Guest guest Posted July 31, 2000 Report Share Posted July 31, 2000 : As difficult as it is to witness and live through, behavioral regression is usually a good sign that your son will benefit from the diet. My son went through 3-4 weeks of severe regression, followed by a " plateau " period of about a month. Then, suddenly one morning his stools were formed instead of mushy, and the improvements in behavior, language use and cognitive ability began simultaneously. Remember that gluten can take a long time to leave the body, even though the child's dietary intake is 100% gluten-free. My son has been on the diet for 5 months and we are thrilled with the results we''ve seen. Hang in there a bit longer, and hopefully you'll see improvement too. Deborah, Mom to (5yr NT) and Aidan (3yr AS) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2000 Report Share Posted July 31, 2000 Hang in! My son's regression lasted 7 weeks. It was worth the wait, since the school was complaining constantly about him. Once we got through the withdrawl period, the school began to rave about him. a - Madison WI > Does anyone out there know, or have an idea about > how long the regression period is, on average? I really can't take > much more of watching my child screaming and rolling all over the > floor. > - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2000 Report Share Posted July 31, 2000 Beginning the diet during Summer vacation has been a good thing for us. I have a feeling that we will be treating for yeast soon but all the talk of regression and undesirable behaviors worries me about doing it during the school year...or at least at the beginning of it. Jake's new teacher needs to get to know the sweetie he is before he turns into some kind of die off demon. As I'm thinking of the upcoming school year....I plan to write up a letter to Jake's teacher explaining the diet and requesting that he only eat foods that I send for him. I also have a recipe for gfcf playdough I'll make and send to school with him. Have most of you had good luck on school following the dietary restrictions? Rhonda __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2000 Report Share Posted July 31, 2000 Rhonda, If you have the diet written into your child's IEP, the school MUST follow it. But they usually are not aware of the scary stuff, like glue, paint, sunscreen etc. You should also mention that the staff needs to prevent your child from sneaking food from other kids. I am sending a letter to school asking that an aide sit between my son and the nearest child, so he can't snag a cheeto or something. Re: how long can the initial regression be? > Beginning the diet during Summer vacation has been a > good thing for us. I have a feeling that we will be > treating for yeast soon but all the talk of regression > and undesirable behaviors worries me about doing it > during the school year...or at least at the beginning > of it. Jake's new teacher needs to get to know the > sweetie he is before he turns into some kind of die > off demon. > > As I'm thinking of the upcoming school year....I plan > to write up a letter to Jake's teacher explaining the > diet and requesting that he only eat foods that I send > for him. I also have a recipe for gfcf playdough I'll > make and send to school with him. Have most of you > had good luck on school following the dietary > restrictions? > > Rhonda > > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2000 Report Share Posted July 31, 2000 Rhonda My son goes to his school ( ABA Program ) 12 monthe a year, of course with 4 vacation weeks in there. I started this diet 1 week ago and I came up with a daily list of snacks and foods that are acceptable. I send in all my sons foods and the school has been great. Noting behaviors and what foods he did eat that I sent in. I have had no problem starting this diet as far as school goes. As for baking thats another story LOLOLOL. Hope your sons school is as adaptive and cooperative as my sons school is. Hope I made you feel a little better. Terry, Mass Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2000 Report Share Posted August 1, 2000 In a message dated 07/31/2000 9:12:15 AM Eastern Daylight Time, angelamariemason@... writes: << Does anyone out there know, or have an idea about how long the regression period is, on average? I really can't take much more of watching my child screaming and rolling all over the floor. >> Congratulations; the diet is working! All the Poisson is leaving his body and when it is over you should have a new child. Hang in there; there is no generic answer as to how long it lasts; they are all different. My child had almost no withdrawal with casein and did remarkable until about the third month of the diet then had a two week horrible gluten withdrawal. It will get better! Angie in Jax 's Mom (6yrs old ASD) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2000 Report Share Posted August 1, 2000 I know EXACTLY what you are going through. We are on day 7 of the diet, and for the past 3 days, Tommy has refused to eat. I can get him to eat an occasional frito, a bit of a sandwhich which he usually spits out onto the floor. He is drinking ALOT of juice, and eating popcorn. Thats about it for his diet right now. As far as his tantrums, well, 2 days ago, he started a tantrum at around 4 pm, and it went constant until about 1am. He gave us about a 45 minute break at 10pm.. but came back full force. He has been like this for the past 5 days. Usually he is very excited when he sees the school bus arrive. This morning, he was so angry, and when I tried to help him onto the bus, he started another tantrum. Took me 40 minutes to get him calmed down. I know this is a good sign that he is going through the withdrawls, but it just breaks my heart to see him struggling so much. If I could just make it through this period... I will be ok. I have NEVER had to deal with something so hard in my entire life. Rhonda NH > My son has been on the gfcf diet for 3 weeks now. We're not sure if > we've seen any improvement because he normally goes through echolalic > phases and then nothing for a couple of months. What we have seen is > a sudden onset of SEVERE, frequent tantrums. At times, they are > uncontrollable. This has only happened once before, and it was just > as we were trying to determine what type of developmental delay he > had--autism had not even been mentioned yet. Luckily, the stint was > only about two weeks long. This has been going on since the day we > began the diet. Does anyone out there know, or have an idea about > how long the regression period is, on average? I really can't take > much more of watching my child screaming and rolling all over the > floor. > - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 1, 2000 Report Share Posted August 1, 2000 Rhonda Could you please tell me what vitamins / minerals and supplements your child is on. I was sent a list from Great Plains Labs when my sons test results came back and I am really afraid about this whole die-off thing. He was a 4+ ( positive ) for Candidia. Thanks Terry 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.