4 Food Groups That Can Increase Uric Acid Levels

If you live with certain health conditions, like diabetes, high blood pressure, or heart disease, you might be at a greater risk of developing a type of arthritis called gout, which inflames the joint around your big toe. In this case, your doctor might recommend limiting the amount of foods you eat containing purines — a compound found naturally in the body and in things like red meat.
When purines break down, it leads to the production of uric acid. While some levels of uric acid in the blood are normal (typically between 6 and 7 milligrams per deciliter), too-high levels of the substance can cause crystals to form and build up around your joints, leading to or worsening gout.
Not everyone gets gout from uric acid; however, your doctor might recommend limiting the amount you get from your diet if you’re at risk. Read on for the four major food groups that lead to higher uric acid levels, according to medical research.
1. Red Meats
Red meat is a main source of purines in the diet, especially organ meats like liver, which leads to uric acid buildup. Other meats that increase uric acid include beef, lamb, veal, and pork. If you’ve been diagnosed with gout or a blood test reveals that you have high uric acid levels, these meats should be limited or even avoided.
2. Seafood and Fish
Certain types of seafood are great sources of healthy fat — also known as omega-3 fatty acids — which can help reduce your risk of heart disease and stroke. But it’s also a major source of purines in the diet, leading to increased uric acid levels. Tuna, mackerel, herring, and anchovies are among the highest in uric acid, as well as lobster, scallops, and shrimp.
Typically, it’s recommended to get 3.5 ounces of cooked fish per week. However, you may need to limit the amount you eat if your uric acid levels are high.
3. Certain Vegetables
There is mixed evidence to show that certain vegetables lead to higher uric acid levels. Beans, peas, lentils, spinach, cauliflower, asparagus, and mushrooms contain purines, but moderate amounts of each are unlikely to increase uric acid levels significantly.
If in doubt, ask your doctor or a registered dietitian about whether you can eat certain vegetables that contain purines. They may suggest you simply limit the amount of purine-rich veggies you consume and instead add other vegetables high in magnesium, for example, to help decrease uric acid buildup in the blood. Magnesium-rich veggies include broccoli, potatoes, carrots, and avocados, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
4. Beer and Alcohol
Alcoholic beverages don’t contain purines or uric acid themselves, but they can increase the production of purines in your body. Try to limit or avoid beer and hard liquor specifically, as both have been shown to increase the risk of developing gout. (Wine has not been shown to have the same influence.) In general, it’s best to limit all alcohol consumption to two or fewer servings per day, or completely abstain if you have a health condition that gets exacerbated by alcohol.

Kayli Anderson, RDN
Medical Reviewer
Kayli Anderson has over a decade of experience in nutrition, culinary education, and lifestyle medicine. She believes that eating well should be simple, pleasurable, and sustainable. Anderson has worked with clients from all walks of life, but she currently specializes in nutrition therapy and lifestyle medicine for women. She’s the founder of PlantBasedMavens.com, a hub for women to get evidence-based, practical, and woman-centered guidance on nutrition and cooking, hormone health, fertility, pregnancy, movement, mental well-being, nontoxic living, and more.
Anderson is board-certified in lifestyle medicine and serves as lead faculty of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine’s (ACLM) "Food as Medicine" course. She is past chair of the ACLM's registered dietitian member interest group, secretary of the women's health member interest group, and nutrition faculty for many of ACLM's other course offerings. She is the coauthor of the Plant-Based Nutrition Quick Start Guide and works with many of the leading organizations in nutrition and lifestyle medicine to develop nutrition content, recipes, and educational programs.
Anderson frequently speaks on the topics of women’s health and plant-based nutrition and has coauthored two lifestyle medicine textbooks, including the first one on women’s health, Improving Women's Health Across the Lifespan.
She received a master's degree in nutrition and physical performance and is certified as an exercise physiologist and intuitive eating counselor. She's a student of herbal medicine and women's integrative and functional medicine. She lives with her husband in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, where you’ll find her out on a trail or in her garden.

Emily Cooper
Author
A registered dietitian, Emily Cooper has developed recipes and articles for Food and Nutrition Magazine, Encore Magazine, and the Vermont Peanut Butter Company. When she's not in the kitchen, you can find Emily hitting the streets for a run, or sharing her healthy-living tips on her blog, Sinful Nutrition.
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