5 Healthy Foods You Shouldn’t Overdose On
- Thrive Market, September 27, 2015, Source
The Inuit people of Arctic Quebec have survived off the natural resources of fish and marine mammals from nearby oceans for centuries.
Essential for protein and rich in omega-3 fatty acids, what the Inuits eat would be considered healthy—theoretically. Yet studies have shown the IQs of their children are abnormally low.
Why? The whales they hunt for meat are contaminated with mercury. While the neurotoxicity of mercury has long been a concern, many people don’t think twice about ordering a tuna melt at a restaurant (28 percent of Americans’ exposure to mercury is from canned tuna), let alone realize that they could be eating too much of certain vegetables, nuts, and superfoods.
Though it sounds like a no-brainer to fix up a huge salad for lunch, there can be too much of a good thing when it comes to even the healthiest of foods.
Here are five nutritious foods that certainly have a place in a well-balanced diet—but in order to safely reap their health benefits, be conscious of the surprising potential side effects of eating them in bulk.