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  1. Home
  2. Vitamins, Supplements & Herbs
  3. Vitamins

ORAC: Scoring Antioxidants?

What is an ORAC score, and is it something I should use in making food choices?

Andrew Weil, M.D. | December 28, 2010

Fruits and vegetables as ingredients for a healthy smoothie: papaya, figs, lemon, blueberries, pomegranate seeds, raspberries and baby spinach
2 min

ORAC stands for oxygen radical absorbance capacity, a measure of the ability of a food or any other substance to quench oxygen free radicals in a test tube. Free radicals are unstable atoms or molecules generated in the course of normal metabolism that can strip electrons from other molecules, causing chain reactions of oxidative damage. Cumulative damage of this sort probably accounts for many of the degenerative changes of aging and for a lot of age-related disease.

The ORAC test was developed at the National Institute on Aging (NIA), an arm of the National Institutes of Health. It assigns a score or value to a long list of fruits, vegetables and spices. As you might expect, high scores were awarded to brightly colored fruits and vegetables including blueberries and raspberries, some types of apples, and beans.

Some studies have shown that antioxidants in foods can boost the antioxidant power of the blood. In studies at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging in Boston researchers found that 10 ounces of fresh spinach produced the biggest increase in blood antioxidant scores in women. While “ORAC” and “antioxidant” are different, eating a combination of foods that have demonstrated high ORAC scores has also boosted blood antioxidant scores. ORAC researchers at the Jean Mayer Center suggest that increasing daily intake to between 3,000 and 5,000 ORAC units seems to have a significant impact on plasma and tissue antioxidant capacity.

If you like, you can choose your foods based on the ORAC scale, but it’s only part of the picture in a healthy diet. While healthy foods tend to have high ORAC scores, simply having high scores in a lab does not necessarily indicate high antioxidant activity in the body, and I think you can avoid the math and get the same health benefits by sticking to my top choices of foods and eating them often. These include:

Green vegetables (which contain lutein and zeaxanthin, carotenoid antioxidants that can protect aging eyes from developing cataracts and macular degeneration):

  • spinach
  • collards
  • kale

Cruciferous vegetables (contain antioxidants and other phytonutrients that reduce cancer risk):

  • broccoli
  • cabbage
  • Brussels sprouts
  • cauliflower
  • turnips

Orange/yellow fruits and vegetables (rich in carotenoids that protect the immune system):

  • sweet potatoes
  • carrots
  • mangoes
  • apricots

Red pigmented fruits (contain lycopene, a powerful antioxidant that helps fight heart disease and some types of cancer, particularly prostate cancer):

  • tomatoes
  • watermelon
  • papaya
  • pink grapefruit

Blue/purple fruits and vegetables (these hues come from anthocyanins, phytochemicals that protect against carcinogens and may help prevent heart disease):

  • blueberries
  • purple grapes
  • red cabbage
  • beets
  • plums

And don’t forget about green and white tea, dark chocolate and red wine, all very high in antioxidant activity. If you check the ORAC score of these foods, you’ll find they rank high.

Andrew Weil, M.D.

Dr. Weil on Healthy Aging

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