Guest guest Posted April 15, 2005 Report Share Posted April 15, 2005 >Anyonbe have any information on the connection between Low-Card diets and gastrointestinal problems/diarrhea? > >- Usually low-carb diets tend to be associated with constipation at first, but a lot of folks on low-carb diets end up eating a lot of cheese and eggs, both of which can be allergenic for some folks. And as others have mentioned, the low carb fake foods can do nasty things. Also some folks don't digest fats very well, and the added fat in the diet can set people off. I used to have a real problem digesting fats, as did my dh, and a high-fat meals were just plain excruciating. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2005 Report Share Posted April 15, 2005 >Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: >Also some folks don't digest fats very well, and the added fat in the diet can set people >off. I used to have a real problem digesting fats, as did my dh, and a high-fat meals >were just plain excruciating. > Heidi, How long did it take you to digest fats without problems? My wife has the same issue with fatty foods. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2005 Report Share Posted April 15, 2005 In addition to what everyone else has said, I cured a lifelong case of irritable bowel syndrome by going on Atkins 23 months ago. And lost 120 pounds, too. <G> My digestive system has never been healthier. Christie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2005 Report Share Posted April 15, 2005 >Heidi, >How long did it take you to digest fats without problems? >My wife has the same issue with fatty foods. > > I think about a year. First I switched from animal fats (and canola ... yecch .. THAT is a bad fat for folks with digestive issues! It even gives cows diarrhea) to coconut oil. Then I started taking HCL and enzymes, which worked fine as long as I took them with every meal. Then I started eating kimchi with each meal, and could cut down on enzymes. Then I started doing the warrior diet, not eating much during the day, which seems to make you " save up " your enzymes til the evening (I don't know this for a fact, but that's what it seemed like). After a year or so, the HCL started giving me heartburn, which is a sign you are taking too much. So I cut it out. Now I can eat a nice fatty steak no problem. I do tend to have red wine with dinner though, and red wine also helps marvelously in the digestion department. Not to belabor the obvious to those who know me, but during this time I also had gone gluten-free, which in my case was likely the underlying cause of lack of HCL and enzymes in the first place. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 >>>>>>>>>>>>> After a year or so, the HCL started giving me heartburn, which is a sign you are taking too much. So I cut it out. Now I can eat a nice fatty steak no problem. I do tend to have red wine with dinner though, and red wine also helps marvelously in the digestion department. Not to belabor the obvious to those who know me, but during this time I also had gone gluten-free, which in my case was likely the underlying cause of lack of HCL and enzymes in the first place. Heidi >>>>>>>>>>> Hi Heidi and and all, When you talk about gastric distress in digesting fats, I was wondering how the liver fits into this? I'm no science expert but I thought that fats went through the liver for assimilation (?) and so are necessarily " hard " on the liver... I ask about fats and the liver because, alas!, I have no stomach acid and so take HCl and enzymes and so on.. I only dream of having my stomach someday " burn " :-) My symptoms of " distress " after almost any meal is extreme fatigue. Maybe the stmach working extra hard? Or the liver? Can you explain why I would have such almost instant fatigue after eating? Thanks. ~Robin Ps. By the way, I have almost identical " issues " as you do with food, Heidi. Sheesh! Milk protiens, glutin, and now you talk about fats... Let's just say that I can relate.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 >Robin: > >Hi Heidi and and all, >When you talk about gastric distress in digesting fats, I was wondering how >the liver fits into this? I'm no science expert but I thought that fats went >through the liver for assimilation (?) and so are necessarily " hard " on the >liver... I ask about fats and the liver because, alas!, I have no stomach >acid and so take HCl and enzymes and so on.. I only dream of having my >stomach someday " burn " :-) My symptoms of " distress " after almost any meal >is extreme fatigue. Maybe the stmach working extra hard? Or the liver? Can >you explain why I would have such almost instant fatigue after eating? Your liver produces gall, which goes into the gall bladder. Gall is what breaks down fats (it acts like a detergent). If you eat more fat, it needs to produce more gall, but I don't know that this is hard on the liver. Often the gall bladder gets blocked, or the liver gets damaged, and then you don't have enough gall and can't digest the fat. Mostly though, the liver processes sugar and turns it into fat. I don't know that a high-fat diet makes for more work on it. Ingested fat isn't broken down much ... it goes straight to your cells for storage or used for energy. As for fatigue after meals ... it's a lot of work for your body to break down food. Plus some foods (notably starches) make you sleepy, as does tryptophan (turkey). Maybe if a person has leaky gut the proteins or whatever affect your brain more too. It's one of those OTHER problems we share though! I solved it by doing the WD ... I just don't eat when I need to be awake. I also keep in mind that most carnivores crash for a long nap after a big meal! Actually my goats do too, and they aren't carnivores. Of course I ALSO like to have wine with my meal, which really helps in the digestion department, but also puts me to sleep regardless of the other factors! Interestingly, my dd is now insisting on kefir cider with her dinner, because she says if she doesn't drink it she gets a " sore stomach " at night. I make a lightly fermented brew for the family. >Thanks. ~Robin > >Ps. By the way, I have almost identical " issues " as you do with food, Heidi. >Sheesh! Milk protiens, glutin, and now you talk about fats... Let's just say >that I can relate.. Weird how that works, isn't it???? Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 > Not to belabor the obvious to those who know me, but during this time I also had gone gluten-free, which in my case was likely the underlying cause of lack of HCL and enzymes in the first place. > > > Heidi Jean Hmmm...so you're saying that being gluten-intolerant caused you to fail to produce HCl and enzymes? How does that work? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 >>> I just don't eat when I need to be awake. I also keep in mind that most carnivores crash for a long nap after a big meal! Heidi >>>>>>> Hi Heidi, Thanks. Just a thought here: Why do I get the idea that you, and probably most (?) people on this list, are pretty lean types... It's incredible, really!, how much self-control many of us here have learned to take for granted. Despite our digestive problems (and probably as a result of them!,) while the rest of the developed world struggles with controlling appetites to stop weight gain, we're saying things like " I just don't eat when I need to be awake " ; I say this because, like you, that's pretty much how I approach it too -- I don't eat much if I have to work right after. Of course, I've had to work to modify my schedule to accommodate this resting requirement -- otherwise I'd be emaciated.. What I'm getting at is that because of our various afflictions and because of our commitment to real healing (not just band aids,) we've learned to control our appetites -- well, at least for the most part -- and that's got to be a huge step in the direction of good health. We are thinking before we eat. In fact, at least at first, we are processing so much information before we take a bite that it is dizzying!!!! And interesting you bring up our animals; Of course they almost all rest after a meal. Which made me think of the siesta. I've always admired Latin cultures with the big meal in the middle of the day and of course the famous siesta after. I lived in Mexico City one summer when I was 16 and it blew me away! Sure, there's too much starch in their mainstream diet but the biggest starch meal (at least in the lower-class family I lived with,) was the late meal at 8 pm or so? Before bed they'd bring out all these rolls.... In fact, as elsewhere, more fresh vegetables and proteins were an outcome of being in a higher class or of having a greater monetary income. I love wine with my meals too, Heidi, and am lucky to live smack dab in the middle of California wine country -- although I love your Washington Pinots! I had to stop drinking wine for a while when I was worried about a possible fungal overgrowth. (I hated giving up my Pilsner Urquell beer the most though...) Now I need to keep alcohol to a minimum because I'm still on a sh-t l--d of parasite medicine -- it's absolute poison!!! I have two weeks to go and the good news is that since I've never done a huge parasite cleanse like this (40 days, 12 capsules a day of Worm Squirm) I'm hoping it'll prove to have eliminated some of these complaints I speak of. You never know! Anyway, I think my biggest problem was not just an h. pylori bacterial infection that went crazy but that I was already every-which-way-messed up for a long time as I was living in a pretty fast lane (network television in the 80's?) 'Twas pretty outrageous (but fun!) there for quite awhile. I took my good health and strong energy for granted. As one doctor told me, " You have to have had a pretty strong constitution to get yourself this messed up " and another who said, " You've got to stop letting your will drag your body around! " Now, like you and others here, I think, I'm using my will-power to get, not just well but, better then well! :-) ~Robin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 >Hmmm...so you're saying that being gluten-intolerant caused you to fail >to produce HCl and enzymes? > >How does that work? > > I'm not sure of the etiology, but in general, gluten intolerance causes the body to produce antibodies that attack bodily organs, like the liver, thyroid, pancreas, etc. When you stop eating gluten, the antibodies stop being produced. But the antibodies damage the organs and then they don't function well (which is what happens in T1 diabetes too). The liver is one organ that commonly gets damaged, along with the pancreas, and those are your two major enzyme producers. With HCL it gets more complicated though: there are feedback loops with the upper intestine that regulate how much HCL gets produced, and gluten intolerant folks tend to have VERY MESSED UP upper intestines. Also with the gall bladder, the opening to the gall bladder gets inflamed, where it opens into the small intestine. That isn't surprising, since the whole upper intestine gets inflamed. But then the bile can't empty out into the intestine, so you don't digest fat. Actually the other enzymes empty into the upper intestine too, so maybe a similar thing holds for them too. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 Robin >Hi Heidi, Thanks. Just a thought here: Why do I get the idea that you, and >probably most (?) people on this list, are pretty lean types... Ha! I wish! I WAS lean most of my life, in spite of eating a lot, but that changed dramatically when I started getting more gluten symptoms, and I gained about 70 lbs. I've lost a lot of that now. > It's >incredible, really!, how much self-control many of us here have learned to >take for granted. Despite our digestive problems (and probably as a result >of them!,) while the rest of the developed world struggles with controlling >appetites to stop weight gain, we're saying things like " I just don't eat >when I need to be awake " ; I say this because, like you, that's pretty much >how I approach it too -- I don't eat much if I have to work right after. Of >course, I've had to work to modify my schedule to accommodate this resting >requirement -- otherwise I'd be emaciated.. What I'm getting at is that >because of our various afflictions and because of our commitment to real >healing (not just band aids,) we've learned to control our appetites -- Actually a lot of my experimenting is because I could NOT control my appetite! I was ravenously hungry ALWAYS even when I didn't give in to said hunger. I started experimenting with food, thinking " if I can just eat a breakfast that will keep me OK til lunch I'll be ok! " . But I'd crash and really be unable to function without constant snacking. Took 2-3 years to figure out something that would work. The WD is what finally did it, in combination with avoiding allergenic foods (the WD doesn't work for me the day after I get a food reaction ... nothing helps). But if you are always slim, in our culture, it's a good bet you aren't absorbing your food right. Some people go the other direction though: they can't absorb their food so the body goes into " store every bit of fat I can " mode and they get outrageously fat, even though they are also horridly malnourished. >well, at least for the most part -- and that's got to be a huge step in the >direction of good health. We are thinking before we eat. In fact, at least >at first, we are processing so much information before we take a bite that >it is dizzying!!!! Yeah sister! I admire anyone who can step back and *analyze* their food and try to get a handle on the whole thing. It is very, very complicated. More complicated because even the researchers aren't sure what is " true " yet. >And interesting you bring up our animals; Of course they almost all rest >after a meal. > >Which made me think of the siesta. I've always admired Latin cultures with >the big meal in the middle of the day and of course the famous siesta after. >I lived in Mexico City one summer when I was 16 and it blew me away! Sure, >there's too much starch in their mainstream diet but the biggest starch meal >(at least in the lower-class family I lived with,) was the late meal at 8 pm >or so? Before bed they'd bring out all these rolls.... In fact, as >elsewhere, more fresh vegetables and proteins were an outcome of being in a >higher class or of having a greater monetary income. That's true today because of harvesting machines. In the past 2 centuries, po' folk lived off cabbage and collard greens and pork fat ... richer folk got the rolls and sugar, both were luxury items. Also the folks in cities got them. But any ol' hardscrabble dirt farmer can grow collards and keep a pig, and talking to some of the old timers, they talk about living off collards and whatever greens they could gather, plus whatever they could shoot (squirrels, snakes, possum) and their pork fat from the yearly pig. This idea of " cheap grains " is fairly new. Try growing and harvesting some, and doing the same with potatoes and collards, and you'll see what I mean! When folks started moving to the cities though, it became too expensive to transport vegies and meat (esp. without refrigeration) so grains became more of a mainstay. The same thing happened to the Maya and other crowded cultures: once people start living close together, they have to rely more and more on grains, and their health goes downhill. >I love wine with my meals too, Heidi, and am lucky to live smack dab in the >middle of California wine country -- although I love your Washington Pinots! >I had to stop drinking wine for a while when I was worried about a possible >fungal overgrowth. (I hated giving up my Pilsner Urquell beer the most >though...) Now I need to keep alcohol to a minimum because I'm still on a >sh-t l--d of parasite medicine -- it's absolute poison!!! I have two weeks >to go and the good news is that since I've never done a huge parasite >cleanse like this (40 days, 12 capsules a day of Worm Squirm) I'm hoping >it'll prove to have eliminated some of these complaints I speak of. You >never know! Maybe someday you should try the Pascalite for parasites. I have no idea if it works, but it might. It seems to do a nice job on fungi, and even if it blocks some nutrients (maybe) it isn't toxic at all. I started taking it with my evening meal as an experiment. No side effects except the meal goes down REALLY easy. >Anyway, I think my biggest problem was not just an h. pylori bacterial >infection that went crazy but that I was already every-which-way-messed up >for a long time as I was living in a pretty fast lane (network television in >the 80's?) 'Twas pretty outrageous (but fun!) there for quite awhile. I took >my good health and strong energy for granted. As one doctor told me, " You >have to have had a pretty strong constitution to get yourself this messed >up " and another who said, " You've got to stop letting your will drag your >body around! " I like that quote! Yeah, I was determined when I was younger NOT to let my body control my life! My WILL would conquer all. Not! >Now, like you and others here, I think, I'm using my will-power to get, not >just well but, better then well! :-) Hey, and with all that network-television brainpower you'll be able to do good research and teach others! > Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2005 Report Share Posted April 18, 2005 >>>>>>>>>> Actually a lot of my experimenting is because I could NOT control my appetite! I was ravenously hungry ALWAYS even when I didn't give in to said hunger. Heidi >>>>>>>>>> That is exactly how I was before I got sick and then started to get well. Always hungry. Always eating. Especially good French bread, cheese and beer -- all things I now (darn!) can't really tolerate.. >>>>>>>>> But if you are always slim, in our culture, it's a good bet you aren't absorbing your food right. Heidi >>>>>>>>>>>>> And that was me too. No one could believe how I could consume 3000+ calories or more a day and was always slim. Always the same Size 6 at 5'6 " no matter what. People thought it was because of my musculature. When I was hospitalized with the bacteria-caused ulcer and got even sicker due to the messed up treatment, no matter what I ate, it wouldn't stay on. I lost 20 pounds, down to 105, in a month and looked Very Scary. I started researching like a Banshee and once I started using the information, my body started responding and not only did I " miraculously " gain the weight back quickly, I noticed that I was only eating about 1300 calories a day and staying my same size. If I ate a calorie over that, it seemed, it would go on as body fat and it was clear that Very Soon my clothes weren't going to fit me at all -- Amazing! This had never happened to me. When I realized that it was probably because I was finally absorbing my food, that got me even more interested in all this NN stuff. I was so dumb I didn't even notice how thin my hair was getting or that I was a nervous wreck. I was out of balance big-time. It all seems so obvious in retrospect but when you're " In It " I guess you can't see the proverbial forest for the trees.. But I was lucky that I didn't have to worry about the old appetite thing getting me too far into trouble because, when I quit the carbs, I started eating a LOT more saturated fat and because of the fat, I simply wasn't hungry (for hours!!!) which was a new concept. In the old days, i wasn't someone who wanted the food for taste or emotional reasons -- I didn't LOVE food for example. My huge appetite and amazing food intake was based on the fact that I was just darned hungry and weak and wanted more fuel like you were saying, Heidi. (I also must confess that I met someone with my same health condition when I was sick who was horrified after being 20 Pounds Underweight to suddenly find herself 35 Pounds Overweight. I wasn't going to let that happen to me. Buy all new clothes?! Ack!! ~Robin Ps. While writing this post I ate a bowl of fabulous ham-hock stock with lots of garlic and onions and two egg yolks thrown in at the last minute so they're warm but still raw. This is a Very Big Change for me.... :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.