ADT & Diet: What are others generally eating in a day?
Hi everyone! Wife here again looking for advice.
Short summary: Husband (60) had radical prostatectomy 2024, PSA bumped up again so just completed ERBT radiation and is now on Orgovyx, Abiterone, Prednisone. Very aggressive cancer. Treatments under a Center of Excellence. Rough road we are on but doing our best to stay positive.
I am struggling with breakfast. Yes, I stress over feeding him correctly!
Lunch & Dinner is no problem to get in a variety of veggies & healthy protein sources. But what are you eating for breakfast?
I’ve been rotating various egg & veggie combos and what I call loaded oatmeal- oats, a bit of almond butter, a scoop of plant protein, flax, nuts, seeds, raisins, dried apricots etc. Smoothies don’t keep him full for long which doesn’t work with his med schedule. Trying to keep him (us!) as healthy as possible and fill him with needed protein, iron, calcium etc.
Would love to hear what others are generally eating in a day. Thanks in advance for any yummy food suggestions!
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@bikeman1
I eat a combination of cereals in the morning that has about 25 g of protein in it. I have a salad midday and put either small bay shrimp or chicken in it. At dinner, chicken or fish, There’s a way along with brown rice and a vegetable with tomatoes in it.
There is no reason you cannot eat chicken, turkey or fish. The real problem is red meat.
@bikeman1
I put 20 g of vanilla vegan protein powder in my oatmeal every day and it’s delicious. Sometimes I make chocolate peanut butter protein shakes for dessert at night with vegan protein powder as well. Also, delicious.
Another example is Amy’s low sodium vegan chili, which I have a couple times a week, which has 25 g of protein per can. I made Louisiana red beans and brown rice and quinoa the other day, which was packed with protein.
You might be surprised how much protein you get when you add up things like this, along with nuts, seed and the small protein amounts in fruits, veggies, grains. etc.
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1 Reaction@bikeman1 I’m vegan and active at 74, I supplement my workout 1 hour before my workout I mix one scoop of pea protein isolate on a glass of water with a 1/2 tspoon of nut butter to slow things down a bit, at breakfast I mix one scoop of Pumpkin seed protein, 2 tablespoons of sucha inche, 2 tablespoons of hemp seeds and rest is is variable, lunch and dinner not counting veggies and legumes I eat lentils, chickpeas, tofu, tempeh, quinoa, nuts, seeds, and various beans depending on the menu for the week, my wife and I try to cook the protein on a Monday for the week and just prepare the veggies on the day I don’t eat any white stuff you can add fiber to supplement if needed and drink plaint of water to keep things flowing, also you can add a tablespoon or two of hemp seeds to any of your meals and side salads
@zzotte I believe my 'almost vegan' diet allowed me to be on AS fo 13 years before needing treatment. Even then, it was one lesion only, contained.
A great source for diet is Dean Ornish & also Dr Greger. Both MD's
https://nutritionfacts.org/
https://ornish.com/zine/the-lancet/
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4 Reactions@service1010 Always appreciate links! Thanks for sharing!
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1 Reaction@guybe
There are some studies that actually show benefit of using whey protein as it possibly suppresses cancer growth , inclooding the prostate one. It seems that casein is the part of milk that induces prostate cell growth (in vitro experiments). So anybody still enjoying cheese consumption should perhaps reconsider. ; )
So, the bottom line is that whey should be OK and at the same time for those that try to stay vegan there is a TON of vegetable based protein shakes - soy, beans, peas, etc. All very tasty at that .
My husband alternates between whey and soy protein shakes and actually when he uses whey he mixes it in soymilk.
PS: using ORGANIC and non GMO or grass fed protein shake is highly recommended. Also try to avoid ones that have added artificial sweeteners, sugar, artificial color and a lot of emulsifiers.