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Cranberry Juice Blend

With moderation
Drink

This drink requires **moderation** for people with gout. While pure cranberry juice is low in purines and does not directly raise uric acid, this specific blend — described as a "100% juice blend with calcium added" — introduces two key concerns. First, juice blends often include apple, grape, or pear juice, which are high in **fructose**. Fructose metabolism generates purines and can elevate uric acid levels, triggering flares. Second, the **added calcium** in this product is noteworthy: although dietary calcium is generally associated with lower gout risk, the form and dose in juice blends is not standardized, and excessive calcium supplementation has been linked to increased serum uric acid in some studies. The bottom line: a small serving of pure unsweetened cranberry juice may even support kidney flushing of uric acid, but a sweetened blend with added calcium is not the optimal choice for daily gout management.

Added by vblinden

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Good for you

✅ **Low purine content** – Cranberries themselves are naturally low in purines and do not directly contribute to uric acid production. ✅ **May support hydration** – Proper hydration helps the kidneys excrete uric acid; any fluid counts. ✅ **Potential antioxidant benefits** – Cranberry compounds (proanthocyanidins) may reduce inflammation, though specific anti-gout evidence is limited.

Bad for you

❌ **High fructose risk** – Juice blends often contain apple, pear, or grape juice concentrates, which are high in fructose. Fructose accelerates ATP breakdown and purine synthesis, raising uric acid. ❌ **Added calcium – potentially counterproductive** – While dietary calcium may be neutral or beneficial, added calcium in beverages has been associated with increased serum uric acid in some observational research. ❌ **Sugar load without fiber** – Liquid sugar (even from "100% juice") spikes insulin, which reduces kidney uric acid excretion. ❌ **Misleading "100% Juice" label** – The term "blend" means other juices (likely higher-fructose ones) are mixed in, reducing the pure cranberry content that might otherwise help flush uric acid.‍

Information researched with AI — not medical advice.