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Re: regression with GFCF?

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,

Just some thoughts. A DAN doctor wanted us to do GFCF after we had

spent alot of time working on yeast. We had drasctically decreased the

sugar intake. Sugar, almost any form, is a nightmare as she has alot of

yeast. Well, if we had gone GFCF, which I found many of the GFCF food s

high in sugar, it would have been a nightmare. We continued ith the

enzymes, which are working relatively well for us.

If yeast is an issue, you have to watch the GFCF sugar intake.

Bridget

>

> Hi My 5 yr old son has been on GFCF for about 2 weeks and I noticed

> that he actually regressed rather than having improvements. He stims

> more, stutters more, and withdraws more at social gatherings. I have

> read many good things about gfcf but that doesn't seem to be our case.

> My son never has any problem with BM before (no BM problem either w/

> gfcf), and he has a PDD-NOS dx. Any idea why gfcf caused regressions

> for him? I have tried the houston enzymes before (a month ago) for

> about 1 week before putting him on gfcf, and observed the same

> regressions back then. Does this mean my son is not a good candidate

> for gfcf/enzymes? We did a bounch of tests and are waiting for the

> results now. Would appreciate your input.

>

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Guest guest

,

Just some thoughts. A DAN doctor wanted us to do GFCF after we had

spent alot of time working on yeast. We had drasctically decreased the

sugar intake. Sugar, almost any form, is a nightmare as she has alot of

yeast. Well, if we had gone GFCF, which I found many of the GFCF food s

high in sugar, it would have been a nightmare. We continued ith the

enzymes, which are working relatively well for us.

If yeast is an issue, you have to watch the GFCF sugar intake.

Bridget

>

> Hi My 5 yr old son has been on GFCF for about 2 weeks and I noticed

> that he actually regressed rather than having improvements. He stims

> more, stutters more, and withdraws more at social gatherings. I have

> read many good things about gfcf but that doesn't seem to be our case.

> My son never has any problem with BM before (no BM problem either w/

> gfcf), and he has a PDD-NOS dx. Any idea why gfcf caused regressions

> for him? I have tried the houston enzymes before (a month ago) for

> about 1 week before putting him on gfcf, and observed the same

> regressions back then. Does this mean my son is not a good candidate

> for gfcf/enzymes? We did a bounch of tests and are waiting for the

> results now. Would appreciate your input.

>

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Guest guest

It sounds to me like he is experiencing withdrawal symptoms if he had

the same symptoms when you tried enzymes. Many children are " addicted "

to casein and/or gluten and initially experience negative symptoms when

they are removed from the diet. The w/d symptoms should pass within a

few weeks or so and you would begin to see gradual improvements at that

time if he is going to benefit from the diet. Most people suggest

giving a good trial of 3 months or so before deciding if the diet

and/or enzymes are going to be helpful.

Sheresa

>

> Hi My 5 yr old son has been on GFCF for about 2 weeks and I noticed

> that he actually regressed rather than having improvements. He stims

> more, stutters more, and withdraws more at social gatherings. I have

> read many good things about gfcf but that doesn't seem to be our case.

> My son never has any problem with BM before (no BM problem either w/

> gfcf), and he has a PDD-NOS dx. Any idea why gfcf caused regressions

> for him? I have tried the houston enzymes before (a month ago) for

> about 1 week before putting him on gfcf, and observed the same

> regressions back then. Does this mean my son is not a good candidate

> for gfcf/enzymes? We did a bounch of tests and are waiting for the

> results now. Would appreciate your input.

>

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Guest guest

It could be withdrawl. In that case you can go very slowly with

your enzyme dosing.

My son is wildly intolerant of rice, legume flours, potatoes, corn

starch, and sugar gives him instant yeast. Basically any type of

starch on the gfcf diet is worse for him than gluten itself. He is

better on enzymes with gluten as his main grain.

My daughter on the other hand is gfcf on enzymes, but still needs

the enzymes in fairly high doses to not react to things. So even 2

kids in the same family can't eat the same foods...it's very

individual for each child.

How has your son done his best, historically? I'd start with

enzymes and the food plan where you've seen him at his most stable,

and when the enzymes are in place, then start adjusting the foods,

where you think there might still be problems.

Also, don't underestimate the impact of sugar and things like

artificial preservatives, colorings, etc. Enzymes don't help with

the chemicals in foods, and my kids are more sensitive to those

effects (sugar and chemicals) than anything.

Amy

>

> Hi My 5 yr old son has been on GFCF for about 2 weeks and I noticed

> that he actually regressed rather than having improvements. He

stims

> more, stutters more, and withdraws more at social gatherings. I

have

> read many good things about gfcf but that doesn't seem to be our

case.

> My son never has any problem with BM before (no BM problem either

w/

> gfcf), and he has a PDD-NOS dx. Any idea why gfcf caused

regressions

> for him? I have tried the houston enzymes before (a month ago) for

> about 1 week before putting him on gfcf, and observed the same

> regressions back then. Does this mean my son is not a good

candidate

> for gfcf/enzymes? We did a bounch of tests and are waiting for the

> results now. Would appreciate your input.

>

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Guest guest

>

> Hi My 5 yr old son has been on GFCF for about 2 weeks and I noticed

> that he actually regressed rather than having improvements. He stims

> more, stutters more, and withdraws more at social gatherings.

This can be the adjustment period.

It can also be that he does not tolerate other foods you are giving

him. Soy, corn, and phenols are commonly not tolerated

http://www.danasview.net/phenol.htm

It can also be the loss of certain nutrients caused by the removal of

those foods. Removing milk removes most calcium and also cysteine.

Removing gluten removes most B vitamins, selenium, and manganese. So

you can add those foods back with enzymes, or supplement those

nutrients in other ways.

>>I have tried the houston enzymes before (a month ago) for

> about 1 week before putting him on gfcf, and observed the same

> regressions back then.

This sounds like adjustment period. The typical adjustment period is

3-4 weeks. You might want to stick it out for that long, then add

supplements.

Dana

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Guest guest

Andy Cutler has put together a great piece on selecting a diet for

your child. It can be found in the autism treatment files.

Anne

> >

> > Hi My 5 yr old son has been on GFCF for about 2 weeks and I

noticed

> > that he actually regressed rather than having improvements. He

> stims

> > more, stutters more, and withdraws more at social gatherings. I

> have

> > read many good things about gfcf but that doesn't seem to be our

> case.

> > My son never has any problem with BM before (no BM problem either

> w/

> > gfcf), and he has a PDD-NOS dx. Any idea why gfcf caused

> regressions

> > for him? I have tried the houston enzymes before (a month ago)

for

> > about 1 week before putting him on gfcf, and observed the same

> > regressions back then. Does this mean my son is not a good

> candidate

> > for gfcf/enzymes? We did a bounch of tests and are waiting for

the

> > results now. Would appreciate your input.

> >

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Guest guest

I'm having trouble finding a file titled " autism treatment " . Can

someone tell

me what I'm doing wrong? (I'm sure it's me....)

Patty

Re: regression with GFCF?

Andy Cutler has put together a great piece on selecting a diet for

your child. It can be found in the autism treatment files.

Anne

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Guest guest

Okay, thanks. I guess that explains it!

Re: regression with GFCF?

>

>

> Andy Cutler has put together a great piece on selecting a diet for

> your child. It can be found in the autism treatment files.

>

> Anne

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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