Guest guest Posted May 1, 2009 Report Share Posted May 1, 2009 Thanks much for this, AJ. I have Crohn’s (have had since the early 1980s) and I find it all fascinating. And interesting. The more I can learn about Crohn’s the better. I’ve read Lutz’s Life Without Bread, which I’ve also found very helpful, and which keeps me from being anal retentive about SCD, though I’m not generally the anal retentive type anyway; at least I haven’t been in the past, having Crohn’s and all (sorry!). Personally, I would very much like to hear more about the lactose/sucrose (disaccharide) part of the story that you by-passed, especially since lactose has been a real problem for me, and for many here. I’ve been on the diet three months and have improved a lot, but still have an ongoing but generally mild ache in my right side (the site of the disease and my past surgeries, two of them). My blood work is normal, except for somewhat low protein levels. But obviously my disease is still active in some way. Please keep posting here. n From: BTVC-SCD [mailto:BTVC-SCD ] On Behalf Of dietscd Sent: Friday, May 01, 2009 4:14 PM To: BTVC-SCD Subject: Re: question for those who have been on SCD for a long time Howdy. I've been part of the list that has been mentioned elsewhere, but have avoided the Yahoo! group as (quite frankly) I have a lot to say about things, and when I get a lot of email, I tend to spend too much time replying to that email, and this group is pretty busy. So, I apologize for neglecting y'all, but I'm just so busy. The tragedy of Ebringer's work is that Elaine was still alive when he was actively publishing all this work, from the mid-1980s on forward. Worse, Ebringer is a rheumatologist, and his work has been published in rheumatology circles; it is now generally accepted that Klebsiella pneumoniae (Kp) has a lot to do with ankylosing spondylitis. Ebringer has made clear inroads in terms of implicating Kp as a cause of Crohn's and ulcerative colitis, but this work is not as well-accepted for several reasons. Here's the theory in a nutshell. Stick with me. Klebsiella pneumoniae is an opportunistic pathogen, known to cause pneumonia (as its name implies), and is also the second-leading cause of Gram-negative sepsis ( " blood infections " ). This becomes important later. In its role in ankylosing spondylitis (AS), Crohn's disease (CD), and ulcerative colitis (UC), it is NOT a pathogen, and is not even an infection. It is a commensal organism- one of several hundred critters swimming around in your gut, performing all sorts of obscene biological things while making your intestines its home. For the majority of individuals, it is harmless (provided it doesn't get into your lungs or your bloodstream- same as many otherwise harmless bacteria). However, Kp has one trait that causes it to be less-than-endearing: it eats starch. This alone isn't a problem- but the *way* it eats starch is a problem. In order to break down complex starch- amylopectin starch (which is depicted in BTVC- Elaine knew it was part of the problem, but didn't know it was THE problem) is attacked by Kp using an enzyme- a " de-branching " enzyme. Think of de-branching enzymes as a pair of hedge shears, lopping off branches. These " branches " consist of short chains of glucose molecules, which Kp then consumes. It's like a digestive enzyme for bacteria. Unfortunately, there's a little amino acid sequence in this enzyme (which is called pulullanase) called QTDRED. That's the amino acids: Q-T-D-R-E-D, which means a glutamine connected to a threonine connected to aspartate, then arginine, and glutamate, and another aspartate. This same sequence appears in certain types of human collagen (there are 20-some types of collagen). So- somehow the human immune system becomes sensitized to this bacterial protein. If the body forms antibodies to QTDRED, then it'll attack pulullanase- which is pretty futile, as pulullanase isn't attacking the body. It's floating around in your intestines, produced by the klebsiella. Unfortunately, these antibodies will also attack things that look just like it, which includes the QTDRED sequence in your collagen. If the individual is HLA-B27 positive, the attack tends to be on the collagen of the spine. If HLA-B27 negative, the attack tends to be on the collagen of the intestines. Meanwhile, the human continues to consume starch, feeding the klebsiella, which then produces more pulullanase- to which the body responds by cranking out more antibodies. With more antibodies comes more autoimmune attack of the intestines, and more ulcers. With more ulcers comes more mixing of the bacterial proteins with the immune system. You can see where this is going. This is why the Gottschall diet works: it eliminates amylopectin starch from the diet. Stop feeding the klebsiella, and it has no reason to produce the enzyme to break down starch. In fact, in order to grow Kp from my own gut, I had to start eating large quantities of cashews and peanuts- which have " slow " starch in them, which is amylopectin wedged into a waxy matrix. If I eat more cashews, almonds, and peanuts, my stool gets loose and I can culture Kp. If I do not, the bacteria don't show up. This is why antibiotics like Flagyl (metronidazole) and Cipro (ciprofloxacin) work. Klebsiella are EXTREMELY antibiotic resistant, so trying to knock them out with this or the Borody protocol (the " triple antibiotic cocktail " that must be taken for years) work poorly, and why other antibiotics don't work at all. This is why steroids work without causing the disease to run rampant. If it were a true infection like Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis (as some have hypothesized), then taking steroids would be a very messy end for the host. Along with immunosuppressants, the immune system would take a vacation, the organism would overwhelm the host, and the host would probably die. In this case, Kp is not pathogenic. This explains why tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) inhibitors, like Humira and Remicade work. The entire class of drugs was invented to combat Gram-negative sepsis. As I started out (some paragraphs above), klebsiella is the second-leading cause of Gram-negative sepsis in humans. The klebsiella theory also explains why anti-inflammatories work. It also explains why NSAIDs are contraindicated: NSAIDs are known to create tiny little holes in the gastrointestinal tract, which is presumably one reason why they combat heart disease (by slowly bleeding the patient, making them lose iron- which is known to prevent heart attacks). These tiny little holes cause the immune system to mix with bacterial proteins, and- whammo. Flares. This explains why endoscopy is frequently followed by a flare: that fiberoptic snake wends its way through the intestines, causing small scrapes- allowing the bacterial proteins from klebsiella to mix with the immune system. Now, don't get me wrong; there's a BIT more to it than just starch once the individual gets sick. Disaccharides (lactose and sucrose, mainly) complicate the situation. But this is already far too long, so I'll leave that bit out. As for me- I've been on the Gottschall diet for 16+ months, and off my meds for over 15 months. I was diagnosed 16 months ago, in fact, and only on the drugs for 2-3 weeks. As it stands, my blood values are ALL NORMAL; that took a long time. 6 months ago, only two values were out of whack: my blood glucose was 2 points LOWER than norms (which is harmless), and my red cell distribution width (from my folate-deficient megaloblastic anemia) was 15.1 (norms 13.0 to 15.0, down from 16- or 17-something just 3-4 months earlier). I am back to normal- normal weight, normal exercising, normal stool, you name it. But it took a very long time, and strict adherence to the Gottschall diet. My doctor is not a believer, and thinks my intestines are surely plotting against me; he insists on endoscopy, and I talked him down to capsule endoscopy since I don't want that fiber-optic snake dinging up my nice-and-intact intestinal mucosa. As for me- to date, I have been unable (despite running many experiments) to find antibodies against Kp in my own blood serum. This is discouraging, but it is possible I am not performing the tests correctly. The refereed literature is full of work by Ebringer and others, implicating klebsiella. These theories are not well-accepted (indeed, they're hardly known at all) within gastroenterological circles. Instead, they offer us antibiotics, steroids, immunomodulators, TNF inhibitors- all drugs with serious side effects, including cancer and death- and inform us that surely a diet cannot possibly work, and may even be dangerous. Would that they were to make us read the black box warning on a shot of Humira or Remicade, I doubt many folks would go through with it. It's very simple: the industrialization of America and the rest of the world has led to the proliferation of white, bleached wheat, in gignormous quantities. Starch from corn, potatoes, wheat and its brethren now constitute an unnaturally large proportion of the diet. Diseases like Crohn's were unknown before white flour, and didn't appear on other continents until well after they landed on their shores. Today, I can consume rice, pinto beans, and small amounts of processed corn with no pain. The same is not true of wheat. Wheat starch has something special about it- probably the lectins that come with it- that inspires pain and discomfort, while other forms of starch do not. I don't have all the answers about precisely what causes this disease, and I'm sure there are many trails to the same destination. But Elaine was absolutely spot-on about this disease. The other genius is Dr. Wolfgang Lutz ( " Life Without Bread " ). His very simple rule- no more than 72 grams/day of carbohydrates- is elegant and (in my humble opinion) an excellent alternative to follow for those who are too busy or travel too much. In fact, if that 72 grams/day is restricted such that none of those calories come from " The Celiac Four " (barley, rye, oats, or wheat- the BROW proteins), I suspect the Lutz management scheme would be greatly amplified in its efficacy. The Lutz rule is one reason why I try not to become neurotic about tiny traces of starch or sugar in any foods I consume. Yes, my chicken seasoning has malto-dextrin in it. I still eat it. My salt may have some trace of dextrose added as a flowing agent. It's not going to make me ill. Your mileage may vary, but the one thing I cannot seem to stress enough is not to become orthorexic because of the SCD: don't become afraid of food. For all this is holy, EAT RICHLY. Steak! Eggs! Sausage! Bacon! Full-fat yogurt! Have some more cheese, some SCD-safe custard with LOTS of eggs and butter. Don't be scared by butter and fat and protein. Carbohydrates are what made you ill- the USDA food pyramid is upside down, jamming our guts with 50-55-60% of our calories from carbohydrates- it's obscene and WRONG. I had no idea how wrong-headed this was until reading " Good Calories, Bad Calories " by Taubes: 608 pages, including 140 pages of notes. It will hurt your mind and damage your furniture as you will want to hurl this book at a wall every 2-3 pages when you realize how absolutely WRONG the " war on fat " has been. Please don't starve yourself on the SCD. It doesn't have to be a breakdown over there being " nothing to eat. " It needs to be a shift from pasta and wheat and ice cream and cookies, yes- and supermarkets cater primarily to the wheat-rice-potatoes-high fructose corn syrup market, yes- but they still have food you can eat! I'm 5'11 " (probably 5'10, but I'm sticking with 5'11 " ), male, and I weighed 139 pounds when diagnosed on 19 December, 2007, having steadily lost a pound a week since June of that year. Nothing abated my weight loss. Within two months, my bleeding had stopped, and within three months I was UP 13 pounds. I'm now 159-ish, which is exactly where I want to be. (As a caver, I don't want extra weight!) I have a lot more to say, but most of you are probably on your second cup of coffee by now. This rant has been brought to you by AJ. Additional rants are available on tape, 8-track cassette, and stone tablets for $19.95. -AJ > > > > How did you arrive at the conclusion that it was KP that was the > > troublemaker? > > I can't say I have any clinical evidence to prove it in my case but > I've read quite a bit of Ebringer et al's work about Kp and the theory > seems to hang together. If it isn't Kp it's something similar...or > it's something else entirely that behaves exactly as the theory > speculates :-) > > -- > Cheers, > DF in MA > UC June '07 > SCD Nov '08 > No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.320 / Virus Database: 270.12.12/2090 - Release Date: 05/01/09 06:17:00 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.