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Re: Milk and calcuim

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In a message dated 9/1/2004 3:02:21 PM Eastern Daylight Time,

kathymatthews@... writes:

I now have to take anywhere from 1,500-2,000 mg of calcium per day.

If not I will get very severe leg cramps.

You sure it's not a lack of potassium?

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Hi Leanne,

Can you tell us what specific brand of Calcium Citrate w/ Magnesium

you are using? Also, where do you purchase it/

Thanks!

> The only kind of calcium that works for me is calcium citrate

> combined with magnesium. Any other calcium does not work. Not

even

> coral calcium.

> Anyway, that's my two cents worth!

>

> Leanne

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Leanne

Calcium citrate is pretty good but if you are getting that much leg cramping you

may need more magnesium than calcium. Try not taking as much calcium and get a

separate magnesium and take some of it. At least equal part, say 1000 mg of

each.

Sorry to get personal, but do your bowels work fast or slow?

Kathy

leannekoren <leannekoren@...> wrote:

I don't know how an O can get by with drinking milk and actually

feeling ok. I know that I can't! I eliminated dairy from my diet

several years before going on the blood type diet because I knew

that it was causing me all kinds of allergy problems.

I now have to take anywhere from 1,500-2,000 mg of calcium per day.

If not I will get very severe leg cramps. If feels like my legs are

going to break. My 5 year old daughter is the same way.

The only kind of calcium that works for me is calcium citrate

combined with magnesium. Any other calcium does not work. Not even

coral calcium.

Anyway, that's my two cents worth!

Leanne

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kathy matthews wrote:

> Leanne

> Calcium citrate is pretty good but if you are getting that much leg

> cramping you may need more magnesium than calcium.

I would agree.

Also you can get low on magnesium if your potassium is low. Potassium

" holds " the magnesium so you do not lose it. Vit B6 is also essential

for absorption of magnesium - in fact they are an interesting pair as

each helps absorb the other :-)

(Constipation is usually magnesium deficiency. Haemorrhoids are B6

deficiency. It has to be pretty bad deficiency for either of these.)

Magnesium can't be absorbed well in presence of fat. Calcium can't be

absorbed well without fat. It pays to take them separately or to take a

big excess of the one taken with the wrong fat/no-fat environment.

.......

> leannekoren <leannekoren@...> wrote:

> I don't know how an O can get by with drinking milk and actually

> feeling ok. I know that I can't!

I know a lot of folks can not handle milk for one reason or other,

perhaps including blood type.

Maybe it's different for non-secretors? But that's just a guess, I have

no data.

> I eliminated dairy from my diet

> several years before going on the blood type diet because I knew

> that it was causing me all kinds of allergy problems.

Allergies are an interesting case however. They can only occur if you

have a skewed immune system. (Too much TH-2 cytokine hence antibody

response from bone marrow in proportion to TH-1 cytokine response from

thymus.) So then to see why you really have allergies you need to know

what skewed your immune system. Research I did at Creighton University

back in 1972 showed that whooping cough vaccination was especially bad

at triggering allergies and did so for 40% of Americans more than before

they introduced the vaccine!

It did it by having an adverse effect on the immune system, and so does

the whooping cough disease (which I had twice by age 4 - plus 6

vaccinations for it. My mother thought the more the merrier.)

This wrecked my immune system and that and the ratio of allergic kids

I saw in my work who had the disease or vaccine, is what triggered me to

do the research later.

My own immune system is not skewed like that any more (thanks to

alternative medicine techniques) and old allergies are now okay to eat.

Only my worst one I do not dare try :-))

Until the balance of immune system is restored an allergic (called

" atopic " ) person will continue to be capable of developing new or worse

allergic reactions to whatever protein their systems " see " in the blood

stream or lungs etc. If your Th-1 cytokines are working, the foreign

protein is just engulfed and tossed, without the TH-2 system going into

gear to make antibodies and hence allergy response.

The only way I can see that milk would " cause " other allergies to occur

is if it somehow compromises the gut lining by damaging it. That indeed

would allow foreign other proteins into the blood stream through the

damaged gut lining - and foreign protein will trigger allergy in an

atopic person. So looks like in your case probably the milk definitely

damages the gut lining in some way making it more " leaky " to protein?

Definitely an avoid then!

I hope you do well with your calcium, magnesium, potassium electrolyte

sources. It's not always so easy to get them right.

Namaste,

Irene

--

Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom.

P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703.

http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html

Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor.

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