Apr 7, 2025 9:29:31 AM

The Food-Pain Connection

The Food-Pain Connection - featured image

 

Pain, especially chronic can often be a trigger that motivates us to seek out advice
or support.
  Various physical therapies like those offered at BodiWorks can be a great
way to help strengthen areas of the body to help manage and reduce pain.
However, when it comes to managing chronic pain there’s an important piece that
when combined with exercise therapy, can make a big difference on the quality of
life and pain experienced-that piece is your diet!

Part 1(of 2)-How Food Choices Impact Pain

Understanding Inflammation
Inflammation is a term that is used to describe your body’s response to injury or
illness.  Let’s explore physical injury as an example, since many people are more
familiar with how the immune system responds those. For instance, say
you sprain your knee; it would become red, swollen, warm and painful, the cardinal
signs of inflammation. This is the body’s natural immune response, helping to heal
from injury and infection, so a bit of inflammation is natural and a good thing!Woman with a knee injury - isolated over a white background

This inflammatory response has a purpose though: to control the foreign invader or
damaging agent (which can be the food you’re eating if it doesn’t agree with you!).

As a result of this response, some of the healthy cells and tissues surrounding the
area are damaged.
The key piece in the inflammatory response is that it is ended before it damages too
many healthy cells.

Inflammation and the Digestive Tract
The same inflammatory response that also occurs systemically (as above example), is rooted within your digestive tract!  Often ignored or unfelt by most.
The inflammatory response is often ongoing since foods that are causing the
inflammation are eaten regularly. This means what you choose to eat at every meal
influences your immune system response and its ability to function optimally and
keep you safe!
Reducing inflammation within the digestive tract is so
important to your overall health and how you feel day to day because this is where 70% of your immune
system lies!  This is called the 'innate immune system'.Digital blue human with highlighted digestive system on blue background

If this inflammatory response within the digestive tract becomes chronic, the
immune system is constantly being stimulated and inflammation levels can increase
and travel throughout the body, contributing to worse inflammation in the areas of
your body that are already experiencing or are prone to pain like your back, knee or
shoulder.  Think of having regular pains and why you have them?
This inflammatory response can feel invisible to many of us because it may not feel
the same way as a sprain or injury would which means over time chronic

inflammation can continue creeping up until the levels are really high and the
symptoms become severe.

Chronic inflammation left unaddressed can also lead to the development of various
disease including: cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease,
autoimmune disorders (RhA, Lupus etc) so it’s best to make changes to your diet and lifestyle sooner than later to reduce risk of disease development.

How to tell if you have chronic inflammation

Everyone will have some level of inflammation in their body from time to time. It’s
the chronic, body wide inflammation that you want to focus on reducing overall
levels which will impact your overall future health or if you currently have an
inflammatory disease positive lifestyle and dietary changes can improve your
overall quality of life and reduce symptom severity.


Factors that may lead to chronic inflammation include:
  • Persistent infection:   this includes underlying bacterial, fungal, viral infections
  • Chronic stress: stress isn’t just mental it can be a result of various emotional, mental, physical, psychological factors
  • Obesity & being overweight: increased fat tissues promote inflammation and influenced by diet & exercise.
  • Food sensitivities or allergies: if body wide symptoms are experienced after eating a certain food, it’s an indicator you may be sensitive to that food and should avoid it or seek out professional help. Symptoms include bloating, heartburn, migraine/headache, fatigue, diarrhea, rashes and more)
  • Inhalant allergies: if you’re exposed to something in the air and experience a runny nose, itchy/stuffy nose, sneezing, watery eyes this may be an indicator that you’re sensitive to something in the air in your environment
  • Autoimmune diseases: conditions that end in “itis” or diagnosed as autoimmune including Colitis, arthritis, vasculitis, asthma, lupus etc.
  • Insulin resistance & diabetes: too much sugar in the blood stream (as a result of diet or chronic high stress) over time can disrupt insulin signaling and contribute to diabetes and insulin resistance.
  • Leaky gut syndrome: a condition where the intestinal tract becomes permeable allowing toxins, food particles, pathogens into the blood stream, resulting in an inflammatory response. Contributing factors to developing leaky gut include pathogenic bacterial/fungal overgrowth, stress, consumption of processed foods, alcohol, caffeine, exposure to toxins, overuse of NSAIDs, antacids, steroids, antibiotics, gluten, aspartame
  • Environmental toxin exposure:   synthetic chemicals interfere with the way your endocrine system works resulting in hormone imbalances and are associated with increase in cancer, fertility population decline. Common environmental toxins include: car exhaust, dry cleaning chemicals, meat from hormone, grain fed animals, pesticides/herbicides sprayed on plant foods, plastic, fire retardant, cosmetics, solvents and adhesives. It’s best to avoid these and swap for better alternatives.
  • Diet rich in pro-inflammatory foods: this includes foods that contribute to leaky gut, blood sugar imbalances and nutrient deficiencies. Foods include sugar, alcohol, processed & packaged foods, processed meats, inflammatory oils and gluten, dairy, corn and soy for many people. 
    It can be very challenging on your own...Female hand emerging from crumpled paper pile holding help sign
    If you would like help determining which of the above factors may be contributing to your symptoms or illness, you can [book a consult] with our holistic nutritionist who can support you with an easy to implement action plan to reduce your overall inflammatory load and customize dietary suggestion for your unique body.
    Inflammations impact overall pains!

    We’ll be discussing steps you can take to reduce inflammation on our next blog stay tuned!

 

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