Celery juice is having a moment right now, thanks to social media and experts proclaiming its "superfood" status. Is celery juice all it's cracked up to be?
Move over, kale. Sorry, spirulina. There’s a new green
juice obsession in town — and the vegetable is one you probably eat
every week. Celery juice is getting a lot of attention on social media
and natural health circles as a way to counteract everything from eczema
to liver problems.
Is celery juice really a miracle worker, or just another Jilly Juice "cure" with no solid basis in science?
It’s a little of both.
What are the benefits of celery juice?
There’s no question that celery is healthy for humans to
consume. It contains many vitamins and minerals, including antioxidant
vitamin C, along with magnesium, iron, calcium and more.
Celery is also a good source of fiber and other phytonutrients.
"Celery is truly the savior when it comes to chronic
illness," author Anthony William writes on his website, Medical Medium.
"I’ve seen thousands of people who suffer from chronic and mystery
illness restore their health by drinking 16 ounces of celery juice daily
on an empty stomach."
William says that the celery juice benefits include the
ability to reduce inflammation and cure autoimmune diseases. He also
says that it can improve digestion by removing the "toxic sludge" in the
stomach.
Holistic health coach Molly Alliman also told Well + Good that celery juice is a "natural diuretic" that can "help the liver flush toxins" to reduce bloat.
Are they right? Yes and no. Their claims about the benefits
of celery juice — like all foods touted as "miracle cures" — are taken
out of context and warped to support the idea they’re trying to promote.
Celery does contain antioxidants and phenolic compounds shown to help reduce inflammation,
along with flavonoids, tannins, volatile oils and alkaloids, that are
shown to help regulate acid and support the mucus lining in the stomach,
helping conditions like ulcers.
Your liver doesn’t need celery to help to "flush toxins"
out of your body — part of its job is to metabolize and get rid of
chemicals and drugs in the body and it does it innately without
intervention. That said, a study on rats did show that celery helped them improve liver enzyme function — a result that could help people with liver disease.
Should you drink celery juice?
The answer: If you want to — or you could just eat celery, too.
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