Guest guest Posted December 23, 2004 Report Share Posted December 23, 2004 Hello, My son has been on SCD for 11 weeks now - mostly dairy-free except on 5 occasions. The first two occasions were at Thanksgiving (parm & cheddar cheese in scr. eggs) and other 3 occasions were in this past week (cheddar cheese in baked bread). On at least 2-3 of these times his behavior got very aggressive within an hour or so of eating the cheese. I'm thinking that there's a connection here. Before starting SCD he ate dairy (milk & cheese) without any apparent problems so I'm a little confused. Another thing to consider is that he tested allergic (IgG) to milk and cheese 3 years ago but I didn't remove the items from his diet as there were no apparent problems. Has anyone seen this happen before? I'd really appreciate some input here. Eileen (mom to , ASD, SCD 11 weeks, and SCD 6 weeks) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2004 Report Share Posted December 23, 2004 his behavior got very aggressive within an hour or so of eating the cheese. We have similar experiences. I think before SCD their bodies are so completely overwhelmed with " bad stuff " that no one food stands out as a problem. I think of it as sort of like being in a very, very noisy room - it hurts your ears and you may be in a sort of permanent " wince, " but no one particular noise stands out - or even when it does, your ears (whole body, in fact!) are so " numb " that the one noise doesn't make much difference. Take away all that noise, however . . . then when a really loud horn blows in the room, you jump, wince . . . that's how it seems with my son. It APPEARS that the sensitivity is greater, but in fact his whole body was so overloaded with allergic reactions and opioid reactions and organic acid reactions and so forth, that who could tell if one food made a difference? Now, though - whew!!! We cheated on the diet 10 days ago and are still paying the price and likely will be for a while . . . NEVER, I repeat, NEVER will I do that again. If he has to live on chicken and carrots for the rest of his life, so be it, because I am NOT going through this again!! Alice, Mama to , 7, ASD, SCD 3 months Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2004 Report Share Posted December 23, 2004 Hi Eileen, Some of the kids may not be ready for cow dairy foods until their guts heal a bit more. He may be okay with legal goat dairy (for example goat cheddar or goat yogurt). The goat milk protein is actually smaller than cow milk protein and doesn't seem to bother as many of the ASD kids. If he still has a reaction to the goat dairy you may try leaving it out of his diet for a while longer until more healing occurs (at least 1 month) Sheila 46 mos SCD, 20 yrs UC mom of SCD 31 mos > Hello, > > My son has been on SCD for 11 weeks now - mostly dairy- free > except on 5 occasions. The first two occasions were at Thanksgiving > (parm & cheddar cheese in scr. eggs) and other 3 occasions were in this > past week (cheddar cheese in baked bread). On at least 2-3 of these > times his behavior got very aggressive within an hour or so of eating the > cheese. I'm thinking that there's a connection here. Before starting > SCD he ate dairy (milk & cheese) without any apparent problems so I'm a > little confused. Another thing to consider is that he tested allergic > (IgG) to milk and cheese 3 years ago but I didn't remove the items from > his diet as there were no apparent problems. > > Has anyone seen this happen before? I'd really appreciate some input > here. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2004 Report Share Posted December 23, 2004 Hi Eileen, Some of the kids may not be ready for cow dairy foods until their guts heal a bit more. He may be okay with legal goat dairy (for example goat cheddar or goat yogurt). The goat milk protein is actually smaller than cow milk protein and doesn't seem to bother as many of the ASD kids. If he still has a reaction to the goat dairy you may try leaving it out of his diet for a while longer until more healing occurs (at least 1 month) Sheila 46 mos SCD, 20 yrs UC mom of SCD 31 mos > Hello, > > My son has been on SCD for 11 weeks now - mostly dairy- free > except on 5 occasions. The first two occasions were at Thanksgiving > (parm & cheddar cheese in scr. eggs) and other 3 occasions were in this > past week (cheddar cheese in baked bread). On at least 2-3 of these > times his behavior got very aggressive within an hour or so of eating the > cheese. I'm thinking that there's a connection here. Before starting > SCD he ate dairy (milk & cheese) without any apparent problems so I'm a > little confused. Another thing to consider is that he tested allergic > (IgG) to milk and cheese 3 years ago but I didn't remove the items from > his diet as there were no apparent problems. > > Has anyone seen this happen before? I'd really appreciate some input > here. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2004 Report Share Posted December 23, 2004 Hi Eileen, Some of the kids may not be ready for cow dairy foods until their guts heal a bit more. He may be okay with legal goat dairy (for example goat cheddar or goat yogurt). The goat milk protein is actually smaller than cow milk protein and doesn't seem to bother as many of the ASD kids. If he still has a reaction to the goat dairy you may try leaving it out of his diet for a while longer until more healing occurs (at least 1 month) Sheila 46 mos SCD, 20 yrs UC mom of SCD 31 mos > Hello, > > My son has been on SCD for 11 weeks now - mostly dairy- free > except on 5 occasions. The first two occasions were at Thanksgiving > (parm & cheddar cheese in scr. eggs) and other 3 occasions were in this > past week (cheddar cheese in baked bread). On at least 2-3 of these > times his behavior got very aggressive within an hour or so of eating the > cheese. I'm thinking that there's a connection here. Before starting > SCD he ate dairy (milk & cheese) without any apparent problems so I'm a > little confused. Another thing to consider is that he tested allergic > (IgG) to milk and cheese 3 years ago but I didn't remove the items from > his diet as there were no apparent problems. > > Has anyone seen this happen before? I'd really appreciate some input > here. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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