Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 I thought members of this forum would be interested in our experience of the OAT, hence I am forwarding the post I sent to the HAand glycine forum. Grandfather of Luke I have only just learned about this forum from Owens and I would like to tell you about our recent experience of the Organic Acid Test (OAT). My daughter recently received the results of the OAT on the urine sample taken from her son Luke (aged 4) on December 11th. We were shocked by the results which showed 23 high levels, compared with only two high levels last July. The worst level was hippuric acid at 10,738 (range 10-400) which compares with 2,169 last July. This was so worrying that I decided to investigate this test more closely. The first thing I found was that, according to Mark Newman of US Biotek, the adult ranges used by Great Plains lab are INAPROPRIATE FOR CHILDREN! Child levels are often higher than adult ones. As a retired chemist familiar with the techniques used in such analyses, I identified the key feature of these analyses as the reference compound, creatinine, used. If the level of creatinine varies this would make the results unreliable. Creatinine levels vary with a person's size and muscle mass and also are a function of renal efficiency. So OAT results can be used to follow TRENDS for a given person provided the renal efficiency does not vary. Hippuric acid is a metabolite of benzoic acid which has three main sources: gut bacteria, food (sodium benzoate is a common preservative) and the solvent toluene. Luke has a very limited diet. He is on a GF/CF diet and only eats spaghetti, spinach and potato, prunes sweetened with pear puree, cereal, rice or corn crackers with peanut butter or marg, pear bars, banana (occasionally), potato crisps and home made pizza. He only drinks water and soya milk. I don't think food is a major source of benzoic acid. Luke's environment is very closely controlled because my daughter has been running the Sun Rise programme since last February and Luke spends 7 days a week in the play room. Exposure to toluene is unlikely. The only unusual thing that happened a few days before the urine sample was taken was that Luke started tearing the wallpaper off the wall and sucking it!! So a bacterial source is most likely. The last stool test (August) showed beneficial flora: Bifidobacter 1+ (low), E. Coli 4+, Lactobacillus 1+ (low); neutral flora: Gamma Strep 2+, Klebsiella species 2+; yeast none; no ova or parasites; rare yeast. However that was several months ago and the December OAT is positive for yeast/fungal and bacterial presence. Our DAN doctor has suggested the OAT be repeated. I conclude with a question: does anyone know which bacteria are associated with benzoic acid? (in UK) --- End forwarded message --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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