Guest guest Posted April 30, 2004 Report Share Posted April 30, 2004 Louise, Welcome to the list. You have lots of questions. I will do my best to address them. SCD is NOT a low carbohydrate diet. The amount of carbohydrates is not restricted in any way. Only the types of carbohydrates are limited. If you are concerned that your son is not getting enough carbohydrates, please use Fitday.com to determine whether he is or not. Fitday.com is completely free and can be customized easily. If you just switched to SCD a week ago, you are probably introducing foods too quickly. We do not recommend starting nut products so soon in the diet. Please start with the intro diet if at all possible. This will give your systems a little break and time to heal. Then begin to add foods slowly. All peeled, seeded and cooked, with the only exceptions be very ripe bananas and ripe avocados. You asked about the probiotics. I am unsure what the D-lactate free probiotics are. Elaine recommends L-Acidophilus which can be ordered from Custom Probiotics. Start slowly with this. Begin with 1/6th of the tiny, tiny spoon that comes with the probiotics. My guess is that you have started with a much higher dose than that. Taking a high dose can trigger a die-off reaction. You mention your son losing weight. Was he overweight to start with? If not, feed him more food. SCD should not trigger weight loss in the long run. A few kids lose a little weight during the intro diet, but then add the weight back afterward. It really sounds to me like you are using a lot of nut products. I would venture to guess that your systems are not ready for the nuts if you have D. Please go back to the intro and add foods more slowly this time to determine what you and your son can tolerate. Foods that are well tolerated will not cause D. You will need to make any " milk " from scratch. There are recipes on pecanbread.com for many, many different things including nut milk. As for supplements, Elaine recommends a good multi-vitamin. Freeda sells an SCD multi-vitamin. Many of the ASD kids use products from Kirkman Labs. On pecanbread.com, you will find a list of legal supplements. You can choose Freeda or one of the others listed on the supplements page on pecanbread.com. You asked what to do to prevent this from happening to your little one. This is my personal opinion and doesn't reflect the opinion of pecanbread.com or this list.... No more vaccines. And when you introduce foods, only give him SCD foods. Once he is older and doing well, you can try other foods and see how he reacts to them. It will be much easier for you to have all three of you eating the same foods than it will be to try to keep your older one from grabbing goldfish from the younger one. As for the yogurt, if it did not ferment long enough, there will not be that many good bacteria in there. You don't have to throw it out, but it may not be that potent. If I have missed any of your questions, just repost and I will do my best. Jody mom to -5 and -7 SCD 15 months Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2004 Report Share Posted April 30, 2004 Jody, thank you so so much. Fitday.com is awesome. Where do I find out the target amounts of carbs, protein etc. that a 3 year old would need? How do you customize the nut muffins, etc.? We had been on GFCF so I thought we could probably add the new foods more quickly. We will reluctantly go back to the intro diet. Do you know who could tell me if the D-Lactate free probiotic is legal? I bought it from Custom Probiotics, the same place that sells L-acidophilus. No, my son is not overweight. He's not wild about this diet and is just eating less. and it worries me. Is it healthy to feed an infant only SCD foods? Louise _____ From: Jody G. Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2004 8:05 PM To: pecanbread Subject: Re: HELP... mom and 3 year old son new to SCD, really struggling Louise, Welcome to the list. You have lots of questions. I will do my best to address them. SCD is NOT a low carbohydrate diet. The amount of carbohydrates is not restricted in any way. Only the types of carbohydrates are limited. If you are concerned that your son is not getting enough carbohydrates, please use Fitday.com to determine whether he is or not. Fitday.com is completely free and can be customized easily. If you just switched to SCD a week ago, you are probably introducing foods too quickly. We do not recommend starting nut products so soon in the diet. Please start with the intro diet if at all possible. This will give your systems a little break and time to heal. Then begin to add foods slowly. All peeled, seeded and cooked, with the only exceptions be very ripe bananas and ripe avocados. You asked about the probiotics. I am unsure what the D-lactate free probiotics are. Elaine recommends L-Acidophilus which can be ordered from Custom Probiotics. Start slowly with this. Begin with 1/6th of the tiny, tiny spoon that comes with the probiotics. My guess is that you have started with a much higher dose than that. Taking a high dose can trigger a die-off reaction. You mention your son losing weight. Was he overweight to start with? If not, feed him more food. SCD should not trigger weight loss in the long run. A few kids lose a little weight during the intro diet, but then add the weight back afterward. It really sounds to me like you are using a lot of nut products. I would venture to guess that your systems are not ready for the nuts if you have D. Please go back to the intro and add foods more slowly this time to determine what you and your son can tolerate. Foods that are well tolerated will not cause D. You will need to make any " milk " from scratch. There are recipes on pecanbread.com for many, many different things including nut milk. As for supplements, Elaine recommends a good multi-vitamin. Freeda sells an SCD multi-vitamin. Many of the ASD kids use products from Kirkman Labs. On pecanbread.com, you will find a list of legal supplements. You can choose Freeda or one of the others listed on the supplements page on pecanbread.com. You asked what to do to prevent this from happening to your little one. This is my personal opinion and doesn't reflect the opinion of pecanbread.com or this list.... No more vaccines. And when you introduce foods, only give him SCD foods. Once he is older and doing well, you can try other foods and see how he reacts to them. It will be much easier for you to have all three of you eating the same foods than it will be to try to keep your older one from grabbing goldfish from the younger one. As for the yogurt, if it did not ferment long enough, there will not be that many good bacteria in there. You don't have to throw it out, but it may not be that potent. If I have missed any of your questions, just repost and I will do my best. Jody mom to -5 and -7 SCD 15 months For information on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, please read the book _Breaking the Vicious Cycle_ by Elaine Gottschall and read the following websites: http://www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info and http://www.pecanbread.com _____ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2004 Report Share Posted April 30, 2004 > > > No, my son is not overweight. He's not wild about this diet and is just > eating less. and it worries me. > > > > Is it healthy to feed an infant only SCD foods? > > Louise, may I interupt? My son really resented the start of this diet two weeks ago. He still does not really " like " all the foods I give him, but I offer them anyway. Now he has to have a little of this to get more of that. Yesterday he ate his peas without effort and even asked for more today. It takes time for your little guy to adjust and his tastes will change to begin to enjoy the foods available. Then his weight should stabalize I imagine. Personally, I have been following the diet out of a sence of comrodery for my son (also, I am sick and tired of yeast infections) and I am amazed how I can reach for an orange and banana when a little hungry and not even miss the crackers, cereal, and all the other " filler " foods that were so addictive to me. And I was ADDICTED!! As far as SCD for baby, my own personal opinion is that much of the food we relied on before SCD seem like cheep fillers (think baby crackers, cheerios, gold fish). They stick to our ribs and so we think they are good. But I can't really feel guilty about not serving bread, rice, cereal (yeah, I miss the potatoes!). To me, we are serving just the healthy food. Get ready to serve all day long though, for mine, it really doesn't stick to their ribs for long! Its hard not to worry about our kids! But we have a good resource here, don't we? Helen, mom to three great kids, including (9 ASD, SCD 2 weeks) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2004 Report Share Posted April 30, 2004 > > > No, my son is not overweight. He's not wild about this diet and is just > eating less. and it worries me. > > > > Is it healthy to feed an infant only SCD foods? > > Louise, may I interupt? My son really resented the start of this diet two weeks ago. He still does not really " like " all the foods I give him, but I offer them anyway. Now he has to have a little of this to get more of that. Yesterday he ate his peas without effort and even asked for more today. It takes time for your little guy to adjust and his tastes will change to begin to enjoy the foods available. Then his weight should stabalize I imagine. Personally, I have been following the diet out of a sence of comrodery for my son (also, I am sick and tired of yeast infections) and I am amazed how I can reach for an orange and banana when a little hungry and not even miss the crackers, cereal, and all the other " filler " foods that were so addictive to me. And I was ADDICTED!! As far as SCD for baby, my own personal opinion is that much of the food we relied on before SCD seem like cheep fillers (think baby crackers, cheerios, gold fish). They stick to our ribs and so we think they are good. But I can't really feel guilty about not serving bread, rice, cereal (yeah, I miss the potatoes!). To me, we are serving just the healthy food. Get ready to serve all day long though, for mine, it really doesn't stick to their ribs for long! Its hard not to worry about our kids! But we have a good resource here, don't we? Helen, mom to three great kids, including (9 ASD, SCD 2 weeks) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2004 Report Share Posted April 30, 2004 I have been thinking of this concept of food not " sticking to the ribs " . I think it is like the difference between formula and nursing. When you nurse a small baby, the timing is often about every 2 hours but if you give formula you can get away with every 4 hours. It was explained to me that since the body can digest breastmilk so much easier, the baby feels hungry sooner but formula takes longer to digest making him feel full longer. This is probably what is happening to our kids (and us adults on the diet). > As far as SCD for baby, my own personal opinion is that much of the > food we relied on before SCD seem like cheep fillers (think baby > crackers, cheerios, gold fish). They stick to our ribs and so we > think they are good. But I can't really feel guilty about not > serving bread, rice, cereal (yeah, I miss the potatoes!). To me, we > are serving just the healthy food. Get ready to serve all day long > though, for mine, it really doesn't stick to their ribs for long! > Helen, mom to three great kids, including (9 ASD, SCD 2 weeks) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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