Rheumatoid Arthritis
Monica Aggarwal is a cardiologist at the University of Florida medical center who developed rheumatoid arthritis five years ago. At the time she was in her 30's, had just had three children in rapid succession, was working hard, sleeping little and stressed. An aggressive drug regime improved her arthritis but she was still very sick from all her medications. Although she was a lifelong vegetarian she realized lifestyle including diet was playing a role in her disease. She started yoga, got more sleep and gave up dairy which allowed her to wean her drugs. Now she is again an active cardiologist and does triathlons.
Western lifestyle has lead to an explosion of heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer's and auto-immune conditions like rheumatoid arthritis. A genetic predisposition to disease is triggered by lifestyle choices. Diet affects the gut microbiome with resultant bowel wall damage and the development of "leaky gut." Toxic bowel contents reach the bloodstream, cause chronic inflammation and disease is triggered, the variety depending on genetic predisposition.
Aggarwal is changing the paradigm at the University of Florida: all cardiac patients get a plant based menu; the staff cafeteria offers many healthy whole plant foods; medical students, residents and fellows all receive training in nutrition science and the importance of lifestyle in chronic disease.
Aggarwal's rheumatoid factor, a marker for her disease, remains very high but she has been symptom free off all medications for four years.
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