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ALLERGIES: THE FOOD AND DISEASE PARADIGM
By
Dr George Samra. MBBS(Sydney), FACNEM
From Chapter 17 of
Dr George Samras book The
New Hypoglycemic Connection SUMMARY:
The notion that food and disease have an intimate relationship is
nothing new to traditional Chinese medicine. The food and disease paradigm is
a new way of thinking about chronic illness. There appears to be a pattern of
food and disease symptoms that are common to sufferers. The food
and disease paradigm argues strongly that rather than using drugs as a first line
of treatment, a diet change based on common food triggers should be tried
first with or without other treatment modalities including lifestyle change
and natural supplements. For example with migraine sufferers, patients should
be taught to avoid chocolate, cola drinks, oranges, peanuts, cows milk products,
green beans and peas, and MSG (code 621). With Asthma, patients should be taught
to avoid dust mite, cows milk dairy, as well as beef and veal.
The food and disease paradigm argues strongly that this is a safe treatment modality,
the patient has nothing to lose and that a reasonable trial for one month should
be considered. The food paradigm aims to cure disease by avoiding the
cause, and argues when food avoidance has a positive effect on a chronic illness
this is the preferred mode of treatment. Little is lost by waiting a month or
so before commencing drug therapies. In chronic illness where drugs are used it
is likely that they will be used for many years, so patients and doctors need
not be in any hurry for the prescription approach. This chapter lists
and explains the foods that may be involved in various chronic conditions. Food
substitutes are also recommended to replace the foods that are being avoided.
Traditional Chinese medicine teaches that food is medicine.
The notion that food and chronic illness have an intimate relationship is nothing
new to traditional Chinese medicine. A paradigm is a shift in ones
way of thinking. The food and disease paradigm is a new way of thinking about
chronic illness, whereby there appears to be a pattern of food and disease symptoms
that are common to sufferers. As far as food is concerned Western medicine tends
to be dismissive. Frequently patients tell doctors of food relationships to their
symptoms, merely to be dismissed with a cynical grunt from their highly educated
medical practitioner attending their illness. A patient might tell a doctor, for
example, every time I eat chocolate I get a headache. Common
sense would dictate that the doctor should respond by saying, Well in
that case dont eat chocolate! So entrenched is the dismissive
view in Western medicine to food and symptom suffering that such a vital clue
offered by a patient is carelessly abandoned. The human machine is fuelled
by food. Logic would dictate that anything we put in our mouths could go one of
three ways in its consequences:
-
It could be
good for us -
It could be neutral -
It could be bad for us This is true for all foods consumed.
For the most part foods are good for our human machine, or they may be neutral,
however, the third possibility is very real as well and some foods are bad for
some individuals. Some children have been known to die from sudden severe anaphylactic
allergic reactions to peanuts - even very small quantities. Foods are not necessarily
good for everybody. Hypoglycemics react to sugar, simple carbohydrates
(including honey and glucose); people with food allergies react to specific foods.
What we put into our mouths can be bad for us! Not just allergy foods!
Imagine, for example, drinking a glass of kerosene - no doctor would argue that
this would be good for you, but those same doctors would have problems believing
that foods could cause any reactions at all to the sufferers. It
is time for a paradigm shift. The food and disease paradigm argues strongly that
rather than use drugs as a first line of treatment, a diet change based on
common food triggers should be tried first, with or without other treatment
modalities including lifestyle change and possibly natural supplements.
EXAMPLES Migraine and Headaches The following foods should
be avoided:-
Substitute products could be tried as alternatives, carob can replace chocolate.
Clear lemonade can replace Cola drinks, and apple juice replace orange juice.
Soy and Goats milk and cheeses replace Cows milk dairy products.
Asthma and Airway diseases The following should be avoided:-
Substitutes for Cows
milk include; Soya milk, Soya cheese and goats cheese, white meats such
as chicken, fish and seafood can be used instead of beef products. For small-goods
things like chicken sausages and turkey loaf maybe used. Asthmatic patients should
wear a protective mask if doing house work. The bedroom should have shiny floors
with tiles, lino or polished floorboards. Patients should purchase special dust
proof pillowcases and mattress covers, and should avoid having feather pillows,
feather doonas and woollen blankets on their beds using knitted cotton blankets
and cotton or synthetic doonas. Irritable Bowel Syndrome and
Stomach Disorders Foods to be avoided include: Substitute
foods include: Pine-nuts and pine-nut pastes, as well as fruits and vegetables
not in the list above. Eczema, Dermatitis, and Skin Conditions
Avoid: -
Chocolate -
Cola drinks -
Oranges -
Apples
-
Cows cheese -
Cows
yoghurt -
All nuts Substitutes include:
Carob for chocolate, lemonade for Cola drinks, pears and bananas instead of oranges
and apples, soya milk products as well as pine-nut and pine-nut paste. Arthritis,
Rheumatism, and Muscle and Joint Problems Avoid: -
Tomatoes -
Potatoes -
Beef
and Veal -
Oranges In cases of severe
disabling disease whole food families should be avoided. The family of tomatoes
is known as Nightshades and includes potatoes, capsicum, chilli and eggplant.
The family of oranges is known as Citrus and includes oranges, lemons, limes,
grapefruit, kiwi fruit, and passionfruit. The family of beef includes other red
meats and includes lamb, pig meat and all the byproducts such as ham, bacon and
salami. Approximately 25% of severe arthritic patients are allergic to gluten
which is wheat protein. Substitutes: Sweet potato or yam, and pumpkin
can be used to replace potato. In many cooking dishes pureed carrot can be used
to replace tomato, apples can replace oranges, white meat can replace red meat,
and non-Nightshade vegetables can be used freely. Where gluten appears to be a
problem rice bread, rice noodles, rice biscuits, and rice flour can replace wheat
and rye products. Neurological Disorders, including Neuralgia,
Parkinsons Disease, and MS Avoid: The Legumes food family includes beans, peas, nuts and
lentils. It also includes soya bean products such as soya milk, soya sauce, tofu,
as well as including bean sprouts. Vegetables can be used that are not
related to beans and peas. Pine-nuts can be used to replace nuts, cows milk
or rice milk can be used to replace soya milk. In these conditions it may prove
wise to avoid all of the foods listed under migraines and headaches also.
Fatigue, Mood-swings, Depression Avoid: Substitute foods
can be purchased from supermarket and health food stores that are free from sugars
and yeast. Auto-immune diseases including Lupus, Rheumatoid
Arthritis, Sjograns, etc. Avoid the food families of: -
Mammalia which includes all animal milks, cheese and yoghurts, as well
as all red meat such as beef, veal, lamb, pig meat and all their byproducts including
ham, bacon, salami, corn-beef, and Devon. -
Gluten
includes all the products from gluten grains which are wheat, rye, oats, barley,
malt, and occasionally some strains of corn or maize. Substitutes
include: Soya cheeses, rice milk and soya milk, as well as rice bread, cereals,
noodles, and biscuits. Auto-immune illness is a massive topic. In a book
of this size one can only hope to skim through some basic dietary instruction. THE
FOOD DISEASE PARADIGM The food and disease paradigm argues strongly
that this is a safe treatment modality and that the patient has nothing to lose
from a reasonable trial of avoidance. A minimum trial would be at least for one
month. Unlike what is offered with drug treatments, the food paradigm aims to
cure disease by avoiding the cause. This new way of thinking hopes to bring Western
medicine into the 21st Century, where food treatments replace drug
treatments and where lifestyle changes encourage the notion that prevention is
better than cure. When avoidance of certain foods has a positive impact
of chronic illness, this is a preferable mode of treatment. There is nothing to
lose by waiting a month or two before commencing drug treatments. In chronic illnesses
once drugs are used, it is likely that they will be used for many years and perhaps
forever. In the case where food has been unsuccessful in changing the course of
a chronic illness, it is no crime to pursue the conventional prescription or drug
approach. EVIDENCE FOR THE FOOD DISEASE PARADIGM Elimination
diets have been used by allergists in the past to unmask allergies. The patient
is placed on a limited variety of low allergy foods for usually 7 to14 days. Many
allergy sufferers improve dramatically in their health on this limited diet. Typical
foods allowed in an elimination diet include: boiled rice, pealed pears, chicken
(no skin), pumpkin, carrots, olive oil, a whole range of rice products including
rice milk, rice noodles, rice cakes, rice cereal, other bulbous vegetables including
sweet-potato, marrow, zucchini, choco, and fresh beetroot. Only filtered water
is used for drinking. The elimination diet varies slightly in the hands of different
allergists. It is reasonable to assume that someone whose health improves
remarkably on an elimination diet has food allergies! The next step is to bring
back foods one at a time, usually one day at a time, to identify offending foods.
Patients are asked to keep a record of symptoms as each new food is returned.
Responses from over 200 of my patients were used to help create a computer program
which can function in two directions. From a list of symptoms and severities the
program can reveal the most likely offending foods, but equally with any given
food the program also is able to show the most likely associated symptoms. This
is how I became involved in the food paradigm, because invariably with chronic
illness the list of offending foods show a great degree of overlap. Hence the
list of foods to avoid can be defined. OTHER EVIDENCE
Dr. Preslav Trenchev works in an Immunological Laboratory in the outer-city suburb
of Kemps Creek. He performs auto-antibody and other immunological testing. These
have been used to cross correlate auto-antibody mechanisms and food relationships.
It is no surprise now to find that patients with multiple joint arthritis have
high Synovial Membrane antibodies and/or high Cartilage antibodies. Patients with
Irritable Bowel Syndrome often have high Colon cell antibodies or high Parietal
cell antibodies. When Parietal cell antibodies are elevated a Gluten free diet
almost always works well to alleviate symptoms. Dr Trenchev tests for an extensive
list of tissue antibodies and an understanding of the food and chronic disease
paradigm not only helps to lower elevated antibody levels with the passage of
time - this in itself is evidence of the food and disease association. The tissue
antibody levels fall with correct diet and this helps to undo the symptoms of
the illness. Dr Chris Reading practicing in the Northern Sydney suburb
of DeeWhy has also conducted extensive food allergy and auto-antibody testing
in thousands of his patients. His conclusions are very similar to those that have
been found in my practice. WHAT TO DO NEXT If it is
possible to do, have allergy testing performed (particularly for foods.) These
can include Rast testing, and Cytotoxic Food Allergy Testing. In good hands Cytotoxic
Food Allergy Testing is about 80% accurate, but this is good enough as it is a
lot better than guess work. If you have a chronic illness then avoid the foods
listed, use the substitute foods, and if possible have food allergy testing performed
through a good laboratory. It must be emphasised once again that the food and
chronic disease paradigm aims to cure disease by avoiding the cause. Surely
if food can stop the symptoms this is vastly superior to using drugs as therapy.
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