A tasty way to cut your toxic burden in half

iStock_000017273869_FullBy Fred Pescatore, M.D.

These days, the word “detox” is on the tip of everyone’s tongue. With all of the frightening reports about the dangers of environmental toxins, it’s no wonder. And that’s why I’ve devoted a significant amount of time to dispelling some popular myths surrounding the subject.

Like the idea that an effective detox regimen has to be complicated. (Honestly, it doesn’t.)

There are a number of supplements that can help your body clear out toxins.  But on a day-to-day basis, the food you eat puts just as big of a dent in your toxic burden as the food you don’t eat.

In fact, a recent study shows that you can disarm some of the dangers of air pollution just by filling up on broccoli sprouts.

To come to this conclusion, researchers prepared a special broccoli sprout beverage, standardized for the active phytochemicals glucoraphanin and sulforaphane. Sulforaphane might sound familiar. It’s a powerful anti-cancer agent. And glucoraphanin is the precursor to sulforaphane.

So the fact that just half a cup of this concoction boosted subjects’ ability to detox deadly airborne carcinogens like benzene shouldn’t come as a surprise.

In fact, blood and urine samples showed that benzene excretion shot up by 61 percent on the very first day the study participants drank the broccoli sprout beverage. And the effect lasted for the whole 12-week trial.

We’ve been relatively successful at reducing air pollution, on the whole. (In fact, the air in New York City where I live is cleaner now than it was when I was a child.) But unfortunately it’s still a terribly hazardous part of most Americans’ lives. It’s responsible for killing millions of people every year.

So continuing to clean up the environment is obviously the most necessary step to take. But if you’re going to avoid toxic fallout, you also need to find some ways to mop up and clear out the unavoidable leftovers from your body. And a simple solution like this broccoli sprout beverage is a great option.

I’m going to go out on a limb here, though, and take a guess that the idea of a broccoli smoothie doesn’t sound all that appealing to you. (I can just imagine the looks on my patients’ faces if I told them to toss some broccoli sprouts into the blender and drink up.)

But that doesn’t mean you can’t achieve a similar effect by filling up on plain old cruciferous vegetables—like Brussels sprouts, cabbage, kale, cauliflower, and of course, broccoli. You just need to make sure you’re preparing them right.

The compounds glucoraphanin and sulforaphane are responsible for most of cruciferous vegetables’ anti-cancer powers. There’s a catch, though.

You also need plenty of an enzyme called myrosinase in order to activate these disease-fighting benefits. Broccoli that’s organic, fresh, and raw contains the most myrosinase. But broccoli that’s been pre-packaged and overcooked may not contain any.

So I recommend getting your produce—cruciferous vegetables included—at the local Farmer’s Market. (Or better yet, grow them in your own garden.) And be sure to chop them up about five minutes before you plan to eat them. (This activates myrosinase, which boosts sulforaphane content.)

And if you’re going to cook your veggies, don’t go overboard. A light steam on the stovetop (never the microwave) for five minutes or so—just enough to make your broccoli or cauliflower slightly tender—is best.

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Dr. Fred Pescatore is the author of the New York Times best—selling book, The Hamptons Diet and the No. 1 best—selling children’s health book, Feed Your Kids Well, amongst others. He is the President of the International and American Associations of Clinical Nutritionists, a member of the American College for the Advancement of Medicine, and belongs to many other professional organizations. Earlier in his career, Dr. Pescatore served as the Associate Medical Director of The Atkins Center for Complementary Medicine, working as the right—hand—man to the late, great Dr. Robert C. Atkins. Today he sees patients at his own practice in Manhattan and writes a monthly newsletter called Logical Health Alternatives, as well as a free e—letter called The Reality Health Check.

SOURCE:

“Rapid and Sustainable Detoxication of Airborne Pollutants by Broccoli Sprout Beverage: Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial in China.” Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2014 Jun 9.