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- When we eat a meal, carbohydrates get broken down into glucose.
- Glucose mixes with oxygen inside the body and produces carbon dioxide, water and energy.
- But energy in this form is not of much use to the human body – the body has to convert it into something that its system can use.
- The format of energy that the body understands is ATP (short for Adenosine TriPhosphate).
- There are small bags inside the human cell called Mitochondria, which exchange random energy for ATP but every time they convert, they produce ‘free radicals’.
- Now all matter, including a free radical, is made up of atoms and atoms have even smaller particles in them: neutrons, protons & electrons.
- Electrons in stable things usually occur in pairs of 2, 4, 6 etc. and elements that don’t have electrons in pairs are unstable and highly reactive.
- And in free radicals electrons are unpaired, so it snatches the electron from another molecule inside the body to gain stability.
- It is like that child in a playroom who doesn’t have a toy and he snatches it from the next guy, who then snatches the toy off the next guy creating a chain reaction.
- This chain reaction, inside the body creates a toxic environment and is called oxidative stress (from oxidation, which means loss of electrons).
- Oxidative stress, if not controlled, can be very harmful and many diseases such as cancer, arthritis, diabetes etc. are attributed to it.
- Fortunately, our cells also have anti-oxidants i.e. molecules which have the ‘godly’ ability to donate electrons but still remain stable.
- But these anti-oxidants are enough only to manage free radicals that get generated through natural body processes.
- However, free radicals can also be created in excess amounts by exposure to environmental stresses like smoking, sun exposure, pollution, pesticides, alcohol and fried food.
- There are some foods which are considered rich in antioxidants and because we can’t always escape external stress, these foods can help us fight extra free radicals and improve health.
- These foods include raw fruits & vegetables, almonds, sunflower seeds, virgin olive oils etc.; exercising (in the long-term) also generates antioxidants