Guest guest Posted January 20, 2010 Report Share Posted January 20, 2010 The ketogenic diet has been around for many years. Some link it to the Bible verse of ³ fasting and prayers² because some say the ancient ketogenic diet is the way to make the body think it is fasting. s Hopkins did the research many years ago. I have old video somewhere. It did seem to help severe cases, but the fat sources were very unhealthy. If my child had life threatening seizures, I would give it a try with a holistic type doctor supervising. I wouldn¹t try it on my own. I first met Will because I was looking for help for my 7 year old dog with grand mal seizures. I lived in Uptown and the first vet gave me phenobarb. Being a good dog mom, decided to see if there was another option to phenobarb. Will didn¹t hand out phenobarb like candy. He first did labs (which cost no more $ than the first vet) and told me that my dog had TO much bad fat. My dog was overweight, had cysts, etc. It wasn¹t me feeding her, but I did feed kibble back then. My elderly neighbors loved dogs, were reluctant to get one given their age. Being a nice person, I had them take care of my dog while I was at work. They fed margarine with grocery store eggs, potato chips, etc. My dog got seizures at age 7. Once Will taught me how to feed (and I had to talk to my kind, elderly neighbors), my dog lived another 7 years seizure free. The cysts disappeared, her gray came in black. Kathy on 1/20/10 7:11 AM, JS at inishglora@... wrote: > > > > > > File this under " We could have told you that. " Note the mother's tearful > reaction to the idea of feeding all that saturated fat to her kid... Now > they're worried about his cholesterol. They'll probably put him on a regimen > of statin drugs next. Sheesh! > ~Joe > > High-Fat Diet Ends Epileptic Seizures For Boy > http://wcco.com/health/high.fat.diet.2.1436243.html > > Max Irvine is on a diet high in fat and low in carbohydrates, which has helped > eliminate the number of seizures he's had. > > A trip to the doctor is all good news these days for 4-year-old Max Irvine. > > Just a year ago, however, Max was enduring more than 100 seizures a day. Even > a barrage of tests at the famed Mayo Clinic's Epilepsy Laboratory revealed no > clear medical explanation. Epilepsy was consuming every waking hour of Max's > life. > > " It got to the point where he couldn't walk or talk or function, or even eat > hardly, " said Max's father Troy Irvine. > > Medications control epilepsy for 75 percent of children, but not for Max. His > family watched helplessly as the light disappeared from his eyes. Max's > playful nature vanished. Priceless intellectual developmental time was being > lost. > > Finally, Mayo Clinic Pediatric Neurologist Elaine Wirrell, an epilepsy > specialist, proposed trading all of Max's meds for a radical change in diet. > The Ketogenic Diet is very low in carbohydrates and super high in fats. Max's > initial diet meal plan contained 80 percent fat. > > " I just remember having tears and thinking how can I be giving my child so > much fat, " said Max's mother, e Irvine. " The majority of his meal was > bacon and butter, or oil and maybe one strawberry. It was very hard to adjust > to that. " > > Butter as an entree. Bacon as a main course. Flavored Canola oil as a > beverage. Dr. Wirrell said the strict diet is worth a try for nearly any child > who does not respond to medication. > > " Over half of them have a meaningful reduction of seizures and nearly a third > of them become seizure free on the diet, " she said. > > Exactly why the diet works is unknown. Wirrell said research suggests it > stabilizes brain cells and alters neurotransmitters, the brain chemicals that > allow cells to signal each other. The Ketogenic Diet has actually been around > since the 1920s. It was first described at the Mayo Clinic, in fact. > > An obvious question the Irvines had was whether the cholesterol would create a > new problem for Max's health. > > " We monitor the children very carefully, " Wirrell said. " We monitor their > blood for cholesterol problems. And in truth very few children actually end up > with cholesterol or lipid problems on the diet. " > > Max's remarkable improvement is documented on his EEG, an > electroencephalogram. The previous lightning storm of misfiring electrical > activity has now calmed. Max is taking no epilepsy medications and is > seizure-free. > > Wirrell said many children are able to come off the diet after getting better > and their epilepsy does not necessarily return. Max's brain is thought to have > recovered enough that he is being gradually transitioned to normal meals. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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