Guest guest Posted May 27, 2005 Report Share Posted May 27, 2005 --- In , " Nenah Sylver " <nenah@b...> wrote: > There's a wonderful book called Dangerous Grains, written by a doctor and > one of his colleagues, which discusses celiac disease and other maladies > that are not specifically celiac, but which are all the result of gluten > intolerance. > > > The one thing the authors do NOT discuss is the distinction between natural > and adulterated foods: pasteurized and homogenized dairy versus raw and/or > raw fermented dairy, and conventionally prepared grains versus soaked or > sprouted grains. I doubt that the same high illness statistics would show up > if the grain and dairy were properly prepared. > Nevertheless, I think that there are some people who simply don't do well on > grains and/or dairy, no matter how they are prepared. Each one of us is so > individual. > > Best, > Nenah > Nenah, The gluten intolerant are intolerant of the main proteins in gluten grains. No amount of preparation with natural products will change the gluten to it's component amino acids. Stanford scientists are working on a recombinant peptide that will break the bonds of the amino acids in the 33 amino acid chain in gluten that is the problem, but they are at least 15 years from market. No humans actually can break down gluten to amino acids in the digestive system. This means that the gluten, which sticks to the villi on the lining of the gut by its own nature, is affecting everyone who eats it. It just doesn't cause the antibodies, immunoglobulins and T cells of some people (60%) to also destroy those villi. I sure would love it if I could look forward to eating bread again, but the bottom line is that even when the Stanford product is ready, it will probably be most useful for eating out and cross contamination/accidental ingestion of gluten. Gluten breaks down to an opiod - having a " drug-like " effect and making it very very difficult to even think that bread/flour/wheat is just rat poison. Connie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2005 Report Share Posted May 27, 2005 connie, i'm really wondering about something. what you said, you are implying then that gluten is not a food per se as we can't digest it, that no one can digest it. and yet gluten is in so many foods...taking away grains containing gluten from the human race would take away a LOT of food. there is something i really want to know and i will probably be jumped on here. SOMETHING is missing here. gluten is in a lot of worldwide foods...yet we can't digest it. first of all, is this REALLY true? either it is or it isn't. IS IT POSSIBLE THAT THE MISSING LINK HERE IS DIGESTIVE HEALTH AND SOIL ORGANISMS??? did any of you read that long article i posted the links of, that someone originally posted over on rawdairy? as you all probably know anyhow, the current state of digestive flora is ABYSSMAL. taking soil organisms is supposed to RESTORE the flora we no longer have because of antibiotics, dead soil, chlorinated water, etc. i started taking them a few months ago. before that, milk would give me gas and diarrhea. now i can drink lots of milk. and i do!! in my most hurried and busy days i live on raw milk and cream. and i love it!!! and i don't think that is a coincidence!!!! i'm telling you, more than one glass of milk would give me horrible gas and diarrhea. now i can drink a quart of milk or more per day. and i do! before i could only tolerate kefir in larger quantities and even then i had to watch it... the article said these organisms digest things for us!! that they SHOULD be living in us to help us digest, among other things!! but what about gluten? do these bacteria digest gluten for us in our gut? what if they do? maybe gluten intolerance is a combination of lack of these bacteria that are SUPPOSED to be living in us anyway to do this for us!! that and the damage that is done to the gut lining when we DON'T have these bacteria to digest for us and heal us...yes, when you start taking them they HEAL you as well. i'm not giving up on this idea. i just don't buy the fact that wapf says raw milk and soaked, sprouted, fermented grains are good for you, and that so many of us can't tolerate them. WHY?????? i'm not letting go of this possible solution until i find out the truth!! laura in nj p.s. i'll repost the link if you want. i just ordered a bottle of them. currently i take Garden of Life Primal Defense HSO's (homeostatic soil organisms.) you have to go easy. my gut was in such bad shape the first pill gave me diarrhea. now i can take the recommended 3 pills per day with no problem at all. but if i skip a few days...and take a pill...i'm loose again if you get my drift. so i'm starting to lose those bacteria in only a few days and have to keep taking them daily. but i have so much more energy...i had border line chronic fatigue. the hso's are supposed to help chronic fatigue. i'm telling you, there is something to this! maybe these are the solution i've been looking for for the past 30 years?? maybe it's too soon to tell. > The gluten intolerant are intolerant of the main proteins in gluten > grains. No amount of preparation with natural products will change > the gluten to it's component amino acids. Stanford scientists are > working on a recombinant peptide that will break the bonds of the > amino acids in the 33 amino acid chain in gluten that is the > problem, but they are at least 15 years from market. > > No humans actually can break down gluten to amino acids in the > digestive system. This means that the gluten, which sticks to the > villi on the lining of the gut by its own nature, is affecting > everyone who eats it. It just doesn't cause the antibodies, > immunoglobulins and T cells of some people (60%) to also destroy > those villi. > > I sure would love it if I could look forward to eating bread again, > but the bottom line is that even when the Stanford product is ready, > it will probably be most useful for eating out and cross > contamination/accidental ingestion of gluten. > > Gluten breaks down to an opiod - having a " drug-like " effect and > making it very very difficult to even think that bread/flour/wheat > is just rat poison. > > Connie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2005 Report Share Posted May 27, 2005 > Gluten Intolerance, continued > > >There's a wonderful book called Dangerous Grains, written by a doctor and >one of his colleagues, which discusses celiac disease and other maladies >that are not specifically celiac, but which are all the result of gluten >intolerance. > >The book is quite comprehensive, loaded with studies (I thought of >you, Suze >;-) but written in a kind of " popular " style that's quite accessible. Good bet, I bought that book a few years ago! :-) > >The one thing the authors do NOT discuss is the distinction >between natural >and adulterated foods: pasteurized and homogenized dairy versus raw and/or >raw fermented dairy, and conventionally prepared grains versus soaked or >sprouted grains. I doubt that the same high illness statistics >would show up >if the grain and dairy were properly prepared. I don't know about dairy, as I think there's far less info available re dairy tolerance. But if one has the gluten intolerant genes, there's not much that can be done to the gluten grains to make them tolerable, UNLESS the gliadin fraction (the most problematic gluten protein), which is something like a 33 amino acid sequence, is broken down into single amino acids or MUCH shorter peptide chains so that it's no longer recognizable as gliadin. There is only one study I know of in which the researchers were able to rid the sourdough bread of gluten via fermentation. However, there is no such product on the market yet, and no one knows if their home fermented gluten grains are appropriately broken down unless they repeatedly test them, so it's generally not a good idea to experiment, especially since the damage is so often silent and thus one cannot go by symptomology alone. That doesn't mean it's not possible to rid gluten grain products of gluten, only that no one knows excactly what it takes to do so on a regular basis. >It's also true that once the leaky gut is repaired, the intestinal flora >re-balanced, and all the glands and organs functioning correctly, the >ability to tolerate foods increases. This is true, but I believe the IgA reaction to gluten actually takes place in the gut, or I think that's the primary location of reaction. The Glutenator can correct me if I'm wrong. > >Nevertheless, I think that there are some people who simply don't >do well on >grains and/or dairy, no matter how they are prepared. Each one of us is so >individual. So true. I think this is really what it comes down to. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- “The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times.” -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 27, 2005 Report Share Posted May 27, 2005 > There is only one study I know of in which the researchers were able to rid > the sourdough bread of gluten via fermentation. is it POSSIBLE that this could happen in the gut...if you had the right bacterial flora? fermentation happens because of BACTERIA (and yeast). don't you think all these wapf healthy people who consumed gluten (wheat, rice, rye, corn, etc.) might have had the right bact. flora in their gut to do this? and that's why there's so many gluten intolerant people? because we have lost the right flora in our gut? i think i might be onto something. or i could be way off. laura in nj Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 VERY interesting discussion. I have Crohn's disease, (in a way more serious than celiac, since celiacers can simply avoid gluten (I know it's not that simple!) while carbless diet does not necessarily lead to Crohn's remission), and so I've thought about leaky gut and probiotics, and inflammatory mediators etc (though believe me I'm no expert).. The SCD diet, which is a version of a no-grain diet, helped me for a week or so, but then my flare got worse. Those were my pre-wapf days, these days if I got a flare I'd probably modify that diet a la wapf, but I think I would stay no-grain, especially wheat (rice I guess is OK for many celiacs BTW, a couple of other grains as well I think). I'm on the fence about the homeostatic soil organisms. From what I've read on this list they're basically the usual probiotics. If I remember Rubin's book he doesn't go into detail about their composition or how he makes them, but I could be remembering wrong, wouldn't be the first time. I don't know which ones were where during whichever period and place that people age fermented grains a lot (did they ever really eat a lOT?). Also, if we can keep chickens in the city, why can't we just put those organisms back in our backyard gardens instead of buying capsules from Garden of Life. I'm sure we have loads of digestive difficulties due to probiotic imbalances (among others), but I have my doubts it's as simple as if we only had the right probiotics we wouldn't have gluten intolerances. But, as you say, I may be way off. Blank On 5/27/05, laurainnewjersey <laurabusse@...> wrote: > > There is only one study I know of in which the researchers were able > to rid > > the sourdough bread of gluten via fermentation. > > > is it POSSIBLE that this could happen in the gut...if you had the right > bacterial flora? fermentation happens because of BACTERIA (and yeast). > > don't you think all these wapf healthy people who consumed gluten > (wheat, rice, rye, corn, etc.) might have had the right bact. flora in > their gut to do this? and that's why there's so many gluten intolerant > people? because we have lost the right flora in our gut? > > i think i might be onto something. or i could be way off. > > laura in nj > > > > > > > <HTML><!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC " -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN " > " http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd " ><BODY><FONT > FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " > > <B>IMPORTANT ADDRESSES</B> > <UL> > <LI><B><A > HREF= " / " >NATIVE > NUTRITION</A></B> online</LI> > <LI><B><A HREF= " http://onibasu.com/ " >SEARCH</A></B> the entire message > archive with Onibasu</LI> > </UL></FONT> > <PRE><FONT FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " ><B><A > HREF= " mailto: -owner " >LIST > OWNER:</A></B> Idol > <B>MODERATORS:</B> Heidi Schuppenhauer > Wanita Sears > </FONT></PRE> > </BODY> > </HTML> > > > ________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 --- In , Blank <john.blank@g...> wrote: > > I'm on the fence about the homeostatic soil organisms. From what I've > read on this list they're basically the usual probiotics. If I > remember Rubin's book he doesn't go into detail about their > composition or how he makes them, but I could be remembering wrong, > wouldn't be the first time. I don't know which ones were where > during whichever period and place that people age fermented grains a > lot (did they ever really eat a lOT?). Also, if we can keep chickens > in the city, why can't we just put those organisms back in our > backyard gardens instead of buying capsules from Garden of Life. > > I'm sure we have loads of digestive difficulties due to probiotic > imbalances (among others), but I have my doubts it's as simple as if > we only had the right probiotics we wouldn't have gluten intolerances. > But, as you say, I may be way off. > > Blank Hi john, you're right, rubin doesn't go into much detail about hso's. but he DOES say that all hso's are not equal. the ones that saved his life, and i presume the ones he put in his Primal Defense formula, are 'special' hso's from somewhere in the world, better than the garden variety ones. i know to skeptics this might sound like he's just trying to sell something. but they DID save his life... it would be nice if we could just build them up in our soil, like in our backyard, once more. but that doesn't take into consideration all the factors around us that are destroying them to begin with, eg clorinated water, the things in food that kill them, and i think maybe alchohol and caffeine but i'm not sure. , did you read the article i posted here a few days ago? the same article that someone was kind enough to post on rawdairy a couple weeks ago. yes, that long article was a very long ad to sell the hso's (tho they called them something else), i'll admit. but it was a very long article with LOTS of info and well worth reading. there are animals that have certain 'bugs' or 'parasites' or whatever in their gut that they absolutely need to digest and function and survive... what if the way the Creator designed things was for us to have these hso's in our gut in order to help us digest and to heal us, and if we don't have them, or the right ones, or enough of them, we can't digest properly, we have food sensitivities, and all manner of disease?? like this article implies or comes right out and says? before modern technology, the way people lived, hso's would have thrived. before modern agriculture which deadens the soil, before chlorinated water and toothpaste and mouthwash, before pasteurized foods and beverages, before irradiation, etc. etc. i'm just saying...if you read that article (and i'll repost it if anyone wants) it makes a VERY LONG LIST of the benefits of these soil organisms. they help us digest proteins, fats and carbs (CARBS!! gluten?), they make antibodies to keep us well, they heal us from diseases, they help heal allergies and food sensitivities (FOOD SENSITIVITIES!!! casein? gluten? i'm living proof...i can drink all the milk i want now pretty much) anyway, at the risk of misquoting...read the article!!! laura in nj Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 > Re: Gluten Intolerance, continued > > >> There is only one study I know of in which the researchers were able >to rid >> the sourdough bread of gluten via fermentation. > > >is it POSSIBLE that this could happen in the gut...if you had the right >bacterial flora? fermentation happens because of BACTERIA (and yeast). When you ferment in the gut, you get gas :-) > >don't you think all these wapf healthy people who consumed gluten >(wheat, rice, rye, corn, etc.) might have had the right bact. First, rice and corn do not contain gluten - not the gluten that is problematic for so many people. It's found rather in wheat, rye, barley, kamut, spelt and triticale. The only group of WAPF's that consumed a gluten grain was the Swiss. Either they fermented the rye long enough to break down the problematic proteins (they fermented their bread for 2 weeks! after all) OR they didn't have the gluten-intolerant genes. Which you'd expect to be quickly eliminated from an isolated population anyway. flora in >their gut to do this? and that's why there's so many gluten intolerant >people? because we have lost the right flora in our gut? If you're really interested in this subject, you might want to hop over to the GFCFNN list and read the archives as all this and more has been discussed at_length over there. > >i think i might be onto something. or i could be way off. I think there's definiitely an issue with dysbiosis and food intolerances, or perhaps dysbiosis causing the gluten intolerant genes to *express*, but it's not exactly a new hypothesis. I think we discussed this issue on this list as well as the other one not very long ago. I don't feel like rehashing it here myself, but if someone else wants to, maybe you can get this line of discussion going again. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- “The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times.” -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 Re: Gluten Intolerance, continued i'm really wondering about something....you are implying then that gluten is not a food per se as we can't digest it, that no one can digest it. and yet gluten is in so many foods...taking away grains containing gluten from the human race would take away a LOT of food.... SOMETHING is missing here. gluten is in a lot of worldwide foods...yet we can't digest it.... i just don't buy the fact that wapf says raw milk and soaked, sprouted, fermented grains are good for you, and that so many of us can't tolerate them. WHY?????? i'm not letting go of this possible solution until i find out the truth!! laura in nj --------------------------------- in NJ, Relevant to the above, a couple of years ago a very provacative 2-part article by Lloyd Pye appeared in Nexus magazine, called DARWINISM: A CRUMBLING THEORY. It can be found on the internet at http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles.html Look down the page on the right hand side. Best, Nenah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 [] i started taking them a few months ago. before that, milk would give me gas and diarrhea. now i can drink lots of milk. and i do!! in my most hurried and busy days i live on raw milk and cream. and i love it!!! and i don't think that is a coincidence!!!! i'm telling you, more than one glass of milk would give me horrible gas and diarrhea. now i can drink a quart of milk or more per day. and i do! before i could only tolerate kefir in larger quantities and even then i had to watch it... [MikeP] Well, it sounds like you've got a classic case of lactose-intolerance, which is quantity-dependent and pretty much a gut flora issue at the level of symptoms as I understand it, but digesting lactose (a sugar) is quite different than digesting wheat-gluten (a protein), and I don't think there's much of a parallel there, because symptomatically the problems with wheat-gluten involve the bloodstream, not the gut. Nevertheless, I think it's a wonderful and stimulating line of thinking you're pursuing here, and I get the impression that the processing of wheat-gluten in the human gut is not well-understood yet, so we should be asking these sorts of questions. I tend to subscribe to the line of reasoning that wheat-gluten was simply not a significant component of human diets until quite recently, for some combination of the following reasons, all probably mentioned at some point or another in these threads (which I haven't followed too well): 1. grains period are a new food for humans 2. of the staple grains in some cultures since the agricultural era began, most of them do not contain wheat-gluten (Suze makes this point quite wonderfully above in the thread and connects it to the critical point about gene pools in traditional isolated societies) 3. in the cases where wheat-gluten grains were consumed, the breeds were different than the modern wheat-gluten grains that have been bred to have drastically higher levels of gluten 4. in the cases where where wheat-gluten grains were consumed, they were fermented (e.g. sourdough), reducing, though probably not eliminating, the amount of gluten While Suze did point out that fermentation *in the gut* (as opposed to outside the body in a jar or something) is definitely not desirable by standard reasoning, I suppose the matter is possibly more complex and perhaps there are non-gas-producing types of fermentations that act on protein and so on. I have no knowledge that would allow me to make a confident conclusion one way or another. I just remembered a conversation I had last night that fits right in this thread. I have a friend who seems to be an absolutely classic case of gluten-intolerance from what he's told me about his experiences and the fact that his grandmother had major problems with wheat! It seems exceptionally obvious to me and I've given him extremely blunt advice to drop wheat-gluten for good, emphasizing the gravity of the matter for his future health. However, like me, he's a carefree twenty-something person quite capable of deluding himself about health realities until they really catch up with him, and even though he's been aware of the existence of the gluten issue for many years, he says he's had negative tests (he couldn't recall what kind of tests they were, surely the crappy ones) and doesn't feel he has evidence to support a gluten-free lifestyle. I often see him eating gluten-containing foods. To make matters a thousand times more bleak and difficult, he's a vegan! However, given some health concerns, he's currently open to adding eggs and/or fish to his diet, though he hasn't actually done so yet and lives in a household with 2 other vegans so he's worried about offending them by preparing fish and so on. He doesn't know much of anything about nutrition, but eats a half-decent diet with a fair amount of veggies and not a typical degenerate " bagel vegan " diet. I'm trying to get him to adopt a coconut/fish/veggie gluten-free diet, but he's not really convinced of the need to go gf. (By the way, thinking about a case like this really makes me see the tremendous positive value in Sally's recent coconut-diet campaign and I'm starting to work on developing recipes for a coconut-based diet that will be practical for friends whose diets are train-wrecks waiting to happen but who have no inclination to put much effort into their food lifestyle and certainly would never adopt my own extremely elaborate food lifestyle. Super-easy coconut soups and that sort of thing.) So that's the context for this conversation last night. I saw him eating a sandwich and I was like " hey man, you're eating wheat! are you crazy? " . But he said it was Ezekial bread (you know the stuff that's commonly sold in health food stores) so it was okay. I told him sprouting helps but it doesn't totally eliminate the gluten and so it's still off limits. He was convinced it was okay though and strongly defended himself; he told me that the father of a housemate has severe reactions to wheat, but can eat a half a loaf of that commercial Ezekial wheat bread with no problems. That is a pretty compelling anecdote, and the information was from a first-hand source, although I would like to verify the details of exactly what kind of Ezekial bread is being referred to. Mike SE Pennsylvania The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 he told me that the father of a housemate > has severe reactions to wheat, but can eat a half a loaf of that > commercial Ezekial wheat bread with no problems. That is a pretty > compelling anecdote, and the information was from a first-hand source, > although I would like to verify the details of exactly what kind of > Ezekial bread is being referred to. > > Mike, Just because the father can eat half a loaf without noticing a reaction, doesn't mean his villi aren't being damaged. He can't be certain without being 'scoped. B. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 >> Relevant to the above, a couple of years ago a very provacative 2-part article by Lloyd Pye appeared in Nexus magazine, called DARWINISM: A CRUMBLING THEORY. << I think Suze's explantion that only one of the groups that Weston Price looked at ate a gluten grain, and that one was fermented for two weeks, answered the question without bringing space aliens into the equation! Ever heard of Occam's Razor? Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 My point is, this guy's data that tiny little grains logically could not have naturally evolved given the circumstances, suggest that perhaps humans were never intended to eat grains, no matter where grains come from. I am unfamiliar with Occam's Razor. Nenah Re: Re: Gluten Intolerance, continued >> Relevant to the above, a couple of years ago a very provacative 2-part article by Lloyd Pye appeared in Nexus magazine, called DARWINISM: A CRUMBLING THEORY. << I think Suze's explantion that only one of the groups that Weston Price looked at ate a gluten grain, and that one was fermented for two weeks, answered the question without bringing space aliens into the equation! Ever heard of Occam's Razor? Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 [MikeP] ...he told me that the father of a housemate has severe reactions to wheat, but can eat a half a loaf of that commercial Ezekial wheat bread with no problems. That is a pretty compelling anecdote, and the information was from a first-hand source, although I would like to verify the details of exactly what kind of Ezekial bread is being referred to. Just because the father can eat half a loaf without noticing a reaction, doesn't mean his villi aren't being damaged. He can't be certain without being 'scoped. [MikeP] Sure, absolutely. I think people like that are crazy for even gambling with it. But what was interesting to me was the possibility that sprouting could have such dramatic effect. I had understood it to be a minor effect. It's a crazy world that people are so fixated on one category of food like that. I mean, I don't haven't the slightest indication of any kind of food allergy or intolerance, but I quit eating grains a year or two ago without even blinking. There's just so much other food to eat. I've thought about adding some safe grains back in for fun or variety or accomodation to guests or the like, but now I'm pretty committed to making a lifestyle statement and expressing solidarity with gluten victims and fighting the cultural hegemony of grains. And the amazing thing is that most people buy into the myth that grains are one of the healthiest categories of food, whereas the truth is precisely the opposite and is as clear as black and white, verifiable by US government data on the USDA site and so on, a trivial observation. People are shocked when you suggest that grains are a nutritionally poor filler food. Mike SE Pennsylvania The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 Mike and (combined post!). >[MikeP] Sure, absolutely. I think people like that are crazy for even >gambling with it. But what was interesting to me was the possibility >that sprouting could have such dramatic effect. I had understood it to >be a minor effect. [Heidi] The Ezekiel bread IS commonly more digestible by a lot of folks, as is sourdough. A lot of " really reactive " celiacs can eat it without feeling bad. And some sourdoughs have even been tested in vitro on gut cells without causing a reaction. You summary of why gluten wasn't such a problem was really nice and thorough! There are still cultures who DO eat wheat, but don't have the horrid reaction to it until they eat " American style " wheat, which is really high in gluten and really poorly processed. As to the fact that gluten affects everyone's villi ... yeah, I believe that is true, and has always been true. But whether or not that will make the individual SICK .. , look at it this way: suppose half the villi were " stuck up " with gluten after a meal, so only half the nutrients get absorbed. Well, if the person is eating a high-nutrient meal, or taking supplements, the person will probably be ok anyway. Part of the gluten is NOT digested, but that's ok too .. a LOT of what we eat isn't digested, as it turns out. This is true in most animals also, which is on reason why some species eat their feces (or other animals eat a different species feces: dog eating " catsicles " for instance!). Some of what we don't digest can feed the wrong bacteria, which does make people sick, and probiotics help that a lot (as in your case, , with lactose). I suspect that one reason for the " Mediterranean diet " though is that eating some foods WITH wheat mitigate it's affects. If you eat a long-fermented artisan sourdough loaf with wine and olive oil, the " sticky " effects of the gluten will be minimized, and the nutrients in the wine will make up for what isn't in the grain bread. So yeah, it's a true thing that gluten likely messes up everyone, but it is only the 10 to 30 percent of the population that have the immune reaction who get the autoimmune diseases that make life so miserable. >It's a crazy world that people are so fixated on >one category of food like that. THAT continues to amaze me! DogtorJ mentioned that 60% of the SAD is wheat or dairy based ... I'd guess a lot of the rest of the diet is based on corn or soy. Whereas the average Native American ate something like 200 different plant species and a lot of various animals (and bugs!). > And the amazing thing is that most people buy >into the myth that grains are one of the healthiest categories of >food, whereas the truth is precisely the opposite and is as clear as >black and white, verifiable by US government data on the USDA site and >so on, a trivial observation. People are shocked when you suggest that >grains are a nutritionally poor filler food. THAT myth amazes me too. People still keep asking " but if I stop eating gluten, won't that cause health problems? " . And mind you these are people who are not eating whole grains, so they are talking about the nutritional value of white bread, which is like no nutritional value at all by ANYONE's database. > Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 Not to divert attention from all the misery that grains can inflict on the gut, but what was most striking to me when I went off grains for three years, than had 2-3 years of grain eating before giving up on them once again (this time, I'm determined, for good), was the number they did on my teeth. Only in the years I was off grains, was I also without cavities. http://www.taichi4seniors.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 >>It's also true that once the leaky gut is repaired, the intestinal flora >>re-balanced, and all the glands and organs functioning correctly, the >>ability to tolerate foods increases. > >This is true, but I believe the IgA reaction to gluten actually takes place >in the gut, or I think that's the primary location of reaction. The >Glutenator can correct me if I'm wrong. Nope, I agree! It's absolutely true that for IgG allergies, healing leaky gut is the key. But it's the IgA allergies that seem to be causing leaky gut (per the most current research). Gluten intolerance (in the sense we are talking about it) is IgA. No one has yet been able to " heal " an IgA intolerance, though the IgA antibodies do go away eventually and at that point, " slipups " might not cause such awful sympoms. IgA are the antibodies produced in the gut: IgG are the antibodies produced in the blood. People who claim to be " healed " seem to have plenty of ongoing gut damage from the gluten they are eating, when a biopsy is done. IgA intolerance is like high blood pressure or diabetes: the symptoms can disappear, but the condition is still there. So folks like me react strongly to claims that " gluten intolerance can be healed " ! I'd love to see a study of someone with confirmed celiac, who went back to eating gluten and then had a confirmed state of healing over several years. There are no such studies to date: the studies that have been done show exactly the reverse. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 >don't you think all these wapf healthy people who consumed gluten >(wheat, rice, rye, corn, etc.) might have had the right bact. flora in >their gut to do this? and that's why there's so many gluten intolerant >people? because we have lost the right flora in our gut? > >i think i might be onto something. or i could be way off. > >laura in nj You are absolutely on the right track ... in fact when I was eating gluten I was able to get rid of most of my *symptoms* by eating probiotics. Probiotics got rid of the IBS quite nicely. However, like I say a lot, gluten intolerance is like high blood pressure or diabetes. MOST people who have it do NOT have symptoms. You can have diabetes for years and ignore it, and until your kidneys fail or you get gangrene or you lose your eyesight, you'd never know your blood sugar was high. People who react to gluten really NEED to treat it as a toxin, or they will get complications, just like folks with diabetes will get complications if they don't deal with the diabetes. But not everyone has diabetes, and not everyone has gluten intolerance. Getting rid of the gut symptoms does NOT heal the disease though. The IgA reaction messes up your hormones and antibodies, and the most common side effects are autoimmune diseases like lupus and thyroid problems, mental issues like depression, and cancer. However, the gluten we are talking about here is not in corn or rice. Some folks are in fact allergic to those grains, but it's a different genetic thing probably. And, some folks react to starchy grains in a different way, because they don't digest them well. THAT is also a different thing. And some folks react to starchy grains with blood sugar problems, which is yet a different problem. In all these cases, probiotics help a lot. But the fact that you can, if you are careful, eat a grain based diet and still be " ok " does not mean it's an ideal diet. I mean, I DO eat white rice and white (non-gluten) bread, but I don't pretend it's great food, any more than my brownies are " good " for me. They just aren't as devastatingly BAD for me as gluten stuff is. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 > Relevant to the above, a couple of years ago a very provacative 2- part article by Lloyd Pye appeared in Nexus magazine, called DARWINISM: A CRUMBLING THEORY. > > It can be found on the internet at > http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles.html > > Look down the page on the right hand side. > > Best, > Nenah nenah, not meaning to sound like the lazy person i actually am in not reading that 2 part article series...what does aliens have to do with gluten intolerance, if i might ask you to cut to the chase, LOL? laura Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 > > I think Suze's explantion that only one of the groups that Weston Price > looked at ate a gluten grain, and that one was fermented for two weeks, > answered the question without bringing space aliens into the equation! Ever > heard of Occam's Razor? > No christie, what is it? laura Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2005 Report Share Posted May 28, 2005 .. > > However, like I say a lot, gluten intolerance is like high > blood pressure or diabetes. MOST people who have > it do NOT have symptoms. You can have diabetes > for years and ignore it, and until your kidneys > fail or you get gangrene or you lose your eyesight, you'd > never know your blood sugar was high. Heidi, i don't understand this. i'm borderline diabetic. i can always tell when my blood sugar is creeping up...i get a funny taste in my mouth (not always reliable), i get more thirsty, and the clincher is i have to get up at night to pee. when i can sleep 7-9 hours without having to get up to pee, many nights in a row, my blood sugar reflects this. it is not high. > people say diabetes has no symptoms...i disagree. maybe you just have to know what they are. laura Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2005 Report Share Posted May 29, 2005 [Nenah] My point is, this guy's data that tiny little grains logically could not have naturally evolved given the circumstances, suggest that perhaps humans were never intended to eat grains, no matter where grains come from. [Mike] Not being able to stand my curiosity, I read that 2-part article (a classic example of sloppy and unconvincing fringe science journalism by someone who definitely doesn't subscribe to Occam's Razor!), but I couldn't figure out what connection it might possibly have to this gluten topic and I didn't see any mention of grains or any data about them not being to evolve. Am I missing something? Mike SE Pennsylvania The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2005 Report Share Posted May 29, 2005 >> Not being able to stand my curiosity, I read that 2-part article << Illustrating yet another famous concept, " Curiousity killed the cat. " Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2005 Report Share Posted May 29, 2005 >Heidi, i don't understand this. i'm borderline diabetic. i can >always tell when my blood sugar is creeping up...i get a funny taste >in my mouth (not always reliable), i get more thirsty, and the >clincher is i have to get up at night to pee. > >when i can sleep 7-9 hours without having to get up to pee, many >nights in a row, my blood sugar reflects this. it is not high. >> >people say diabetes has no symptoms...i disagree. maybe you just >have to know what they are. > >laura That's a good point. And it is similar in gluten intolerance ... some folks really can't tell when they are reacting to gluten and some folks get deathly ill. And some folks just don't recognize the symptoms. Not all diabetics can tell when their blood sugar is high ... which is why they invented test kits. But doctors routinely TEST for high blood sugar, so most folks who have it get notified of the fact eventually. Now suppose your doctor didn't know about the " blood sugar test " . You kept getting more and more thirsty and having a weird taste in your mouth and have to pee a lot ... but you don't know what is the problem. Your doctor tells you " it's normal for a lot of people " so you ignore it and read books about your body's need for water. Then your eyes start going bad. By the time you get diagnosed, you have permanent damage. THAT is the situation for most gluten intolerant folks these days. They either really have no symptoms, or they don't know that the symptoms are related to gluten. But the doctors don't know enough to do the test. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2005 Report Share Posted May 30, 2005 On 5/28/05, Anton <michaelantonparker@...> wrote: > And the amazing thing is that most people buy > into the myth that grains are one of the healthiest categories of > food, whereas the truth is precisely the opposite and is as clear as > black and white, verifiable by US government data on the USDA site and > so on, a trivial observation. People are shocked when you suggest that > grains are a nutritionally poor filler food. One of my students reacted with some level of shock when I told her my pre-workout meal was generally something like a hamburger with green vegetables. She said I should eat something healthy like Ritz crackers. (!) Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2005 Report Share Posted May 30, 2005 > One of my students reacted with some level of shock when I told her my > pre-workout meal was generally something like a hamburger with green > vegetables. She said I should eat something healthy like Ritz > crackers. (!) I went on a picnic with a guy and when I declined to eat any baguette--mumbled I was " allergic " or something--he said, " oh, that's too bad, cause it's a great source of carbohydrates " . Ay ay ay. B. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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