Red meat Starchy foods Tobacco
Buttermilk
Fish and white meat of fowl
Fresh vegetables
Nuts
Potatoes
Salads (green)
Sweet fruits (non-acid)
Eat rather sparingly, especially at the evening meal.
 
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