Guest guest Posted January 15, 2010 Report Share Posted January 15, 2010 I am going along with Dr. Cannell's recommendations of ratio 1 to 10 A to D. I just sent a child his usual Nordic CLO but asked his mom to give it only every other day and to give 5000iu of D every day and generally suggest that for most kids. For the ones I test who are below 50ng, I suggest 10,000 a day for two weeks, then move to maintenance 5000iu daily. If you are lucky enough to have a child who likes colored veggies and eats well, there is probably no need for extra A, and I do not have very many kids on CLO. However, there is general agreement that all need lots of Vit D, and in developing countries where grains are the main source of food, there is a huge need for vitamin A, particularly in regard to measles. As to measles, if the child tests very high on roseola antibodies or has history of getting gi problems right after the MMR, and still has evidence of inflammatory bowel disease, I suggest the high Vit A protocol, as Vit A is the only thing that has benefit against the measles virus. Some docs do this every six months - each child has to be assessed individually for this decision. Dr. JM Subject: Re: Update on Dr. Cannell's Suggestions Concerning A and D? To: csb-autism-rx Date: Thursday, January 14, 2010, 3:39 PM  Dr. JM, Can you please update us on where you stand on Dr. Cannell's suggestions in your book? I am struggling with whether to drop CLO and replace with Klaire A and higher Vitamin D. I'm also considering trying the Vitamin D push he suggested in your book. I'm also considering the high dose A protocol. > > > Subject: [csb-autism- rx] trouble digesting fat > To: csb-autism-rx@ yahoogroups. com > Date: Sunday, March 15, 2009, 1:03 PM > > > > > > > Hi listmates, > > My daughter has a hard time digesting fat. She has always had a hard time with vitamin A--could it be because it's fat soluble? I remember trying lipase awhile ago and noticing no difference. > > I've done the high dose A protocol twice and the first time I saw nothing. The second time, she threw up the first dose. We determined that she just threw it up--not a toxicity issue, but a reaction to it hitting her stomach. > > Any thoughts on this one? I'm in the process of sorting out next steps with my gut child, and I'm thinking about vitamin A, how much she needs it and how to get her on it. > > Thanks, > > > Mom to Lucy, age 7 > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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