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Keeping Your Liver Healthy

by | Last updated: Jan 23, 2023 | Gut Health | 4 comments

Your liver is one of the most hard-working organs in your body. The liver is responsible for detoxifying everything you put into your bodies as well as packaging up your used up hormones for disposal by the colon. On top of detox detail, your liver produces cholesterol which acts as building blocks for cell membranes and steroid hormones. And when you consume more carbohydrate calories than you can expend, your liver repackages the sugar molecules as triglycerides (triple glucose) to be stored in your body fat.

I like to “clean house” twice a year – after the holidays and around midsummer.

And once a week, we have a cleansing meal of veggies. My husband calls it Liver Cleanse Sundays (the farmers market is open Sunday mornings where we buy the organic veggies that we don’t grow). In the winter I roast root vegetables in olive oil or grill them in the summer. I used to steam the vegetables, but found that roasting in olive oil to preserve more of the nutrients plus the veggies taste great!

Here’s a Liver Cleanse diet I recommend:

For three to seven days, follow the liver cleanse diet to rest liver and gallbladder.

Upon Awakening:
drink 1 cup of lemon tea (2tbl fresh lemon juice in hot water) every morning to stimulate bowel movement then eat ½ cup of fibrous fruit (apple, pear, berries, melon, not citrus)
15 minutes later consume whole grain hot cereal, unsweetened, no diary

For lunch and dinner:
consume 2 -4 cups of steamed or roasted vegetables
roots (beets, garlic, onions, turnips, carrots, yams)
stalks (broccoli, cauliflower, brussel sprouts, artichoke, asparagus, leeks, fennel)
leaves (greens like collard, kale, mustard, beet, chard may be sautéed only in olive oil)

Drink olive oil and lemon juice 1 tablespoon each nightly to flush bile ducts

During the cleanse:
no saturated fats and no protein foods, absolutely no caffeine, no alcohol, no sugar, no processed food.

What about Gallstones?

Gallstones are formed by bile salt buildup in the gallbladder. When they pass, they cause tremendous pain. Conventional medicine recommends surgery to remove the offending gallbladder, but the gallbladder performs a vital function in storing bile produced by the liver and releasing it when needed into the small intestine to emulsify fats for digestion. Once the gallbladder is removed, the liver must take on its function. Since the liver has so many other vital functions to perform (detoxification, cholesterol formation, amino acid processing, anticoagulation, and filtering of the blood) adding gallbladder duty can tax the liver leading to toxicity, maldigestion, and malabsorption.

Here’s a great Gallbladder Flush:

Mix the juice of 1 orange & 1 lemon
With ¼ tsp cayenne pepper, 1 tsp minced garlic
And ¼ cup olive oil
Drink it up!

Some of my patients use the combination as a marinade for chicken and fish, which is great, but you have to drink it all at once to flush the gallbladder. A daily dose of gallbladder flush while you are on the liver cleanse diet can be helpful to dissolve bile sediment in the gallbladder. If you have severe abdominal pain, you may be passing gallstones and an ultrasound of the gallbladder may be needed.

If you have any questions about how to keep your liver healthy, you can join us in our Hormone Support Group. You can get access through our free Hormone Reboot Training. It is all about helping you understand how your hypothalamus works to affect your hormones and so much more.

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About the Author - Deborah Maragopoulos FNP

Known as the Hormone Queen®️, I’ve made it my mission to help everyone – no matter their age – balance their hormones, and live the energy and joy their DNA and true destiny desires. See more about me my story here…

     

4 Comments

  1. Elicia

    Do you recommend still doing this liver detox diet if your gallbladder has been removed?

    Reply
  2. Jeanne

    Please send the link again for the insulin resistant diet plan.

    Reply

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