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Eating tomatoes do flare up gout pain

WELLINGTON: Researchers from University of Otago have for the first time found a biological basis for the belief that eating tomatoes can cause gout to flare up in some people
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An organic vegetable farmer collects tomatoes in his greenhouse in Perenchies, on August 18, 2015. AFP Photo
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Wellington, August 20

Researchers from University of Otago have for the first time found a biological basis for the belief that eating tomatoes can cause gout to flare up in some people.

Gout is a painful and debilitating form of arthritis that affects approximately three times more men than women.

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Once a person has gout — higher levels of uric acid in the blood — eating certain foods can cause their gout to flare up in a painful attack.

"We found that the positive association between eating tomato and uric acid levels was on a par with that of consuming seafood, red meat, alcohol or sugar-sweetened drinks," explained PhD student Tanya Flynn and lead researchers.

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Researchers noticed that a large number of gout sufferers believe tomatoes to be one of these gout trigger foods.

The researchers surveyed 2,051 New Zealanders with clinically-verified gout. Of these people 71 percent reported having one or more food triggers. Tomatoes were listed as a trigger in 20 percent of these cases.

Tomatoes were found to be the fourth most commonly mentioned trigger, after seafood, alcohol and red meat.

After determining tomatoes are a commonly cited trigger food, the authors analysed data from 12,720 male and female members of three long-running US health studies.

The results showed that tomato consumption is linked to higher levels of uric acid in the blood.

Tomatoes can alter uric acid levels to a degree comparable to other commonly accepted gout trigger foods.

Flynn emphasised that the most important thing that people with gout can do to prevent attacks is take a uric acid-lowering drug.

"Avoiding tomatoes may be helpful for people who have experienced a gout attack after eating them, but with proper treatment this doesn't have to be a long-term avoidance," she noted in a paper published in the international journal BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders. — IANS

 

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