Functional Nutrition Archives - The Nutrition Supplement Dietitian https://mysupplementrd.com/category/functional-nutrition/ Janet Zarowitz, MS, RD, CDN, Registered Dietitian Nutritionist Tue, 23 Jan 2024 04:58:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://mysupplementrd.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/msrd-favicon-jpg-webp-100x100.webp Functional Nutrition Archives - The Nutrition Supplement Dietitian https://mysupplementrd.com/category/functional-nutrition/ 32 32 Welcome to My Website! https://mysupplementrd.com/welcome-janet-zarowitz-msrdcdn-nutrition-supplement-dietitian/ Fri, 22 Apr 2022 21:40:03 +0000 http://mysupplementrd.com/?p=1312 Hi, I’m Janet Zarowitz, MS, RD, CDN, Registered Dietitian Nutritionist in Ossining, NY, in Westchester County, NY, about 1 hour north of New York City. As a integrative and functional...

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Hi, I’m Janet Zarowitz, MS, RD, CDN, Registered Dietitian Nutritionist in Ossining, NY, in Westchester County, NY, about 1 hour north of New York City. As a integrative and functional nutritionist, I believe that a blend of healthy food, nutrition supplements and lifestyle changes form the basis of good health and feeling better.

In addition to seeing patients in my Ossining, NY office, I also offer Telenutrition (remote nutrition consults). If you are interested in a nutrition assessment and consultation, contact me.

What is functional nutrition? Functional nutrition addresses the underlying root causes of symptoms and diseases and helps the body rebalance and heal. My goal is to provide you with nutrition strategies to help you realize your optimal health.

Many of us today have difficulties with even the basic functions of everyday life — Digestion, Sleeping, Moving (without Pain), Mental Clarity, and Maintaining a Healthy Immune System. Why? What is it about the foods we eat, the environment we live in, and our lifestyles that seems to be affecting the quality of how so many of us feel?

On my website I discuss these issues and offer a “shop” of a select number of nutrition supplements. And, I share with you the experiences of my own personal journey and exploration to feel better and age well.

My website is a place I hope you will visit often –with information about healthy food and lifestyle choices and about “Food and Nutrition Supplements for Everyday Living.”

Janet

Janet Zarowitz, MS, RD, CDN
Integrative and Functional Nutritionist
162 Croton Ave, Suite 2
Ossining, NY 10562

914-222-3919

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Nutrition and Functional Dentistry https://mysupplementrd.com/functional-medicine-based-dentistry-nutrition/ Sat, 17 Oct 2020 17:11:35 +0000 https://mysupplementrd.com/?p=8050 The post Nutrition and Functional Dentistry appeared first on The Nutrition Supplement Dietitian.

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Taking care of your mouth, gums and teeth is a really important part of maintaining good health.

As an integrative and functional nutritionist, I look for underlying root causes for symptoms and illnesses….and that includes your oral health.

While still not typically part of conventional dentistry, more and more dentists are looking at the connection between oral health and the health of the rest of the body.


Your oral health is more important than you might realize. Learn how the health of your mouth, teeth and gums can affect your general health. Did you know that your oral health offers clues about your overall health — or that problems in your mouth can affect the rest of your body? Protect yourself by learning more about the connection between your oral health and overall health.

What’s the connection between oral health and overall health?

Like other areas of the body, your mouth teems with bacteria — mostly harmless. But your mouth is the entry point to your digestive and respiratory tracts, and some of these bacteria can cause disease.

Normally the body’s natural defenses and good oral health care, such as daily brushing and flossing, keep bacteria under control. However, without proper oral hygiene, bacteria can reach levels that might lead to oral infections, such as tooth decay and gum disease.

Also, certain medications — such as decongestants, antihistamines, painkillers, diuretics and antidepressants — can reduce saliva flow. Part of saliva’s job is to wash away food and neutralize acids produced by bacteria in the mouth, helping to protect you from microbes that multiply and may lead to disease.

Studies suggest that oral bacteria and the inflammation associated with a severe form of gum disease (periodontitis) might play a role in some diseases. Compounding that, certain diseases, such as diabetes and HIV/AIDS, can lower the body’s resistance to infection, making oral health problems more severe.

Read the full article.

It’s a two-way street — your oral health might contribute to various diseases and conditions, and certain conditions also might affect your oral health.


Oral Bacteria and PPI’s

Dysbiosis of the mouth is thought to be the root cause of many diseases. The oral microbiome is connected to, and affects the rest of the gut microbiome.

Stomach acid has an important job of naturally killing many pathogens entering from the mouth. But when people are on PPIs (proton pump inhibitors) or other acid suppressing medications (like H2  blockers), acid levels are reduced and the body loses that natural protection. Consequently, many “bad bacteria” that originated in the mouth are not killed off and can get translocated to the small intestine where they do not belong! If these bacteria take hold and flourish, this can lead to gut dysbiois, gut inflammation and digestive symptoms.


Nutrition and a Healthy Mouth — Diet and Supplements

Among other things, a healthy mouth is one that is free from inflammation, has pink, firm gums, no bleeding and very little plaque. (And of course, no untreated caries!)

Oral health begins with good oral hygiene and a healthy diet. It’s foundational to eat a healthy diet such as the Mediterranean diet — a whole foods diet (e.g. lots of vegetables, fruit, nuts, seeds, whole grains, healthy fats, lean proteins, little red meat, fatty fish, no processed foods or added sugars).

In addition, to a healthy, nutrient dense, whole foods diet, the following nutrition supplements are being used in functional medicine-based dentistry:

  • Vitamin D, Vitamin K2, Vitamin C – gum, tooth and bone health
  • CoQ10 – gum health
  • Probiotics – oral microbiome

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Functional Nutritionist Addresses Underlying Imbalances https://mysupplementrd.com/functional-nutritionist-addresses-underlying-imbalances/ Wed, 15 Apr 2020 14:44:29 +0000 https://mysupplementrd.com/?p=6184 The post Functional Nutritionist Addresses Underlying Imbalances appeared first on The Nutrition Supplement Dietitian.

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It’s often difficult for patients to fully grasp how my work as a Functional Registered Dietitian Nutritionist differs from more traditional Registered Dietitian Nutritionists!

This original image (designed by Jessica Zarowitz) communicates how I use functional nutrition to address each person’s underlying root causes to help rebalance the body. This is deep nutrition, going below and beyond managing or masking symptoms.

The design is a representative yet playful Functional Nutrition Tree, showing root causes below the surface and symptoms and diseases above the surface.

Functional Nutrition Tree 

Functional Nutrition

Through functional nutrition, I approach each patient by focusing on his or her unique underlying imbalances, such as inflammation, gut dysbiosis, poor detoxification, or low nutrient status, to name a few.

Finding the roots of the problem and providing nutritional support, allows the body to rebalance itself and heal, resolving or improving symptoms and diseases.

I use a variety of nutritional strategies from biochemistry to nutrigenomics, diet therapies, targeted supplements, lifestyle options and more.

I work with clients in my Westchester, NY office and via telehealth.

So, I’ll ask you what I ask my clients,
“When Was the Last Time You Truly Felt Well?

Contact Janet Zarowitz, MS, RD, CDN for a Functional Nutrition Assessment and Consultation. 


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Farmer’s Markets Offer Healthy Options, nonGMO’s https://mysupplementrd.com/westchester-wellness-magazine-farmers-markets-gmos/ Wed, 01 Aug 2018 15:59:20 +0000 https://mysupplementrd.com/?p=6146 The post Farmer’s Markets Offer Healthy Options, nonGMO’s appeared first on The Nutrition Supplement Dietitian.

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How Farmer’s Markets are Beneficial to Consumers: Beyond Nutrition (and some nutrition facts too)

by Gabrielle Bilik
Westchester Wellness, Vol 1, No 2, July 2018

I was interviewed by Westchester Wellness magazine about the benefits of farmer’s markets and the changing quality of our food supply.

Exerpt:

Janet Zarowitz, a certified dietitian-nutritionist, based in Ossining, shed some more light on the biological effects of diet. Zarowitz holds a Master of Science degree and did her training at Cornell and Columbia Universities. She is a practicing CDN of 25 years and for the past 10 she has been involved with integrative and functional nutrition.

Functional nutrition is when nutrition is used to address the underlying issues in the body that might cause sickness or other symptoms, she explains.

“For example, people get headaches so they may take pain relievers for the headache,” she says, “but that addresses the symptoms. It may make them feel better short term but it doesn’t address why they may be getting the migraine. Is it a food sensitivity? A hormone imbalance? A digestive problem? Address the problem, so ideally you don’t get the migraines anymore, or you get them less.”

Many symptoms she sees in her clients she attributes to the food supply.

“Anecdotally, that’s been my experience. I believe that our food supply has diminished our soils,” says Zarowitz. “They are not as rich in nutrients anymore. Some of the pesticides that are used actually bind minerals in the soil so if they’re binding [those nutrients] we don’t get them.”

Genetically modified foods have had their DNA manipulated in order to demonstrate certain traits such as delayed ripening or thicker skin to withstand long journeys. According to the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Environmental Science these types of modifications can increase productivity and yield for farmers.

“There are two main categories of genetically modified crops,” Zarowitz says. “Some of them are made to resist pesticides and some of them are genetically modified to actually produce insecticides.” While she said she can’t speak to the economic benefits of the practice, she personally believes gentically modified foods affect human health.

“When you eat those foods it also affects the bacteria in your gut,” she says. “It’s very antibacterial and changes the balance of the bacteria in your gut.”

While digestive issues are common among her older clients, she said that she sees more and more people in their 20s and 30s for digestive issues. While she can’t positively say it’s the sole cause, she believes pesticides are a contributing factor.

“If you think about it we’re a living organism and we interface with the outside world. Other animals, air and bacteria in the soil— everything. What’s our exposure to the outside world? Our skin and our gut.Think about it — if you open your mouth you’re totally ex- posed to the outside world.”

– Janet Zarowitz, MS, RD, CDN is an Integrative and Functional Registered Dietitian Nutritionist. She addresses root causes of symptoms and diseases through nutritional support of the body’s underlying imbalances. Janet’s personalized nutrition plans integrate diet therapies, targeted supplements and lifestyle options that coordinate with standard medical care. Contact Janet at 914-222-3919 or Janet@mysupplementrd.com or visit mysupplementrd.com.


 

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