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Re: adult ADD and diet

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A friend lent my dh a book on adult ADD. DH read some of it and looked up at

me with this shock of recognition -- " This book is all about you! " he said. I

read the common traits and diagnostic questions (i know, it's only a book)

and felt the same shock. Although I'm very skeptical of the whole diagnosis

of ADD (but also quite ignorant), it does succinctly explain so many

hardships and challenges i have faced my entire life.

I know Katja said her husband's ADD symptoms lessened quite a bit by going

gluten-free. Or was it grain-free?

What other dietary changes have been shown to relieve adult ADD? (besides

the obvious of removing processed foods). What experience does anyone have

with Adderall (sp?).

Tia,

Elaine

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> What other dietary changes have been shown to relieve adult ADD? (besides

> the obvious of removing processed foods).

>

> Tia,

> Elaine

Recently read that niacin helped children who's school nature was lack of

attention span, unable to sit still, fidgety, nervous. Book is from '82. Was

considered subclinical pellagra not ADD, which is not mentioned. Knowing

you're a protein metabolic type, niacinamide is better than niacin. Niacin

gives protein types the flush side effect in higher supplementation the carb

types won't get with it and it speeds the already fast metabolism. 100 mg.

niacinamide was part of the supplement program Wiley in Biobalance gave to

all his fast oxidizing, protein types.

Wanita

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>I know Katja said her husband's ADD symptoms lessened quite a bit by going

>gluten-free. Or was it grain-free?

People use " grain " and " gluten " kind of interchangably ... which isn't

very accurate. But then the term " gluten " isn't accurate either. Wheat,

barley, and rye are the main culprits ... there is a peptide chain in them

that is basically indigestable and really does affect some people's brains.

What I've found, and Katja too, I think, is that when you drop wheat/barley/rye

the whole grain thing seems less appealing, it's just too much work. Our diet

centers more around potatoes now: we grew some this year, they taste

good, and they don't need soaking etc. I do make bread for snacks though,

with rice/potato flour.

>What other dietary changes have been shown to relieve adult ADD? (besides

>the obvious of removing processed foods). What experience does anyone have

>with Adderall (sp?).

Actually not all processed foods cause problems, at least not for all people.

Casein is the other big offender, followed by corn, eggs, soy. Myself I just

avoid gluten and casein (mostly: casein isn't as problematic as gluten by

a long shot). Large amounts of, say, gluten free brownies don't cause

a problem though, even though they are obviously not healthy.

Fish oil, fried anchovies, kimchi, ginko all seem to help though, and coffee.

I've never taken any drugs for mental issues, they scare me. Going GF

removed the " mental fog " that I've fought most of my life though, and

it comes back if I get any gluten at all.

>

Heidi Jean

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At 05:36 PM 10/10/2004, you wrote:

>A friend lent my dh a book on adult ADD. DH read some of it and looked up at

>me with this shock of recognition -- " This book is all about you! " he said. I

>read the common traits and diagnostic questions (i know, it's only a book)

>and felt the same shock. Although I'm very skeptical of the whole diagnosis

>of ADD (but also quite ignorant), it does succinctly explain so many

>hardships and challenges i have faced my entire life.

>

>I know Katja said her husband's ADD symptoms lessened quite a bit by going

>gluten-free. Or was it grain-free?

we went gluten free, but we also don't eat any grains. very very recently,

we've introduced pamela's gluten-free pancake mix (which we let sour

overnight) for special occasions, but that's about it. and the symptoms

were gone within about a week. presto. more below --

>What other dietary changes have been shown to relieve adult ADD? (besides

>the obvious of removing processed foods). What experience does anyone have

>with Adderall (sp?).

i should note that we do not eat ANY processed food whatsoever, with the

brand new exception of pamela's. (only once a month though). and we do have

coconut cream sometimes too, which i guess also counts as processed. other

than that i make everything from scratch. dr. feingold found that salicytes

(sp?) also can affect ADD, as well as preservatives and colorings. so, if

you want to go crazy, go gluten free, casein free, tomato and almond free,

and processed food free for two weeks, and then start adding back first

almond, then tomato, then casein, and whatever minimal processed food you

*require*. never add back in gluten. whatever you react to, stays out

permanently.

as for the drugs, just stay away. he tried ritalin, adderal, and some of

the generics, and there are pretty crappy side effects.

-katja

>Tia,

>Elaine

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