Top 10 Foods That Help Clean and Strengthen
Your Lungs Naturally (2026)
India has 14 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities. Every breath you take in an Indian city contains PM2.5 particles, vehicle exhaust and industrial toxins that damage lung tissue daily. But the right Indian foods can clean your lungs, reduce inflammation and strengthen respiratory function — starting from your very next meal.
Table of Contents
WHO — Air Pollution & Respiratory Health
WHO identifies air pollution as the world’s largest environmental health risk — responsible for 7 million premature deaths annually. India’s air quality crisis directly causes increased rates of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, lung cancer and cardiovascular disease. WHO dietary guidelines for respiratory health emphasise antioxidant-rich foods (Vitamins C, E, beta-carotene), omega-3 fatty acids, magnesium and polyphenols — all present in abundance in traditional Indian foods. Diet cannot reverse smoking or severe pollution damage but significantly reduces oxidative stress and inflammation in lung tissue, slowing further damage. WHO Air Quality & Lung Health →
Why Indian Lungs Need Extra Daily Protection
Every Indian city dweller is exposed to air pollution equivalent to smoking 10+ cigarettes daily
PM2.5 particles (smaller than 2.5 micrometres) bypass the nose and throat — penetrating deep into lung alveoli where they cause oxidative damage, chronic inflammation and gradually destroy lung function. India’s average PM2.5 is 7-12x above WHO safe levels in most cities. The lungs’ natural defences — mucus and cilia — cannot keep up with India’s pollution levels. Antioxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds from food are the most practical daily defence available to every Indian.
Top 10 Indian Foods That Clean and Strengthen Lungs
Tulsi (Holy Basil) — India’s #1 Lung Herb
💊 Active Compounds
Eugenol — bronchodilator (widens airways). Rosmarinic acid — anti-inflammatory (COX-2 inhibitor). Ursolic acid — anti-fibrotic (prevents lung scarring). Carvacrol — antimicrobial against respiratory pathogens. Vitamin C — antioxidant protection of lung cells from PM2.5 damage.
✅ How to Use Daily
10-12 fresh tulsi leaves in morning warm water. Tulsi-ginger-honey tea 2-3x daily. Add fresh tulsi to dal and sabzi. Chew 4-5 fresh leaves daily on empty stomach. During air pollution peaks: boil tulsi + adrak + haldi + kali mirch = powerful lung kadha.
🌿 Daily Lung Protection Tulsi Kadha
- Boil 10-12 tulsi leaves + 1-inch ginger + 1/4 tsp haldi + 5 black peppercorns in 2 cups water
- Simmer 8-10 minutes until water reduces by half
- Strain and add 1 tsp honey when slightly cooled
- Drink warm every morning — especially in high pollution months (Oct-Feb)
- This kadha is used in Ayurveda and is now validated in modern research for respiratory protection
🔬 Research: A 2018 clinical study in Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine found regular tulsi consumption significantly reduced respiratory symptoms in urban dwellers exposed to chronic air pollution — including reduced wheezing, cough frequency and shortness of breath — with measurable reduction in inflammatory markers COX-2 and IL-6 in lung tissue.
Haldi (Turmeric) — Curcumin Directly Protects Lung Tissue
💊 Curcumin Lung Protection
Inhibits NF-κB — reduces lung cell inflammation from PM2.5. Activates Nrf2 — upregulates body’s own antioxidant production. Anti-fibrotic — reduces lung scar tissue formation. Reduces mucus hypersecretion in chronic bronchitis. Protects alveolar cells from oxidative damage.
✅ Maximum Absorption
Always add kali mirch (black pepper) to haldi — piperine increases curcumin absorption by 2000%. Add haldi to warm milk, dal, sabzi and every dish. Haldi doodh with black pepper daily is the most evidence-backed form. Fat increases absorption — cook haldi in oil or ghee before adding to dishes.
🔬 Research: Multiple clinical trials have demonstrated curcumin’s lung protection — including a study showing curcumin supplementation significantly reduced PM2.5-induced lung oxidative stress in urban dwellers. Research in COPD patients showed curcumin supplementation reduced inflammatory markers and improved lung function tests after 8 weeks of use.
Amla (Indian Gooseberry) — 600mg Vitamin C Per Fruit
✅ How to Eat Amla Daily
1 fresh amla daily — chew raw or with a pinch of kala namak. 30ml amla juice diluted in water. Amla murabba (1 piece daily). Amla powder in warm water — 1 tsp. Amla chutney with meals. Amla candy for those who cannot tolerate sour taste.
💊 Lung Protection Science
Vitamin C neutralises ROS from PM2.5 in alveolar fluid — the immediate contact zone. Regenerates Vitamin E (lung’s fat-soluble antioxidant) after it neutralises oxidants. Supports collagen synthesis — maintains lung structural integrity. Reduces respiratory infection severity and duration. 125mg daily (about 1/5 of an amla) is WHO’s recommended intake — amla provides 5-6x this in one fruit.
🔬 Research: A large epidemiological study found that for every 100mg increase in daily Vitamin C intake there was a measurable 3.4% improvement in FEV1 (forced expiratory volume — the key lung function measure). People in the lowest Vitamin C quartile had 27% higher risk of COPD compared to the highest quartile — making Vitamin C intake one of the strongest dietary predictors of lung health.
Adrak (Ginger) — Natural Bronchodilator and Mucus Cleaner
💊 Lung Mechanisms
Gingerols relax bronchial smooth muscle (bronchodilation). Breaks down and loosens airway mucus (mucolytic). Inhibits 5-LOX reducing allergic airway inflammation. Reduces prostaglandin E2 — key mediator of airway inflammation. Anti-nausea properties help during pollution-triggered breathlessness episodes.
✅ Best Forms for Lung Health
Adrak-tulsi-honey tea — 2-3x daily for respiratory support. Fresh ginger in all cooking. Ginger steam inhalation — add fresh ginger to bowl of hot water, inhale steam — excellent for congestion. Adrak + haldi + kali mirch kadha. Raw ginger juice 1 tsp in warm water morning.
🔬 Research: A 2014 study in the American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology found ginger compounds directly relaxed contracted airway smooth muscle in a dose-dependent manner — confirming the bronchodilatory mechanism. Ginger has also been validated in clinical studies as reducing airway hyperresponsiveness in asthma — a condition directly worsened by India’s pollution levels.
Walnuts and Flaxseeds — Omega-3 Reduces Lung Inflammation
💊 Omega-3 Lung Protection
EPA reduces leukotriene B4 — key mediator of airway inflammation. DHA is incorporated into alveolar surfactant — the liquid that keeps air sacs open. Reduces alveolar macrophage inflammatory activity triggered by pollution particles. Balances omega-6/omega-3 ratio — modern Indian diet is severely omega-6 dominant causing excess inflammation.
✅ Best Indian Sources
Walnuts (akhrot) — 4-5 daily. Flaxseeds (alsi) — 2 tbsp ground in food daily. Fish (mackerel, salmon, tuna) 2-3x weekly for non-vegetarians. Mustard oil — ALA source — use in cooking. Chia seeds — add to dahi or water. Hemp seeds if available.
🔬 Research: A systematic review of 15 studies found omega-3 supplementation significantly improved FEV1 and FVC (lung function tests) and reduced asthma symptom scores. Higher dietary omega-3 intake was associated with 20% lower risk of COPD and significantly better lung function preservation in pollution-exposed populations.
Garlic (Lahsun) — Allicin Protects Against Respiratory Infections
💊 Lung Benefits
Allicin — antiviral against influenza, RSV, coronavirus. Antibacterial against S. pneumoniae (pneumonia) and H. influenzae. Anti-TB properties — significant for India’s TB burden. Quercetin — antihistamine (reduces allergic airway responses). Reduces NF-κB in lung cells — directly anti-inflammatory.
✅ Maximum Allicin
Crush or chop garlic — WAIT 10 MINUTES before cooking. This allows allicin formation by allowing alliinase enzyme to act on alliin. Add raw crushed garlic to room temperature food for highest allicin. 2-4 cloves daily. Garlic-ginger-honey paste — powerful respiratory immunity booster.
🔬 Research: A randomised trial found people taking garlic extract had 63% fewer colds than the placebo group and when infected recovered 70% faster. A 2012 study found garlic reduced frequency of respiratory tract infections by 65% and days of work lost due to respiratory illness by 56% over 12 weeks.
Pumpkin and Carrot — Beta-Carotene Maintains Lung Lining
🥕 Best Orange-Yellow Lung Foods
Kaddu (pumpkin) — highest beta-carotene. Gajar (carrot) — excellent beta-carotene source. Sweet potato (shakarkandi) — beta-carotene + Vitamin C together. Papaya — beta-carotene + Vitamin C + papain enzyme (helps clear mucus). Mango — seasonal but excellent lung food. Corn — modest beta-carotene.
💊 Vitamin A Lung Science
Maintains goblet cell function — these cells produce protective mucus in airways. Required for cilia health — the hair-like structures that sweep pollution particles out of airways. Supports alveolar type II cell function — these produce surfactant keeping air sacs open. Deficiency directly increases susceptibility to respiratory infections and pollution damage.
🔬 Research: Studies show dietary beta-carotene intake correlates inversely with lung cancer risk — with highest intake associated with 40% lower risk in non-smokers. Research consistently finds that orange-yellow vegetable intake is among the strongest dietary predictors of lung function preservation in pollution-exposed urban populations.
Palak and Leafy Greens — Magnesium Relaxes Airways
🥬 Best Leafy Green Lung Foods
Palak (spinach) — highest magnesium + iron + Vitamin C + folate. Methi (fenugreek leaves) — magnesium + anti-inflammatory diosgenin. Saag (mustard greens) — magnesium + glucosinolates (cancer-protective). Pudina (mint) — rosmarinic acid (same as tulsi) + menthol (airway opening). Dhania (coriander) — quercetin + anti-inflammatory.
💊 Magnesium Lung Mechanisms
Opposes calcium in bronchial smooth muscle — acts as natural bronchodilator. Required for adenylyl cyclase activation — the enzyme that produces broncho-relaxing cAMP. Deficiency associated with 45% higher risk of bronchial hyperresponsiveness. Reduces mast cell degranulation — reduces allergic airway responses. Supports respiratory muscle function — reduces breathlessness.
🔬 Research: A study of 2,633 adults found magnesium intake significantly correlated with lung function (FEV1 and FVC). People in the lowest magnesium intake quartile had 25% higher rates of bronchial hyperresponsiveness and significantly worse lung function tests than those with adequate magnesium intake — confirming dietary magnesium as a key modifiable lung health factor.
Pomegranate (Anar) and Berries — Polyphenols Repair Lung DNA
🍇 Best Indian Polyphenol Sources
Anar (pomegranate) — punicalagins + punicic acid = exceptional lung protection. Jamun (black plum) — anthocyanins + resveratrol. Grapes (angoor) — resveratrol + quercetin. Strawberries — ellagic acid + Vitamin C. Amla — gallic acid + ascorbic acid. Karela — charantin reduces lung inflammation.
💊 Polyphenol Lung Science
Punicalagins activate Nrf2 — the master antioxidant switch in lung cells. Anthocyanins inhibit NF-κB — reducing inflammatory cytokine production in lung tissue. Ellagic acid reduces TGF-β — the primary driver of lung fibrosis. Resveratrol has SIRT1 activation — anti-aging effect in lung cell mitochondria.
🔬 Research: A study on COPD patients found pomegranate extract supplementation significantly reduced oxidative stress markers in lung tissue, improved FEV1 by 12% over 8 weeks and reduced exacerbation frequency. Population studies consistently find berry and pomegranate consumption inversely correlated with lung cancer risk in both smokers and non-smokers.
Mulethi (Liquorice Root) — The Lung Tonic of Ayurveda
💊 Mulethi Lung Mechanisms
Glycyrrhizin — antiviral against influenza, RSV, coronavirus. Expectorant — thins and clears airway mucus. Glucocorticoid-like effect — anti-inflammatory without steroid side effects. Soothes upper airway inflammation from pollution. Glycyrrhetic acid — anti-fibrotic in lung tissue.
⚠️ Safe Use Guidelines
Safe at moderate amounts (1-5g daily). Excessive use (over 2-4 weeks continuously) can cause hypertension and potassium loss. People with hypertension — use cautiously and consult doctor. Pregnant women — avoid in large doses. Best used seasonally during high pollution months or during respiratory infections for 1-2 weeks.
🌿 Mulethi Lung Kadha — Winter and Pollution Season
- Boil 1 stick mulethi + 5 tulsi leaves + 1-inch ginger + 5 black peppercorns in 2 cups water
- Add 1/4 tsp haldi and simmer 10 minutes
- Strain and add honey when cooled slightly
- Drink warm 1-2x daily during Oct-February (peak pollution and respiratory infection season)
- Do NOT use daily year-round — use seasonally or during respiratory illness only
🔬 Research: Studies on glycyrrhizin show significant antiviral activity against multiple respiratory pathogens with IC50 values comparable to antiviral medications for some viruses. Clinical trials in SARS-CoV patients found glycyrrhizin treatment significantly reduced inflammatory cytokine levels and improved recovery outcomes — validating mulethi’s ancient reputation as a lung tonic.
Best Drinks for Lung Health — Indian Options
Tulsi-Adrak-Honey Kadha
Tulsi (bronchodilator + antimicrobial) + ginger (mucolytic + anti-inflammatory) + honey (soothes airways) = India’s most complete lung drink. 2-3 cups daily.
Green Tea
EGCG catechins directly protect lung cells from oxidative damage. Reduces lung inflammation. 2-3 cups daily without sugar significantly reduces respiratory infection risk.
Amla + Lemon Water
30ml amla juice + lemon juice in warm water. Double Vitamin C dose for maximum lung antioxidant protection. Best first drink of the morning for lung health.
Haldi Doodh
Curcumin reduces lung inflammation + warm milk soothes airways + kali mirch increases absorption 2000%. Best bedtime drink for lung repair during sleep.
Adrak Steam
Not a drink but a technique — boil ginger in water, cover head with towel, inhale steam for 5-10 min. Clears congestion, opens airways, helps expel pollution-trapped mucus.
Honey + Warm Water
Raw honey has antibacterial (hydrogen peroxide) and antiviral properties. Coats and soothes inflamed airway mucous membranes. Add lemon for Vitamin C benefit. 1-2 tsp in warm water.
Foods That Damage Your Lungs — Avoid These
These foods increase lung inflammation and worsen pollution damage — avoid them especially in high pollution months
While eating lung-protecting foods is important, avoiding foods that amplify lung inflammation is equally critical. In Indian cities with extreme pollution levels the combination of environmental oxidative stress and dietary inflammatory foods can overwhelm the lungs’ protective capacity rapidly.
Processed and fried food — Advanced glycation end products (AGEs) and trans fats directly increase lung inflammation. Chips, pakoda, samosa, bhujia — worsened lung damage during high pollution days
Sugar and cold drinks — Fructose and glucose spikes promote inflammatory cytokine release in lung tissue. Cold drinks are doubly harmful — cold temperature irritates airways + sugar worsens inflammation
Maida products — High glycemic rapid glucose spike promotes IL-6 and TNF-alpha in lung tissue. These inflammatory markers directly worsen asthma and COPD severity
Excess dairy for asthma patients — Casein in dairy can increase mucus production in airways for some asthma patients. Dahi is generally fine but heavy cream and full-fat milk may worsen mucus
Alcohol — Depletes glutathione — the lung’s primary antioxidant enzyme. Dehydrates airways reducing protective mucus. Promotes aspiration of oral bacteria into lungs during sleep
Excess red meat — Arachidonic acid in red meat is precursor to inflammatory prostaglandins and leukotrienes in lung tissue. High intake significantly associated with increased COPD risk
Agarbatti and dhoop indoors — Not food but critical — indoor burning of agarbatti creates PM2.5 10-15x above outdoor levels. Directly deposits toxic particles in lungs in the enclosed space
Refined vegetable oils in excess — Omega-6 dominant oils (refined sunflower, soybean) without omega-3 balance promote systemic inflammation including in lung tissue. Use mustard oil, cold-pressed coconut oil instead
Lung Health Myths — Busted!
📚 Related Articles on SwastFit
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India’s air pollution crisis — how PM2.5 affects every organ, protection strategies and WHO air quality guidelines for Indians.
Read Article →10 Tips to Boost Immunity
Strong immunity is your lungs’ first defence against respiratory infections. Our complete immunity guide covers all 10 evidence-based tips.
Read Article →Home Remedies for Cold & Cough
When lung protection fails and respiratory infection strikes — our complete science-backed cold and cough remedy guide with kadha recipes.
Read Article →Frequently Asked Questions
Diet cannot physically remove PM2.5 particles that have already deposited in lung alveoli — these are handled by alveolar macrophages (immune cells that engulf particles) over weeks and months. What diet CAN do: (1) Reduce the oxidative damage these particles cause by providing antioxidants (Vitamin C, curcumin, quercetin) that neutralise the free radicals generated when particles interact with lung cells, (2) Reduce the inflammatory response triggered by particles (omega-3, curcumin, magnesium), (3) Enhance mucociliary clearance — the mucus and cilia system that catches particles in upper airways before they reach alveoli (Vitamin A, hydration, ginger), (4) Support alveolar macrophage function (Vitamin D, omega-3). So diet does not “clean” lungs literally but significantly reduces particle-induced damage — which is what matters clinically.
If forced to choose one: Tulsi + Amla together as a daily morning drink. Tulsi provides bronchodilation, anti-inflammation and antimicrobial protection specific to the respiratory tract. Amla provides 600-800mg Vitamin C — the primary water-soluble antioxidant in alveolar fluid — in the most bioavailable form. Together they cover the two most critical lung health needs for pollution-exposed Indians: airway protection and oxidative damage reduction. If choosing just one single food: amla — because Vitamin C depletion at alveolar fluid is the primary mechanism through which pollution causes daily cumulative lung damage, and amla is India’s most potent Vitamin C source by a significant margin.
Yes — these foods provide meaningful benefit even for smokers, though the most important step is quitting. Smokers have dramatically elevated oxidative stress and inflammation in their lungs — and dietary antioxidants (Vitamin C from amla, curcumin from haldi, omega-3 from walnuts) measurably reduce this burden even with continued smoking. For current smokers: these 10 foods slow the progression of smoking-induced lung damage. For ex-smokers: the same foods support the lung’s natural repair process — the lungs begin recovering within weeks of quitting and proper nutrition accelerates this recovery. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) found in high-cysteine foods like eggs also specifically helps break down the mucus build-up from smoking. However — these foods complement but cannot substitute quitting. Quitting remains the single most important action for a smoker’s lung health.
Different benefits occur at different timescales: Within days — tulsi and ginger reduce acute airway inflammation and improve breathing comfort noticeably in people with active respiratory symptoms. Within 2-4 weeks — reduced frequency of respiratory infections (garlic, tulsi, amla Vitamin C). Within 4-8 weeks — measurable reduction in inflammatory markers (curcumin, omega-3) in blood tests. Within 3-6 months — measurable improvement in FEV1 (lung function test) in those who consistently eat all 10 foods. For long-term lung preservation — these foods need to be lifelong dietary habits not temporary interventions. The lungs respond to chronic consistent nutritional support not short-term supplementation.
Generally yes — all 10 foods are safe and beneficial for asthma and COPD patients. Specific notes: (1) Mulethi — avoid in hypertension (common in COPD patients), (2) Some asthma patients are sensitive to sulfites in dried fruits — fresh is better, (3) If on blood thinners — high omega-3 from fish may interact — consult your doctor, (4) Excess amla (over 3 fruits daily) may affect some kidney stone patients due to Vitamin C oxalate — moderate amounts are fine for most, (5) These foods should be additions to your prescribed medication — never stop or reduce prescribed inhaler or bronchodilator use because of dietary changes. Always inform your pulmonologist about dietary changes especially if on multiple medications.
A Message from Tofikuddin Ahmed — SwastFit Founder
I grew up in Siliguri and studied in Jalpaiguri — both cities with significant air pollution and a high prevalence of respiratory illness in the community. As a pharmacy student studying pharmacology, I find myself increasingly convinced that the most powerful daily medicines for Indian lungs are not in a pharmacy — they are in a kitchen.
The evidence for tulsi, haldi, amla, adrak, lahsun, anar, omega-3 from akhrot and alsi — is not anecdotal. It is published in peer-reviewed journals, replicated across multiple countries and validated in clinical trials. The mechanisms are understood at the molecular level. These are not vague “health foods” — they are pharmacologically active compounds with specific, measurable effects on lung tissue.
What makes me genuinely concerned is that India’s rapid urbanisation and shift from traditional food to processed fast food is stripping our diets of exactly these protective compounds at exactly the time when our lungs need them most — as pollution in Indian cities reaches levels that are a true public health emergency. Our grandparents eating traditional tulsi chai, haldi doodh, amla in every season and home-cooked sabzi with lahsun had intuitively far better lung nutrition than most modern urban Indians.
Go back to your kitchen. Grow a tulsi plant. Eat one amla daily. Put haldi in everything. Drink ginger tea. Your lungs will thank you in ways that may not be visible today but will be profoundly felt over decades.
— Tofikuddin Ahmed, B.Pharma Student & Founder, SwastFit.com
References: WHO Air Quality Guidelines | American Journal of Respiratory Cell Biology | European Respiratory Journal | Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | Lancet Respiratory Medicine
Clean and Strengthen Your Lungs — Starting From Your Kitchen!
Tulsi kadha every morning. Amla daily. Haldi in every dish. Adrak tea twice daily. Walnuts and flaxseeds daily. Garlic in all cooking. Kaddu and gajar sabzi. Palak and methi. Pomegranate juice. Mulethi kadha in winter. These 10 foods done consistently are India’s most powerful daily lung protection — completely natural, affordable and available in every Indian market.
Table of Contents
WHO — Air Pollution aur Respiratory Health
WHO air pollution ko duniya ka sabse bada environmental health risk identify karta hai — annually 7 million premature deaths ke liye responsible. WHO dietary guidelines for respiratory health antioxidant-rich foods (Vitamins C, E, beta-carotene), omega-3 fatty acids, magnesium aur polyphenols emphasize karte hain — sab traditional Indian foods mein abundance mein present hain. WHO Air Quality & Lung Health →
Top 10 Foods Jo Aapke Lungs Clean aur Strong Karte Hain
Tulsi — India Ka #1 Lung Herb
🌿 Daily Lung Protection Tulsi Kadha
- 10-12 tulsi leaves + 1-inch ginger + 1/4 tsp haldi + 5 kali mirch 2 cups paani mein ubalo
- 8-10 minute simmer karo jab tak paani half reduce ho
- Strain karo aur thoda thanda hone ke baad 1 tsp honey daalo
- Warm piyo har subah — especially high pollution mahino mein (Oct-Feb)
- Yeh kadha Ayurveda mein use hoti hai aur modern research ne validate kiya hai
Haldi — Curcumin Directly Lung Tissue Protect Karta Hai
Amla — 600mg Vitamin C Per Fruit
Adrak — Natural Bronchodilator aur Mucus Cleaner
Akhrot aur Alsi — Omega-3 Lung Inflammation Reduce Karta Hai
Baaki 5 Top Lung Foods — Lahsun, Kaddu, Palak, Anar, Mulethi
Tofikuddin Ahmed Ka Message — SwastFit Founder
Main Siliguri mein bada hua aur Jalpaiguri mein padha — dono cities mein significant air pollution hai aur community mein respiratory illness ki high prevalence hai. Ek pharmacy student ke roop mein pharmacology study karte hue main increasingly convinced hoon ki Indian lungs ke liye sabse powerful daily medicines pharmacy mein nahi hain — yeh kitchen mein hain.
Tulsi, haldi, amla, adrak, lahsun, anar, akhrot aur alsi ke liye evidence sirf anecdotal nahi hai. Yeh peer-reviewed journals mein published hai, multiple countries mein replicated hai aur clinical trials mein validated hai. Yeh vague “health foods” nahi hain — yeh pharmacologically active compounds hain specific, measurable effects ke saath lung tissue pe.
Jo mujhe genuinely concern karta hai woh yeh hai ki India ka rapid urbanisation aur traditional food se processed fast food ki taraf shift exactly in protective compounds ko hamari diets se strip kar raha hai exactly us waqt jab hamari lungs ko unki sabse zyada zarurat hai. Apni kitchen pe vapas jao. Ek tulsi plant ugao. Roz ek amla khao. Har cheez mein haldi daalo. Adrak chai piyo. Aapke lungs aapko shukriya karenge.
— Tofikuddin Ahmed, B.Pharma Student & Founder, SwastFit.com
Apni Kitchen Se Apne Lungs Clean aur Strong Karo!
Har subah tulsi kadha. Roz amla. Har dish mein haldi. Din mein do baar adrak chai. Roz akhrot aur alsi. Sab cooking mein lahsun. Kaddu aur gajar sabzi. Palak aur methi. Anar juice. Winter mein mulethi kadha. Yeh 10 foods consistently khao — India ki sabse powerful daily lung protection — naturally, affordably aur har Indian market mein available!
বিষয়বস্তুর তালিকা
WHO — বায়ু দূষণ ও শ্বাসযন্ত্রের স্বাস্থ্য
WHO বায়ু দূষণকে বিশ্বের বৃহত্তম পরিবেশগত স্বাস্থ্য ঝুঁকি হিসেবে চিহ্নিত করে। WHO শ্বাসযন্ত্রের স্বাস্থ্যের জন্য অ্যান্টিঅক্সিডেন্ট সমৃদ্ধ খাবার, ওমেগা-৩ ফ্যাটি অ্যাসিড এবং ম্যাগনেসিয়াম সুপারিশ করে — সবই ঐতিহ্যবাহী ভারতীয় খাবারে প্রচুর পরিমাণে রয়েছে। WHO বায়ু মান ও ফুসফুসের স্বাস্থ্য →
ফুসফুস পরিষ্কার ও মজবুত করার শীর্ষ ১০টি খাবার
তুলসী — ভারতের #১ ফুসফুস ভেষজ
বাকি ৯টি ফুসফুস সুরক্ষাকারী খাবার
তোফিকুদ্দিন আহমেদের বার্তা — SwastFit প্রতিষ্ঠাতা
আমি শিলিগুড়িতে বড় হয়েছি এবং জলপাইগুড়িতে পড়াশোনা করেছি — উভয় শহরেই উল্লেখযোগ্য বায়ু দূষণ রয়েছে। একজন ফার্মেসি ছাত্র হিসেবে আমি ক্রমশ নিশ্চিত হচ্ছি যে ভারতীয় ফুসফুসের জন্য সবচেয়ে শক্তিশালী দৈনিক ওষুধ ফার্মেসিতে নয় — রান্নাঘরে আছে।
তুলসী, হলুদ, আমলা, আদা, রসুন, আনার, আখরোট ও আলসির প্রমাণ শুধু কিংবদন্তি নয়। এটি পিয়ার-রিভিউড জার্নালে প্রকাশিত, একাধিক দেশে প্রতিলিপি করা এবং ক্লিনিকাল ট্রায়ালে যাচাই করা। নিজের রান্নাঘরে ফিরে যান। একটি তুলসী গাছ লাগান। প্রতিদিন একটি আমলা খান। হলুদ সবকিছুতে দিন। আদা চা পান করুন।
— তোফিকুদ্দিন আহমেদ, B.Pharma ছাত্র ও প্রতিষ্ঠাতা, SwastFit.com
আপনার রান্নাঘর থেকে ফুসফুস পরিষ্কার ও মজবুত করুন!
প্রতি সকালে তুলসী কাড়া। প্রতিদিন আমলা। প্রতিটি রান্নায় হলুদ। দিনে দুবার আদা চা। প্রতিদিন আখরোট ও আলসি। সব রান্নায় রসুন। কুমড়া ও গাজরের তরকারি। পালং ও মেথি। আনারের রস। শীতে মুলেঠির কাড়া। এই ১০টি খাবার ধারাবাহিকভাবে খান!
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