Benefits of Liver Detox
If your liver is healthy you should:
- Feel energetic
- Have clear eyes with no dark circles under your eyes
- Have clear skin
- Have a normal metabolism and healthy body weight for your frame
- Have normal, healthy cholesterol levels in your blood
- Not have any coating on your tongue
- Have a healthy immune system
- Not bruise easily
Conversely, if your liver is not functioning well you could feel:
- Fatigued
- Generally unwell
- Nauseated at random times
- Itchy, especially worse at night
- Not hungry
- Bloated
- Swollen especially our ankles
- Abdominal pain under the right side of the rib cage
Often times in order to improve our liver health we ideally need to undertake a liver detoxification. But do these detoxes actually work and what does the word ‘detox’ mean?
Detox often refers to ‘detoxifying’ the liver by removing any build-up of toxins or substances that can overload it, such as environmental toxins, alcohol, and other substances found in our lifestyles.
The issue with relying on one particular product, supplement or strict diet to detoxify the liver is that this creates a reliance on the particular liver cleanse to be able to return your liver to good health. Another problem with relying on a strict diet is that it is often not sustainable. As soon as you stop following the diet and return to your usual lifestyle you will find the same problems occurring with your liver.
So to put the record straight first, I’d need to say that there is no one ‘detox diet’ that works for everyone. In fact, oftentimes the best approach is not extreme but rather involves making some small changes to our overall diet and lifestyle to keep your liver healthy and help your liver to do its job.
One of the key roles of the liver is to detoxify harmful or chemical substances from the body such as environmental chemicals, pesticides, drugs, alcohol, and other toxins. The liver also has key roles in food breakdown, storage, and metabolism.
The key then to detoxifying or cleansing the liver, so to speak, is to reduce exposure of the liver to risk factors or substances which can overload this vital organ. The good news too is that the liver is remarkably efficient at renewing itself so when given a chance the cells in the liver can regenerate and work as they should.