Gut bacteria may play a role in eating disorders#iBelieve#Health#Eatingdisorder

By Dr Flannery

Eating disorders affect an estimated 5 to 10 percent of the population and are generally thought to be a psychological disorder. However, new research from France shows gut bacteria can also play a role in causing eating disorders. The study showed eating disorders developed in mice who had an immune reaction to a protein made by gut bacteria. Basically they reacted to these proteins as if they had an allergy or sensitivity to them. The protein made by the gut bacteria is very similar in structure to a satiety hormone called alpha-Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (a-MSH). When the immune system reacts to the protein it reacts to the a-MSH too because they are so similar. This reaction causes the immune system to attack a-MSH, which regulates feeding, energy usage, and anxiety.

Mistaken identity and friendly fire by the immune system

When a pathogen, such as infectious bacteria, is similar to a tissue or hormone in the body and the immune system can’t distinguish between the two and attacks both, this is called cross-reactivity. It is a very common cause of autoimmune reactions. For instance, gluten, the protein in wheat, cross-reacts with tissue in the brain. Many people with gluten sensitivity develop neurological disorders because when the immune system attacks ingested gluten it attacks the brain too, confusing it with gluten. The same holds true for dairy and some cases of type 1 diabetes, and other foods and autoimmune diseases. This study opens the door to the possibility that eating disorders may have an immune component at their root driving the psychological disorder.

Ways to address an unhealthy relationship with eating nutritionally

Although serious eating disorders are complex and require intensive therapy, certain nutritional strategies can help you obtain a more balanced approach to eating and food. The key is to follow a diet that fosters healthy brain chemistry.

Eliminate processed carbohydrates from your diet as they are addictive and skew brain chemistry in the way other addictive substances do. This can foster an unhealthy relationship with food.

Eating to keep blood sugar stable is a vital component to curbing cravings, obsessions with food, and a constant feeling of hunger. Avoid sweet, starchy foods, coffee drinks and energy drinks, going too long without eating, and relying on coffee for breakfast. Many people need to eat small, protein-dense meals frequently in the beginning to stabilize blood sugar.

It’s also important to base your diet on plenty of vegetables — research shows a plant-based diet affects the composition of gut bacteria and affects energy usage and fat storage in a way that promotes being slender naturally — without having to obsess over it.

Supporting your neurotransmitters, brain chemicals that affect mood and brain function, can also help you stabilize your approach to eating. Your brain may need serotonin or dopamine support. Serotonin is important to feel joy and ward off depression, while dopamine support may be helpful to feel motivation and ward off cravings. Both have been shown to play a role in eating disorders.

Ask my office for more advice on how to support a healthier approach to balanced, obsession-free eating.

Post in it’s entirety, is compliments of www.drflannery.com/

 

Can Celiac Disease Affect the Brain?#ASD#iBelieve#Repost

 WHEN Andre H. Lagrange, a neurologist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, saw the ominous white spots on the patient’s brain scan, he considered infection or lymphoma, a type of cancer. But tests ruled out both. Meanwhile, anti-epilepsy drugs failed to halt the man’s seizures. Stumped, Dr. Lagrange turned to something the mother of the 30-year-old man kept repeating. The fits coincided, she insisted, with spells of constipation and diarrhea.

That, along with an odd rash, prompted Dr. Lagrange to think beyond the brain. Antibody tests, followed by an intestinal biopsy, indicated celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder of the gut triggered by the gluten proteins in wheat and other grains….

 Read the Entire Article Here

www.nytimes.com

Related Articles:

Some of the benefits from setting aside a known carcinogenic wheat, but did you know which wheat is carcinogenic?

Do you have wheat in your prescriptions, shampoo or make-up?

Are you eating toxic dwarf wheat?

 

 

 

Some of the benefits from setting aside a known Carcinogenic Wheat – but did you know which wheat is carcinogenic?#ASD#Family#iBelieve

Weight loss, often to astounding degrees, relief from acid reflux and bowel urgency, freedom from joint pain, reversal of eczema and other skin rashes, no more depression or anxiety just a few of the surprising and unexpected health transformations…

“Five years ago I was basically bedridden. I went to doctor after doctor and they never had any answers. Everything was ‘normal.’ I vomited every morning for five years, had high blood pressure, high cholesterol, had been hospitalized twice with blood pressure at one point of 210/115. I had chronic pain, exhausted. At 34 years old, I didn’t have much of a life.

I started working with a nutritionist who suggested leaky gut syndrome. I went low-carb and felt a little better. I went gluten-free and saw a slight improvement.

I read Wheat Belly and it was like a light bulb went off…

Continue to Success Stories

www.wheatbellyblog.com

One of the best health/nutrition books I have read.  So simple, and my family and I have had quick results.  So happy I came across this book, and love the blog. 

Written by a veteran cardiologist with 1000’s of success stories.  What an observant specialist to look outside the box when things were just not adding up.  Funny, how so many health answers are truly simple, inexpensive and within reach.

Related Post – FAQs

Related Media

How Anyone Can Eat Healthy On A Tight Budget#family#iBelieve#MS

By JJ Virgin

 A few years ago, while promoting The Virgin Diet, I spoke at a local health food store. Afterwards, during the Q&A, the last question caught me off-guard. “How do you expect a mom with an out-of-work husband and three children to afford grass-fed beef?” asked a woman from the back row.

I had my answers in place. Healthy food becomes inexpensive health care, I reasoned, and those bargain menus aren’t such a great deal when you factor in bigger-picture issues like obesity and diabetes. If grass-fed beef becomes too expensive, simply stick with mostly plant foods.

Yet her question stayed with me. As a single mom with two teenage sons, I understood her situation all too well.

I became determined to dig a little deeper about eating healthy without spending half your paycheck. On my drive home that day, I brainstormed these 10 effective strategies. I’ve long employed them to stretch even the tightest food budget…

Read the Entire Article Here

www.mindbodygreen.com

If you could have a glimpse into your parents/grandparents past, everyday lives#iBelieve#health#ufollowme

If you have spent time perusing my blog, you will probably find that I have a love of learning, especially in those things that benefit our health, freedoms, and family life.

As of late, I have noticed benefits in returning to some old ways.  You know, cooking from scratch more, Knowing what is in the food you feed your family.  I have to chuckle, because that liver and onions my mom used to make, is probably loaded with good benefits. 

My mom grew up on a family farm, and knew a lot about cooking, and food.  She would mill her own wheat, freeze hand-picked corn, make homemade jellies, and the like.  I used to feel guilty about the butter, and homemade hot cocoa made from whole, raw milk. 

Now I wish I could go back and observe all the little details of my mother’s, and grandmother’s cooking.  With discussion of nutrient dense foods, I find a lot of them sound like what I used to find on my dinner table growing up.

Vegetables from a family garden, bulk higher quality grains, and meats that source from the nutrient rich parts of the animal.  Less processed foods, and making choices of grocery items that have short, recognizable ingredient lists.

What I would give, to go back and observe first hand, and learn little tips from their ways.  How I appreciate all the little details that I can remember. We have a lot of fun as siblings when we reminisce, and try to recall as much as we can.

Are you eating Toxic dwarf wheat?#ASD#iBelieve#Celiac

If you eat grains, then take a look at, wheatbellyblog.com.

Over 50 years ago, our everyday wheat changed, mainly due to a hybridized plant that delivered 10 times the yield of prior wheat plants.  This appeared as a wonderful discovery, but decades later we now know that this dwarf wheat contains glutens that the human body cannot digest.  Thus, leading to many autoimmune disorders, and very possibly the four-fold increase in celiac disease present today. You can probably guess that this is another case with a lack of safety tests completed prior to placing this product on the market.

I have been reading, Wheat Belly, by cardiologist William Davis.  One of the best health/nutrition books I have ever read. I have backed off the toxic wheat, and have noticed an overall better state of health in a short period of time.

If you eat grains, I hope you take the time to visit this blog or read the book, and find out for yourself what health benefits lie ahead.

 

 

Do you have Toxic Wheat in your prescriptions, shampoo, make-up or soy sauce?#Health#Celiac#A.S.D.

Access theDr.com Articles Here

 Love this site, so much helpful information.  I especially love listening to the podcasts while I am about at home or in the car. 

New tidbit to me, wheat has changed significantly in the past 100 years.  The common dwarf wheat plant, contains proteins that the human body cannot breakdown, and it strikes an immune response in the body, which can lead to various autoimmune diseases. 

Adjusting the diet can reverse or arrest symptoms tied to this autoimmune reaction. 

Celiac disease can be present with symptoms other than intestinal symptoms.

Cyrex Laboratories, is the place to go, for the most accurate, Celiac testing.

Find out more at the link above.  So glad I have this information for myself, and my family.