Anti-Gout Diet Program: Complete Guide 2025
Gout affects approximately 2% of French population according to Health Insurance, affecting nearly one million people. This inflammatory joint disease, caused by uric acid crystal accumulation in joints, can be significantly improved by adapted diet program.
According to a New England Journal of Medicine study, low-purine diet can reduce serum uric acid by 10 to 18%, and decrease new attack risk by 40%. This complete guide presents anti-gout diet principles, complete food list of recommended and forbidden items, and detailed 7-day menu.
What is an Anti-Gout Diet Program?
Anti-gout diet program is structured, personalized nutritional plan aiming to control blood uric acid level by limiting dietary purine intake. Unlike simple restrictive diet, well-designed gout program allows maintaining balanced, varied and tasty eating while avoiding attack-triggering foods.
Anti-Gout Diet Objectives:
- Reduce uricemia (serum uric acid level) below 60 mg/L threshold
- Prevent acute gout attacks and recurrence
- Maintain healthy weight to reduce joint pressure
- Improve daily quality of life
- Effectively complement medication if necessary
Effective program relies on three essential pillars: rigorous selection of low-purine foods, optimal hydration of 2.5 to 3 liters daily, and regular monitoring of nutritional intake to identify personal triggers.
Understanding Diet-Gout Relationship
Uric acid comes from purine breakdown, compounds naturally present in our body and certain foods. When blood uric acid (uricemia) exceeds 70 mg/L, crystals can form in joints, causing painful attacks.
High Health Authority (HAS) recommendations establish low-purine diet must limit intake to less than 150 mg daily, versus 600 to 1000 mg in standard eating.
Key Point: Diet accounts for approximately 30% of body uric acid production, but its impact on attack prevention remains significant.
Foods to Avoid: High-Purine Sources List
Very Purine-Rich Foods (>150 mg/100g)
- Organ meats: liver (554 mg/100g), kidneys (269 mg/100g), brain (195 mg/100g)
- Seafood: anchovies (411 mg/100g), sardines (345 mg/100g), herring (219 mg/100g)
- Meats: game, concentrated meat broth
- Legumes: brewer's yeast (559 mg/100g)
Moderately Purine-Rich Foods (50-150 mg/100g)
- Red meats (beef, pork, lamb)
- Poultry (chicken, turkey, duck)
- Fatty fish (tuna, salmon, mackerel)
- Dried vegetables (lentils, chickpeas, beans)
- Mushrooms (75 mg/100g)
- Spinach (57 mg/100g)
Recommended Foods: Anti-Gout Diet Foundation
Low-Purine Foods (< 50 mg/100g)
- Vegetables: tomatoes, carrots, zucchini, broccoli
- Fruits: apples, pears, bananas, citrus
- Cereals: rice, pasta, whole wheat bread, oats
- Dairy: milk, yogurts, fresh cheese
Specific Beneficial Foods
According to USDA FoodData Central, certain foods have particularly interesting anti-inflammatory properties:
- Cherries: 10-12 daily reduce attack risk by 35%
- Low-fat dairy: protective effect proven against hyperuricemia
- Coffee: 4 cups daily reduce gout risk by 40% in men
- Vitamin C: 500 mg/day decrease uricemia by 0.5 mg/dL