Guest guest Posted February 16, 2004 Report Share Posted February 16, 2004 Hello, my name is Colleen from Prince Island, Canada, my daughter Jewel is ASD with seizures and is almost 11 years old. We started the SCD in October, and the biggest change we have seen is her much improved food choices. She went through a couple of weeks of searching the house for potato chips and rice pasta (she had been GFCF, soy and sugar free, for 4 years) really obviously carb addicted. Now she will eat just about anything and everything we give her. Her main gut issue is constipation, she has been on just about every laxative known to man, at some point in her life. Most recently miralax which actually made the problem worse. We were having to give enemas, after 10+ days without a BM. She has always had overflow D. for a few days, followed by very large hard BM. We started with the intro diet, then moved along, gave raw pears too soon, and saw giddy, noisy behaviors so took them away again. She didn't like the pear sauce. We didn't introduce nut flours until she had been on the diet for almost 4 months and she did like the almond flour cookies cashew carrot cake. But then she had massive D. every two days for over a week. It was uncontrollable, she didn't have time to get to the bathroom, excuse the graphics but it was very gritty, like the nut flour hadn't been digested at all. That has stopped and now she hasn't had a BM since (4 days) and I'm getting worried about her constipation coming back. During the week of D. I put her back on the intro diet for 2 days then gradually added back in a few cooked green veggies. Does the nutty texture mean that she isn't ready for nut flour, should I try a nut butter instead? She has been dairy free for a long time so I want to try the nut yogurt before the goat, will this reaction affect how she tolerates the yougurt? I was really hoping that the yogurt would be the solution to her gut issues, this is 5 months on SCD without a " trophy " yet. I keep telling myself that her gut has been damaged for a long time, and will take a long time to heal. We had testing done in October that showed she had no yeast and actually did have some good gut bacteria, finally after working on it for 4 years, using diet. probiotics and natural antifungals. Yet still the constipation...I think I'll have to put her back on Milk of Magnesia soon, if nothing happens. So what do you all think? Do I go ahead and try the yogurt with nuts, or be brave and try the goat? Thanks in advance. Colleen, PEI Canada Jewel's Mom (10 yrs, ASD) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 16, 2004 Report Share Posted February 16, 2004 Welcome Colleen..... This was sent to me recently by another SCD mom...... it's from her DAN doctor. You might want to try the beet juice..... I know another list mom reported that it worked great, also.......... <<From Dr. Green: Hi all. I've found a few remedies of particular help with constipation, though again there's the struggle of getting them in. One of the most effective is fresh made beet juice, which I usually have combined with carrot and apple (approx equal parts of beet, carrot and apple juiced together). It tastes remarkably good, and has helped several kids who failed fiber, triphal, magnesium, C, kiwis, and Miralax. (and even one who did little in response to senna). Rhubarb tablets (I don't have any idea how to get kids to eat rhubarb--except one guy who eats it raw, plain!) are a pretty good laxative, and there's a Chinese herbal company who sell Rhubarbin tablets. We've often had pretty good luck with pharmaceutical grade cellulose, which I started buying by the 30 gallon drum, as it's quite expensive when bought by the pound (and cheaper by the 30 gallon!). Carnitine seems to enhance gut tone and motility, and I suspect that creatine may have some of the same effect, as it enhances muscle function. Occasionally bethanecol helps to get things moving. Glycerin suppositories are very benign, and increase the urge to move bowels. Mineral oil is nasty and somewhat toxic, and I would stay away from it, though it could be used a few times as an enema (fleet's MO) to clean things out from below (we've never resorted to this). Some of the stimulants like cascare and senna are effective but risky for all but brief (l-2 week) use, as they foster colon " dependency. " Some of the kids with intractable constipation have a tethered cord, which requires surgical release (and they often have bladder incontinence too). Golytely (colonoscopy prep) essentially always works, but it's rather nasty to give, and can only be used for an acute clearing. Green MD>> Patti, mom to Katera, SCD 10 months Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 16, 2004 Report Share Posted February 16, 2004 Welcome to the list Colleen & Jewel, Nice to see another Atlantic Canadian on the list (we live in Newfoundland) The nutty texture of her stools and the D indicate that she isn't ready for the nut flour yet. Once she gets over this you might want to try introducing nut butter before the nut flour. And go slow - start with 1/4 of a muffin( or cake etc.) one day, skip a day then try 1/4 muffin again, skip another day and then increase on the 5th day.. Sometimes it is just a matter of too much, too soon. If I have any GI upset now for any reason (flu, wrong food etc.) once the D stops it usually takes 2-3 days before another bm appears. If you decide to go with the nut yogurt why not try a little bit of nut milk first to see if she is ready for it first. As above, just try small amounts in case she doesn't tolerate it yet. If the nut milk goes well then try the nut yoghurt... slowly. If the constipation continues you can go with the prune nectar and orange juice. Full details at http://pecanbread.com/recipes.html and further reading at http://www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info/knowledge_base/kb/constipation_continued\ ..htm And you are right, her gut has been damaged a long time so it will just take time to heal it. And you seem to be on the right track. Sheila, SCD 36 mos UC 20 yrs didn't introduce nut flours until she had been on the diet for almost 4 months and she did like the almond flour cookies cashew carrot cake. But then she had massive D. every two days for over a week. It was uncontrollable, she didn't have time to get to the bathroom, excuse the graphics but it was very gritty, like the nut flour hadn't been digested at all. That has stopped and now she hasn't had a BM since (4 days) and I'm getting worried about her constipation coming back. During the week of D. I put her back on the intro diet for 2 days then gradually added back in a few cooked green veggies. Does the nutty texture mean that she isn't ready for nut flour, should I try a nut butter instead? She has been dairy free for a long time so I want to try the nut yogurt before the goat, will this reaction affect how she tolerates the yougurt? I was really hoping that the yogurt would be the solution to her gut issues, this is 5 months on SCD without a " trophy " yet. I keep telling myself that her gut has been damaged for a long time, and will take a long time to heal. We had testing done in October that showed she had no yeast and actually did have some good gut bacteria, finally after working on it for 4 years, using diet. probiotics and natural antifungals. Yet still the constipation...I think I'll have to put her back on Milk of Magnesia soon, if nothing happens. So what do you all think? Do I go ahead and try the yogurt with nuts, or be brave and try the goat? Thanks in advance. Colleen, PEI Canada Jewel's Mom (10 yrs, ASD) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 17, 2004 Report Share Posted February 17, 2004 " She has been dairy free for a long time so I want to try the nut yogurt before the goat, will this reaction affect how she tolerates the yougurt? " There are probably three things of concern: 1. will she tolerate nuts 2. will she tolerate the casein-like substances in the goat's milk 3. yoghurt itself/the probiotics 1.: one way to find out would be to introduce nut milk to her. As it is very finely grinded (10 minutes in the blender) and then filtered through a fine metal sieve, it is as un-gritty as one can hope for. Nuts diluted/watered down, so to speak. 2.: you can't tell yet. You need to test... 3.: nut yoghurt as well as goat's should be introduced gradually, spoon by spoon. Be cautious when you seem to get no reaction. Fight the temptation to give too much too soon. I wouldn't assume at all that if she tolerates the nut yoghurt, you can just go right ahead with the goat's. The two yoghurt are so different (though not in taste). The one thing that you CAN say is that if she tolerates the nut yoghurt, she tolerates the probiotics. Though I have not heard of anyone NOT tolerating the probiotics in yoghurt. Good luck, Marjan Netherlands mom to Nick, 7, scd since jan 18, 2003 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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