Guest guest Posted December 17, 2006 Report Share Posted December 17, 2006 Hi , Thanks very much for your comments. I really appreciate them. In particular, I am glad for the tips on how to improve protein digestion. Anything I can do to improve my ability to digest protein will help me to follow an anti-candida diet. I did search the web for info about manganese and found that manganese deficiency can contribute to loss of hair color. When I was about 25, I developed a small cluster of gray hair (around 6-8 hairs). Not sure if it was from mineral deficiency or pure metal toxicity but it never seemed normal to me. This mercury toxicity diagnosis has helped me explain a whole collection of bizarre symptoms which I had been unable to connect. Now that I am gaining an understanding of how mercury affects the body and how to overcome the problem, I am finally beginning to feel some hope. ----Katharine > > Katharine, > > Your test meets counting rule #3 with more than 4 in red. I would > suggest supplementing lithium and possibly a bit of manganese. > Pretty close on counting rule #4 as well. > > > You have an all low presentation, suggesting that lead may be more > of a problem than it appears. After amalgam removal, DMSA will be > the best choice of chelator, along with ALA. > > > > Your ratios look okay, but as Dean suggests you may be drifting > toward adrenal/thyroid issues. The pattern of the electrolyte > minerals does seem to suggest this. > > > > > From a nutritional point of view, I really struggle because I am > > intolerant to all types of protein except fish (!) and beans. > > Andy says people with low manganese don't handle ammonia properly > and will feel better on reduced protein. A manganese supplement > is a good idea. After supplementing it for a few weeks, try > increasing protein again and see if you do any better. > > Betaine HCL and ascorbic acid will help with protein digestion, > and will also help to remove ammonia from the body. Digestive > enzymes are a good idea, too, given your " all low " test. > > If you're going to eat fish, stick with the low mercury varieties. > Your fish intake could be another source of your toxicity. I think > you can find some good links for fish mercury content in the > archives. > > > > > Supplements and medications on at time of hair test: > > Primal Defense – 1 capsule per day > > B50 1 capsule per day > > Multivitamin 1 tablet t per day > > > > Recently added supplements and medications after the hair test and > > date added: > > 200 mcg. chromium picolinate 2x per day > > 150 mg magnesium 1x per day > > > > I've discontinued the B50s since they tend to exacerbate yeast > > problems. > > You will definitely need to increase the supplements to get any > improvement. You are right to add one thing at a time, of course, > especially with intolerances and allergies. > > There are B vitamins that are yeast free. They are not hard to find. > If this does not help, try adding one (yeast free) B vitamin at a > time. Some of them may be tolerated. > > If you are not on a candida diet, that is important. It is possible > to get a lot of improvement (at least for some people) even if you > must eat some carbs, as long as they are whole grains. If you > tolerate legumes, that may be okay, too. You will have to experiment > to see what works. Very important to eliminate all sugar, fermented > foods, mushrooms, vinegar, simple carbs, gluten, dairy, fruit. > > -- > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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