HYBRID EVENT: You can participate in person at Barcelona, Spain from your home or work.

9th Edition of International Conference on

Traditional Medicine and Integrative Health

June 22-24, 2026 | Barcelona, Spain

Traditional Med 2026

Rationale for an adaptogenic diet

Speaker at Traditional Medicine and Integrative Health 2026 - Kevin KF Ng
MD Natural Care LLC, United States
Title : Rationale for an adaptogenic diet

Abstract:

Modern humans live in a biological environment our ancestors never faced—constant oxidative stress, chronic inflammation, metabolic overload, circadian disruption, and emotional stress that collectively exceed the body’s natural adaptive capacity. Traditional diets supply calories and nutrients, but they do not activate the deeper cellular pathways responsible for resilience. An adaptogenic diet is introduced to address this gap. An adaptogenic diet is not merely “healthy eating.” It is a strategic nutritional framework designed to strengthen the body’s adaptive defense network—Nrf2, FOXO, AMPK, autophagy, mitochondrial biogenesis, HPA-axis stability, microbiome balance, and inflammation-resolution. These pathways govern how well the body tolerates stress, repairs damage, and maintains youthful function.

Why It Is Needed: Adaptogenic foods—cruciferous vegetables, berries, herbs, spices, teas, omega-3 sources, and medicinal mushrooms—act as molecular signals. Their polyphenols, glucosinolates, terpenoids, and flavonoids gently stimulate cellular hormesis, upregulating endogenous antioxidant enzymes while suppressing excessive inflammation. This dual modulation is crucial in an era where oxidative and inflammatory pressures are constant. With age, core protective pathways decline: Nrf2 activity weakens, autophagy slows, mitochondrial efficiency drops, and telomerase activity decreases. Adaptogenic foods counter these trajectories by activating gene programs that enhance detoxification, energy production, DNA repair, and immune balance. They transform food from passive nourishment into active biochemical instruction. Moreover, adaptogenic nutrition supports metabolic flexibility—the ability to switch between glucose and fat as fuel—by stabilizing AMPK and mTOR rhythms and improving insulin sensitivity. This reduces the risk of metabolic syndrome, fatty liver, and cardiovascular disease.

Consequences of Not Adopting an Adaptogenic Diet
When adaptogenic foods are absent, the consequences accumulate silently:

  • Oxidative stress rises, overwhelming weakened endogenous defenses and accelerating aging.
  • Chronic low-grade inflammation (inflammaging) persists, elevating IL-6, TNF-α, and CRP, and driving chronic disease.
  • Mitochondrial function declines, leading to fatigue, cognitive slowing, and poor stress recovery.
  • Metabolic flexibility is lost, increasing insulin resistance, weight gain, and postprandial inflammation.
  • The HPA axis becomes dysregulated, contributing to sleep disturbance, anxiety, and cortisol overload.
  • Inflammation-resolution weakens, prolonging pain, swelling, and immune dysregulation.
  • Biological aging accelerates, as Nrf2, FOXO, TERT, and autophagy pathways remain under-activated.

In short, a non-adaptogenic diet leaves the body operating with diminished resilience, reduced repair capacity, and greater vulnerability to chronic disease and early aging.

The Core Insight
In a high-stress world, nutrition must become adaptive—not just nourishing—to preserve vitality, resilience, and healthy longevity. The adaptogenic diet answers this need by engaging the body’s built-in defense systems, supporting both immediate stress tolerance and long-term biological youth.

Biography:

Dr. Kevin KF Ng, a distinguished pharmacologist, began his career in Singapore in 1962. His early research uncovered emetine’s neuronal blocking effects, earning him an MD in 1967. Working with Nobel Laureate Sir John R. Vane, he discovered angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) in the lungs and an ACE inhibitor in snake venom, paving the way for drugs like captopril. He received his PhD from the University of London in 1968. After moving to the U.S. in 1981, he conducted over 150 clinical trials. Since 2008, he has focused on “Food as Medicine,” exploring phytochemicals' roles in pain relief and disease prevention.

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