Showing posts with label Elimination Diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elimination Diet. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

If You Are Suffering From... Chronic Headaches

Chronic headaches...what a nightmare.  Headaches can range from low grade (buzzing in one's head) to severe (migraines) - each with different but ultimately negative impacts to daily life.

FIRST THINGS FIRST, GO SEE YOUR DOCTOR

Some very serious conditions can cause chronic headaches.  Click here to read what the Mayo Clinic has to say on chronic headaches (including some alternative medicine recommendations).  If your doctor rules out the known serious conditions that can cause chronic headaches, alternative medicine can likely help.

"UNKNOWN" CAUSES OF CHRONIC HEADACHES

The theory that I find most plausible for the causes of "unknown" chronic headaches is chronic inflammation (that either leads to or accentuates a physical imbalance - e.g. muscle tension- or chemical imbalance) due to one or more of the following: (1) dietary sources of inflammation, (2) nutrient deficiency, (3) chemical exposure.  Diet and nutrient deficiency are fairly easy to test.  Chemical exposure, however, is a much more tricky subject.  Chemical exposure can come from a variety of sources, including hygiene products, food (primarily preservatives, herbicides, and pesticides), water (municipal water is fairly well regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency- unless a company spills chemicals into your water supply as happened recently in Charleston, WV - so I would be more suspicious of well water, especially if you live near any form of industry and possibly agriculture), the environment (including materials used in your home such as lead based solder or drywall with formaldehyde), and the air (such as carbon monoxide infiltrating your home from a garage or faulty furnace, radon in your basement, and air pollution from industry). 

RECOMMENDED ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES

The following alternative therapies can likely help with chronic headaches.  My belief is that health is not sustainable without dietary change.
  1. Trigger Point Therapy - Several known trigger points cause or accentuate headaches.  Trigger Point Therapy can help eliminate any muscle tension that is causing or accentuating the headaches. 
  2. Elimination Diet - Performing an elimination diet, as prescribed herein, performs two functions including eliminating all common food allergens/irritants from your diet and increasing your nutrient intake (if done properly).  These two functions help address both dietary sources of inflammation and nutrient deficiency.  Click here to find guidance on performing an elimination diet
  3. Herbs - Herbs, specifically butterbur has been scientifically proven to be beneficial in migraines.  Click here to find additional information and guidance on the use of butterbur.
  4. Vitamins, Minerals, & Other Supplements - If you have muscle tension or increased inflammation due to vitamin, mineral, or other deficiencies, identifying these deficiencies and correcting them through supplements can augment efforts to eliminate chronic headaches.
  5. Acupuncture -  Acupuncture promotes blood flow, which can help reduce inflammation and may help with chronic headaches.
  6. Product Elimination Trial - Modern hygiene products are full of chemicals that may promote inflammation in your body.  By identifying sources of inflammation from these products, you can reduce their contribution to any headaches.

Friday, November 14, 2014

In Real Time - Modified Grain Brain Diet

This is me.  Not the best photo, but the best of the most recent photos of myself - taken by my daughter, Adelaide, during her first experience with my iphone camera (she is three and wanted to snap a picture of me next to some rocks in our neighborhood). 
I am 6'-3", 212 lbs.  This puts my body mass index (BMI) at 26.5, which is considered overweight.  I've never been one to take much stock in a BMI as I am fairly dense, meaning I have above average muscle mass - largely due to years of hiking, biking, rock climbing, and other miscellaneous activities.  However, a few years ago my doctor told me that the statistics didn't care if a high BMI was due to above average muscle mass or higher body fat - a high BMI correlated with a shorter lifespan and reduced quality of life.

After pondering that for a little while, I decided that it made sense.  More body mass, whether from fat or muscle, at a minimum required the heart to work harder, to pump blood to more tissues.  When an organ works harder than it otherwise needs to, it tends to wear out more quickly.  Just like when the liver of someone who consumes a lot of alcohol wears out more quickly than the liver of someone with low alcohol intake.  A second obvious ramification of more weight is mechanical - meaning more force is being applied to joints (knee joints, hip joints, etc.) during movement as simple as walking.  More force on each joint will wear out the joint faster than than if less force were applied, leading to bad knees, ankles, and hips. Without expounding further, the bottom line is that reducing body mass has several advantages.  

Within the past year I've lost close to twenty pounds, primarily through diet (as at the time I was too nauseated to exercise).  I started out experimenting with the Grain Brain diet, the one advocated by Dr. Perlmutter, attempting to get rid of my debilitating nausea.  The nausea stayed (I later figured out that the nausea was caused by medication, Cyclobenzaprine - aka Flexeril - which my doctor recommended as a Western approach to my chronic health issues; I'll post more on that later).  However, on the Grain Brain diet, which I modified heavily due to my nut, egg, and dairy limitations, I consistently lost weight.  And it stayed off.  My goal is to lose the remaining fat, maybe another ten or twenty pounds.  

Today is day four of my diet - a grain-free, allergen-free (see the elimination diet post to see what I consider allergenic), refined carbohydrate-free diet.  All recipes currently on my blog are on the diet.  The good news is that I can eat as much as I want and exercise need not exceed walking (though the longer the better).  To date, I've lost three pounds - hardly worth writing home about - but a good beginning.   

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Elimination Diet

An elimination diet, modifying food habits with the sole purpose of identifying foods that trigger symptoms of inflammation (headaches, night sweats, blurry eyes, brain fog, fatigue, etc), was one of the most significant elements of my road to health.  My elimination diet trial phase lasted the better part of 8 years due to my experiments.  However, an elimination diet need not take nearly that long.  Below is a summary of lessons learned and a suggested starting point for a comprehensive elimination diet.  The results should help you to understand what foods your body reacts poorly to so that you can make intelligent decisions on when to indulge in those foods.

WHERE TO START

Eliminating Food-Born Inflammation

From my research and experience, reactions to food are specific to the individual and can include a very broad list of foods.  There are a number of recommended low-inflammation diets with conflicting lists of foods to include.  In fact, one weekend I saw two programs on PBS with conflicting low-inflammation diet information.  So where do you start?  The simple answer is with the most common food allergens.  I recommend three lists of common food allergens to start your elimination diet:  (1) a list of comment allergens – modified from the FDA list, (2) common allergens known or suspected in alternative medical communities as irritants, (3) your unique identified list of possible food irritants.   

Modified Food & Drug Administration (FDA) List of Common Food Allergens

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires food manufacturers to list the eight most common ingredients that trigger food allergies.  These foods are (1) Milk, (2) Eggs, (3) Peanuts, (4) Tree Nuts (e.g. almonds, cashews, walnuts), (5) Fish (e.g. bass, cod, flounder), (6) Shellfish (e.g. crab, lobster, shrimp), (7) Soy, and (8) Wheat.  The items in these foods that the body reacts with are often the proteins.  For example, in milk two proteins are known allergens, lactose and casein, and in wheat the protein is gluten – a wonderful.  Therefore, the FDA list is recommended to be expanded to the following categories: 

  1. Dairy (e.g. milk, cheese, cream, butter)
  2. Eggs
  3. Peanuts 
  4. Tree Nuts 
  5. Fish
  6. Shellfish
  7. Soy
  8. Gluten (Wheat, Barley, Rye, and non GF-Certified Oats)
Allergens Known or Suspected in Alternative (and Non-Mainstream Western) Medical Communities as Irritants

Diet is often overlooked by western doctors but is one of the first items looked at by a number of practitioners of alternative medicine.  The following is a partial list of foods known or suspected of being inflammatory by alternative medical communities.
  1. Alcohol
  2. Corn
  3. Sulfates & Sulfites (Often used as preservatives in Wines)
  4. Nitrates & Nitrites (Often used as preservatives in bacon, coldcuts, etc.)
  5. Nightshades (Tomatoes, Potatoes, Chilies, Eggplant, Tomatillos, etc.)
  6. Refined Sugars (Read Grain Brain by Dr. David Perlmutter)
  7. Grains (Read Grain Brain by Dr. David Perlmutter)
  8. Caffeine (Coffee, Chocolate, Teas)
  9. Genetically Modified Foods – those approved for use in US designated as such.
o   Alfalfa (US)
o   Argentine Canola (US)
o   Beans
o   Carnation
o   Chicory (US)
o   Cotton (US)
o   Creeping Bentgrass (US)
o   Eggplant
o   Flax (US)
o   Maize, i.e. corn (US)
o   Melon (US)
o   Papaya (US)
o   Petunia
o   Plum (US)
o   Polish Canola
o   Poplar
o   Potato (US)
o   Rice (US)
o   Rose (US)
o   Soybean (US)
o   Squash (US)
o   Sugar Beet (US)
o   Sugarcane
o   Sweet Pepper
o   Tobacco (US)
o   Tomato (US)
o   Wheat (US)

Your Unique List of Food Items

During my experiments, at various times, I suspected a number of foods that were on and off the list based on daily fluctuations.  Below is a sampling of my list (though only to give you a sense of how diverse a list can be).
  1. Coconut
  2. Citrus (Lemons, Oranges, Grapefruit)
  3. Beets 
  4. Swiss Chard

EXECUTION

Execution of an elimination diet is the most difficult aspect.  The starting point for this diet is usually as restrictive as you are able to accommodate.  If you think it will be too difficult to eliminate everything on the above list, I recommend starting with the minimum restrictions.
  • All items on the modified FDA list;
  • Corn, Nightshades, and Genetically Modified Foods from the alternative list; and
  • Items that you have previously identified as inflammatory for yourself.
*Note that this is not a restrictive diet, meaning you can eat as much as you want of foods that you have determined are safe.

Stick to the following regimen:

1.      Stick to the initial elimination diet for a minimum of two weeks and benchmark your health issues to see if they are getting better, worse, or staying the same. 
2.      If after two weeks your health is worse or the same…

a.       Attempt to make correlations between the remaining foods you are still consuming and ongoing symptoms (for example, if you feel great in the morning and then feel horrible in the afternoon, look at the food items consumed at lunch to draw conclusions on if a particular food item is still affecting you.  If you identify additional food items during this process, eliminate them from your diet and continue to track your progress.  Repeat this process of reviewing and eliminating foods for as many iterations as you continue to positively identify foods that cause inflammation.  Keep a list of all foods that you identify during this period.

3.      If after two weeks your health is better or after you have identified all foods that cause you irritation in Step 2a above…

a.       Start to reintroduce one food at a time that was initially excluded from the diet.  Consume this new food daily for the following 1 – 3 days, charting any aggravated symptoms during that time period.  If your symptoms increase in number, intensity, or frequency during this food reintroduction, exclude it from your list.
   
4.      Once all foods that you aggravate your symptoms have been identified and eliminated, the remaining list of good foods is your optimal diet for health. 

The Alternative Road - Diet

One of the major elements that has helped to manage my chronic illness is diet.  I began dieting back in 2006, when my father (also a physician) suggested that I might have Celiac Disease.  After eliminating gluten from my diet, I felt noticeable improvement but not complete relief - so my experiments with diet expanded.  After eight years, I have come to the conclusion that two specific diet modifications are worthy of attention for anyone traveling the alternative road.  The first modification entails eliminating any foods that caused inflammatory symptoms.  The second modification entails increasing the consumption of foods known to help the body deal with inflammation.      

REDUCING INFLAMMATION

Since 2006, I have dabbled in a number of fad diets and food restrictions. The fad diets included a Paleo Diet, a Vegan Diet, a Vegetarian Diet, a Raw Foods Diet, a Candida Diet, and the Grain Brain Diet.  Each of these diets have merit.  However, none of these diets eliminated all of the foods that I now consider inflammatory - in fact most of these diets emphasized many of the foods that I consider inflammatory.

The most useful tool in reducing inflammatory foods was a series of food restrictions that can be adequately described as an elimination diet - a modification of food habits with the intent of identifying foods that trigger inflammatory symptoms (headaches, night sweats, blurry eyes, brain fog, fatigue, etc.).  My elimination diet took eight years to develop, partly because I did not have a template to follow and partly because I didn't want to give up foods that I enjoyed eating.  It took years of ill-health to steer me away from some of my beloved foods.  Ultimately, my decision to minimize exposure to inflammatory foods opened my eyes to a world of food alternatives that are just as satisfying. 

INCREASING FOODS THAT FIGHT INFLAMMATION

To function properly, the human body needs vitamins, minerals, enzymes, fiber, and other items historically provided by food.  However, the modern western diet is largely a high-calorie, low nutrient diet, potentially resulting in nutrient and vitamin deficiency.  For thirty years, I was guilty of consuming many more simple carbohydrates and sugars than high nutrient foods like whole fruits and vegetables.  The result was a body ill-equipped to deal with inflammation.  Increasing consumption of whole fruits and vegetables is recommended by virtually every health care professional that I consulted with on my road.  And though I personally was unable to attribute specific improvement of symptoms to this modification, I do believe that my general level of health (energy level and ability to focus) improved as a result.          

IF YOU ARE SUFFERING

If you are suffering from symptoms that are attributed to inflammation (including headaches, night sweats, blurry eyes, brain fog, fatigue, etc.), I can't more highly recommend trying an elimination diet and increasing your consumption of whole fruits and vegetables.  Specifically, if you have any autoimmune disease (or symptoms that correlate to an autoimmune disease), I am confident that this diet will help alleviate some of the symptoms.  And I also believe (largely through anecdotal evidence - though in the case of neurological and heart disease there is scientific evidence) that this diet has the potential to help those suffering from other ailments that currently do not have a cure through western medicine including but not limited to Autism, Alzheimer, Dementia, ALS, Cancer, heart disease, and obesity.  I do not intend to imply diet can cure these items, only help alleviate some of the symptoms. I will provide guidance in a future post for those considering an elimination diet; and I will provide recipes and recommendations of resources in a series of future posts to help you feel satisfied while on the diet and beyond.

WHAT THE MEDICAL COMMUNITY SAYS

Sjogren's Syndrome Foundation