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These were my exact thoughts a long time ago.

I wondered exactly the same thing. And I've never

gone along with any doctor who wanted to prescribe

anything to suppress immunity. I think that's crazy.

Junk food will not help arthritis because I have either

rheumatoid or psoriatic arthritis (apparently) and

a lot of times I got much worse after eating junk food

for a couple days.

rheumatic Diet?

> From: MHOLMES@... (HOLMES, MARK T.)

>

>

> You know what I find interesting - if the theory is that RA is caused by

> the immune system going nuts on itself and the doctors think that the way

to

> treat it is to suppress the immune system, then why do they tell us to

make

> sure and have a good diet? Seems if you ate well, you would boost your

> immune system. Under their theory, seems like junk food would be much

> better - would suppress your immune system and you should feel better

> quickly! But I don't think that most of us feel better by eating junk,

do

> we? I'll have to ask my doc next time why we're supposed to eat well, if

> we're trying to suppress the immune system.

>

> Mark

>

>

> ------------------------------------------------------------------------

> ONElist: where the world talks!

>

> Join a new list today.

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  • 2 years later...

I've been reading various things on the net today and I've seen a couple

mentions here and there about diet helping kids with apraxia. What kind

of diet is this? Is it like the wheat-free diet for kids with autism?

My little sister is autistic so I know a little about that. ..or am I

just completely mistaken?

I've read a little about the Omega-3 and Omega-6 and Omega-9 stuff. The

strange thing is... I used to give Hunter flax seed oil in his bottle

when he was younger but stopped for some reason. I just went to Whole

Foods and found some that all three omegas to put in his milk at night.

I think I need to calm down a little bit. =)

~~ Amber ~~

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Welcome Amber,

I have a different story. My son wasn't diagnosed until 4. He was in

speech therapy since 2 with little progress until he saw a Dev Ped. He

diagnosed him with a lot of things. He started seeing an OT and BOOM.

Progress. But you can look at the dx of apraxia as a big blessing. They

caught him way early and he can get the help he needs. I have never cried

over Grahams dx's I knew something was wrong and nobody listened for the

longest. When they finally did it was a relief because now we can do

something

Good Luck

from TX.

>

> I've read a little about the Omega-3 and Omega-6 and Omega-9 stuff. The

> strange thing is... I used to give Hunter flax seed oil in his bottle

> when he was younger but stopped for some reason. I just went to Whole

> Foods and found some that all three omegas to put in his milk at night.

>

> I think I need to calm down a little bit. =)

>

> ~~ Amber ~~

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Thank you, . I'm truly, truly, honestly thankful for this list and

everyone that has emailed me on and off list with support.

~~ Amber ~~

>Welcome Amber,

>I have a different story. My son wasn't diagnosed until 4. He was in

>speech therapy since 2 with little progress until he saw a Dev Ped. He

>diagnosed him with a lot of things. He started seeing an OT and BOOM.

>Progress. But you can look at the dx of apraxia as a big blessing. They

>caught him way early and he can get the help he needs. I have never cried

>over Grahams dx's I knew something was wrong and nobody listened for the

>longest. When they finally did it was a relief because now we can do

>something

>Good Luck

>

>from TX

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  • 2 years later...
Guest guest

My friend from Seattle coined this one - she fed all this (see other email for list of items) for a growth spurt once he got his Doc Band. I used it in my post as a laugh cause if the attention it received (to say the least!) is not currently on the plagio or tort boards at the moment but I'll try and talk her into joining us again! We have Angelina and married off already!

and Angelina in , B.C.

-----Original Message-----From: sueandcolin2004 [mailto:sflavin@...]Sent: Friday, June 25, 2004 8:37 AMPlagiocephaly Subject: Diet?What is this? TIASueFor more plagio info

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  • 6 years later...
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I am confused with the diet....I have Dr. G's book but the diet is unclear.  I

understand pulling dairy/casein, dyes, sugar & limiting carbs.

 

Wheat is confusing.  Some wheat is allowed, but not all?  Can someone elaborate

for me?

 

Whole grains are good or bad?

 

Are these items ok to give?

English Muffins

Cheerios

Pasta-what kind?

Bagels?

 

Thanks,

Hildy

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I know rice crispies daily for breakfast are okay and Homestyle Eggo waffles are

fine but limit to once every two weeks.

Still working on figuring it all out.

We had our first appointment with Dr. G in the beginning of March. We were so

impressed and very hopeful! Each child is different and I think Dr. G modifies

what he would allow depending on the many factors that affect our kids.

Good luck and hang in there!!

Margaret

Margaret M. Neville

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 22, 2011, at 9:55 AM, hildy gogal <hildygogal@...> wrote:

> I am confused with the diet....I have Dr. G's book but the diet is unclear. I

understand pulling dairy/casein, dyes, sugar & limiting carbs.

>

> Wheat is confusing. Some wheat is allowed, but not all? Can someone

elaborate for me?

>

> Whole grains are good or bad?

>

> Are these items ok to give?

> English Muffins

> Cheerios

> Pasta-what kind?

> Bagels?

>

> Thanks,

> Hildy

>

>

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Highly processed wheat in very small quantities is ok on occasion. Processed

because it's more easily digested and less inflammatory and allergenic that

way. We used to use sourdough bread, but we cut pretty much all of my son's

" bad " carbs (any grains or anything that's not really low glycemic) about 2

months ago, including corn and all forms of rice and he's been at his very

best ever. I've been eating that way, too, and finally some weight that's

been tough to get rid of around my middle is falling off.

Whole grains are too difficult for the body to digest.

Hope that helps some.

Kristy Nardini

Tazzini Stainless Steel Bottles

www.tazzini.com

kristy@...

858.243.1929

<http://www.facebook.com/tazzinicompany> Find us on Facebook!

<http://www.twitter.com/tazzini> Follow us on Twitter!

From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of hildy

gogal

Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2011 6:56 AM

Subject: re: diet?

I am confused with the diet....I have Dr. G's book but the diet is unclear.

I understand pulling dairy/casein, dyes, sugar & limiting carbs.

Wheat is confusing. Some wheat is allowed, but not all? Can someone

elaborate for me?

Whole grains are good or bad?

Are these items ok to give?

English Muffins

Cheerios

Pasta-what kind?

Bagels?

Thanks,

Hildy

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What carbs do you eat and how often?

Thanks,

Elaine

On 3/22/11 6:15 PM, Kristy Nardini wrote:

>

> Highly processed wheat in very small quantities is ok on occasion.

> Processed

> because it's more easily digested and less inflammatory and allergenic

> that

> way. We used to use sourdough bread, but we cut pretty much all of my

> son's

> " bad " carbs (any grains or anything that's not really low glycemic)

> about 2

> months ago, including corn and all forms of rice and he's been at his very

> best ever. I've been eating that way, too, and finally some weight that's

> been tough to get rid of around my middle is falling off.

>

> Whole grains are too difficult for the body to digest.

>

> Hope that helps some.

>

> Kristy Nardini

>

> Tazzini Stainless Steel Bottles

>

> www.tazzini.com

>

> kristy@... <mailto:kristy%40tazzini.com>

>

> 858.243.1929

>

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Guest guest

Hi Hildy,

As Kristy said, anything with whole grains is out. Dr. G also removes Cheerios.

I'd imagine that the english muffins and bagels have whole grains in them (as

this is the big trend right now), and it's difficult to find highly processed

breads/crackers, etc. Highly processed white bread (typically the cheaper it is,

the more processed it is) is your best bet if you're trying to get your child to

eat some protein in the form of a sandwich. Plain Lay's potato chips are fine,

and Dr. G told me that potato starch flour is about the least allergenic out

there if you're looking to make your own food. -- Holly

>

> I am confused with the diet....I have Dr. G's book but the diet is unclear.  I

understand pulling dairy/casein, dyes, sugar & limiting carbs.

>  

> Wheat is confusing.  Some wheat is allowed, but not all?  Can someone

elaborate for me?

>  

> Whole grains are good or bad?

>  

> Are these items ok to give?

> English Muffins

> Cheerios

> Pasta-what kind?

> Bagels?

>  

> Thanks,

> Hildy

>

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Diet as I understand it.

No dairy (some can have goats milk or soy)

No whole grains (oats, brown rice, whole wheat, etc. (this is why gluten free

substitutes are often not good))

generic white bread is a better option if you must do bread (the processing

reduces allergic response, still limit amount ... no more than 2 pieces per day)

No nuts some can have a highly processed peanut butter (peter pan I've heard is

a good option if they can handle it)

No berries, cherries or tropical fruit

No red or blue food coloring

low sugar

I would not do english muffins or bagels I would stick to generic processed

white bread (no dairy)

cheerios are a no (whole grain)... he approves of rice Krispys and corn flakes

for cereal

Pasta is iffy we avoid it for now

also avoid anything that you know your child reacts to (examples might be soy,

corn, eggs, white rice, citrus fruits, etc)

Focus on meats, veggies, some fruits, potatoes are ok

Our sons typical diet:

breakfast options

rice krispys or corn flakes (sugar) no milk (he likes it that way)

bacon (nitrate free)

turkey, chicken or pork sausage (no dairy)

eggs

french toast with generic white bread and sugar free syrup

hash browns

crepe type pancakes I make with potatoe flour and starch and garbanzo/ fava bean

flour and white rice flour

Lunch options:

apple gate farms turkey, chicken or beef hot dogs

applegate farms uncured ham (no dairy)

hard boiled egg

left over meat from night before

peas

carrots

beans

oranges

apple

grapes

banana

Snack food items:

potato chips (ruffles or pop chips, no flavors)

corn chips (fritos or tostitos... although we aren't doing these currently...

might be sensitive to corn)

snap pea crisps

pretzels (we don't do these because I think less is more when it comes to wheat)

Dinner options:

Pork, chicken, Steak, Turkey, fish, ...

Eggs and bacon

peas

beans

carrots

salad (with balsamic or italian dressing)... you could also make your own ranch

with soy or goat milk products

cole slaw

fast food (hamburger, fries at in and out or mc donalds, grilled chicken at KFC)

asparagus

brocolli

potatoes (fries, mashed, baked, etc)

we dont do noodles but I think they are allowed for some (they do make white

rice noodles)

Dessert

Home made rice krispy bars (with no dairy/no soy margarin... earth balance)

merengue cookies (we buy these at trader joes)

soy/goats milk ice cream (if they tolerate either of those)

sugar free lollypops (not red)

white jelly bellies

pillsbury sugar cookies some times (i try to not do these very often... I try to

stay away from too much wheat products even if processed)

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Guest guest

This diet that lists has worked well for us, as she said. And when I

look at the list it makes me aware of how the diet, though restricted, is not so

narrow that there aren't good options. We found that initially it feels like

real deprivation, then you realize there's more there than you initially

thought.

If you printed and posted it to your fridge, you would definitely be staying

inside Dr. G's safe zone.

Sent from my iPhone

On Mar 23, 2011, at 11:20 AM, " Pedersen " <mpedestrian@...>

wrote:

> Diet as I understand it.

>

> No dairy (some can have goats milk or soy)

> No whole grains (oats, brown rice, whole wheat, etc. (this is why gluten free

substitutes are often not good))

> generic white bread is a better option if you must do bread (the processing

reduces allergic response, still limit amount ... no more than 2 pieces per day)

> No nuts some can have a highly processed peanut butter (peter pan I've heard

is a good option if they can handle it)

> No berries, cherries or tropical fruit

> No red or blue food coloring

> low sugar

>

> I would not do english muffins or bagels I would stick to generic processed

white bread (no dairy)

> cheerios are a no (whole grain)... he approves of rice Krispys and corn flakes

for cereal

> Pasta is iffy we avoid it for now

>

> also avoid anything that you know your child reacts to (examples might be soy,

corn, eggs, white rice, citrus fruits, etc)

> Focus on meats, veggies, some fruits, potatoes are ok

>

> Our sons typical diet:

>

> breakfast options

> rice krispys or corn flakes (sugar) no milk (he likes it that way)

> bacon (nitrate free)

> turkey, chicken or pork sausage (no dairy)

> eggs

> french toast with generic white bread and sugar free syrup

> hash browns

> crepe type pancakes I make with potatoe flour and starch and garbanzo/ fava

bean flour and white rice flour

>

> Lunch options:

> apple gate farms turkey, chicken or beef hot dogs

> applegate farms uncured ham (no dairy)

> hard boiled egg

> left over meat from night before

> peas

> carrots

> beans

> oranges

> apple

> grapes

> banana

>

> Snack food items:

> potato chips (ruffles or pop chips, no flavors)

> corn chips (fritos or tostitos... although we aren't doing these currently...

might be sensitive to corn)

> snap pea crisps

> pretzels (we don't do these because I think less is more when it comes to

wheat)

>

> Dinner options:

> Pork, chicken, Steak, Turkey, fish, ...

> Eggs and bacon

> peas

> beans

> carrots

> salad (with balsamic or italian dressing)... you could also make your own

ranch with soy or goat milk products

> cole slaw

> fast food (hamburger, fries at in and out or mc donalds, grilled chicken at

KFC)

> asparagus

> brocolli

> potatoes (fries, mashed, baked, etc)

> we dont do noodles but I think they are allowed for some (they do make white

rice noodles)

>

> Dessert

> Home made rice krispy bars (with no dairy/no soy margarin... earth balance)

> merengue cookies (we buy these at trader joes)

> soy/goats milk ice cream (if they tolerate either of those)

> sugar free lollypops (not red)

> white jelly bellies

>

> pillsbury sugar cookies some times (i try to not do these very often... I try

to stay away from too much wheat products even if processed)

>

>

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