Hello Jeff,
> I am sorry to hear you've had such difficulties in finding effective
> treatments. Personally I'm not as attached to the type of treatment,
> whether it's lifestyle or diet or meds, if it works or if it helps, then
> I'm all for it. If they made a pill that would cure or significantly
> reduce the symptoms with minimal side-effects I'll be the 1st in line to
> get it.
Me too! But I look for some evidence to support the treatment and
then review the risks, little evidence / high risk gets ignored. Its
why I tried the Chlorella you recommended a while back, only a little
evidence but, assuming the supplement maker was honest, very low risk.
> Correct me if I'm wrong (I know you will :-)) but it seems you do and
> have made some dietary adjustments that help, or you have identified
> foods that you avoid, either of these would help reduce overall level of
> symptoms.
Not really. I've tried a lot of things to identify problem foods and
with one exception, the results come back either nothings bothers me
or everything does.
I lean to the everything bothers me as my fatigue gets worse about
60-90 minutes after eating. So the lifestyle change I made is to fast
until my symptoms get worse anyway and then eat.
The on exception is bacon. If I eat a pound like I used to do when I
was younger, it makes my diarrhea worse. 5 or 6 pieces seems to be
okay.
> This is really all I mean by diet and/or lifestyle changes
> that just about everyone makes on some level.
The problem with your definition is that it covers everything. Any
change in diet, any change in lifestyle. Given this definition,
everyone makes some change, if nothing else to avoid foods which cause
pain. If I stop hitting myself with a hammer, my pain improves and
I've made a lifestyle change treatment.
My definition is stricter, for instance bone loading exercises to
reduce osteoporosis is a life style change that improves my health.
> And it's not limited to
> just elimination techniques, which some find effective to identify
> problem foods, but the addition of some things that can be digestive
> enhancements, for lack of a better term at the moment. I take a high
> potency probiotic as well as digestive enzymes along with a number of
> vitamins and minerals which I believe help overall digestion. I've made
> these choices from a reasonable amount of research on the matter and
> lots of trial and error.
>
> An elimination diet is one technique but it may also eliminate essential
> ingredients to having a healthy digestive eco-system. People with IBD,
> imho, already have their eco-system out of whack, so elimination diets
> may not be the best choice to re-balance things because the missing
> ingredients are still - missing. That's a simplified version for sake of
> this discussion but I hope the point is clear.
Elimination diets were only one form of restricted diets I've tried.
Low residue diets ( a must for me following a colonoscopy), liquid
diets, elemental diet, almost vegan (2-3 ounces of wild caught salmon
weekly was the exception) and more.
I had to give up the almost vegan diet and I could not eat enough to
keep my weight up. Well, not without eating sugar or something
similar.
And I try to track my nutrition on any new diet. There's an open
source program called CRON-o-meter (
http://cronometer.com) which is
excellent for checking nutrition. It was originally intended for
people trying a calorie restricted diet.
> Fatigue is perfectly understandable since we are not getting the
> nutrients our bodies need for all it's functions and also it is
> expending more energy fighting this continual battle that is going on.
> All that takes energy away from the already burdened system.
Systemic inflammation can cause fatigue as well. I've had fatigue
since well before any recognized nutritional problems, I'm going with
the inflammation as the probably cause.
> Getting the right combination to re-right the ailing ship is no small or
> easy task.
No it is an impossible task. There is no way currently to track all
the nutrients a person needs. There isn't any easy way to determine
what nutrients a person is having trouble getting, if you can't test
for it you have to use other ways to determine its level. And the
nutrients are often needed in combination. Look up combinatorial
complexity. And then there's the form and quantities available to us
in some unknown quality.
Take vitamin E for example, there are several forms available and one
person may respond better with one form and not at all with another.
I think that was part of the trouble with early vitamin E studies,
they didn't distinguish which form was used.
> I've been trying for over 10 years. I feel that I am on the
> right track though, and have made significant improvements so that I am
> mostly free from the constant worry about "how far away is the nearest
> clean bathroom facilities". If not for the damning effects from the
> prednisone my life would not be so bad. I realize this illness takes on
> many forms and each person has their own individual manifestations,
> however I also think there are many who share similarities, and of
> course we all want to share what works and what doesn't in hopes we may
> help someone else just as we have been helped by others.
>
> I do think rather strongly that a healthy diet is ever so important to
> regaining health and well being. Drugs cannot do that,
I agree. The problem is figuring out what actually is a healthy
diet. There are a lot of opinions out there but even the best science
can't say much. If you have the time check out “The Gospel of Food:
Everything You Think You Know About Food Is Wrong”, it discussed the
limitations of most studies on diet.
> I know you have worked tirelessly to share so much, I do hope you can
> find the key or keys get things moving in the right direction.
>
> I've rambled enough for now.
No, it was a nice discussion. We may not agree about everything but
that doesn’t mean we can't talk about it.
Take care,
--
Luke