If you’re on the constipation side, try adding magnesium supplements.
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Fibre feeds the gut microbiome, that are responsible for digesting your food and such. Vegetables, fruits, beans lentils and legumes.
A doctor explained to me, Some laxatives use caffeine as the active ingredient, best to avoid those, they only work for a brief period of time. Laxatives like osmolax draw the liquid into the poop. Make sure you're drinking adequately during the day, and take a Laxative regularly, you are constipated, as constipation leads to polyps and stretching of the bowel and heaps of nasty side effects.
How to use fodmap: Essentially fodmap is a map of foods that have a high or low digestive impact on the gut.
So if you're having digestive issues, sometimes giving your stomach a break from high fodmap foods can be enough to alleviate symptoms.
Although staying on a low fodmap foods diet can cause some nutritional deficiencies, so it is recommended to not extend too long. How long is too long? Not sure, the specialists i saw didn't tell me that.
How do I have this knowledge: I had some serious digestive issues, and went to specialists to help figure it all out. I had asked to pursue an allergy diagnosis, but my doctor suggested starting with a dietician to guide me through the process, because sometimes the foods giving you trouble won't show up on allergy tests and vice versa.
The dietician suggested a low fodmap diet, with no gluten and no dairy for one month and then just add one thing back in at a time, give it a few days to see how you react, if you have a bad reaction wait a few weeks and try again, just to be sure, to eliminate things that do give you trouble. I found i couldn't tolerate gluten, and after having 2 months of gluten free, so many symptoms had alleviated for me. Bumpy skin on my arms and forehead, bloating and pain, and I found i could add back in other foods I previously couldn't tolerate, after just taking a break from gluten (that's just me though, different for everyone).
I've been told it's about balancing. When you have a flare up, reduce down to low fodmap, for a time, a month seems like the usual time suggested. To give your stomach a break to heal, but don't stay down on the low fodmap, as it's not nutritionally complete.
There's a fodmap app from the Monash university, for easy mapping and tracking of your foods as well as recipes.
I have had a lot of success with upping my fibre and liquid intake, and reducing my refined sugar intake. My gut will tolerate so much more now. I found little tins of beans with salad dressing on them, lemon, lime and vinegarettes etc. beans in a tin are cooked ready to eat, they just need rinsing (if no sauces or flavourings) and heating slightly (30 seconds in the microwave) to improve the taste. I add them to various dips, add frozen peas and corn (reheated in microwave, too) and have a chunky salsa, it's amazing. I'm time poor, so i need quick and easy.
Hell yes King/Queen. This is what I’m talking about. Thanks, fam.
I can use this as a real starter
A friend of mine has had success with a DIY fecal transplant.
LOL. Ill try one of the of the dog turds in my back yard
Marijuana.
In my case stress level is the most influential factor. Certain foods make it worse of course, but nothing has an impact that comes close to stress levels.
So for me the issue shifted from diet management to stress management.
So true. This is the main factor, stress increases sensitivity and inflammation
Psylium fiber, lots of leafy greens, and limiting dairy and wheat. I shit a lot at the beginning when I started psylium with lots of leafy greens, but as the inflammation got better I ended up on a pretty regular once a day schedule.
If you haven't already, I would suggest looking into FODMAP. It's not necessarily a diet, but more focuses on different molecules/carbohydrates that our bodies may be sensitive to that are in a lot of the foods we eat. It took me a few months of super focusing on what I ate and how I felt after to identify that I was sensitive to very common foods/ingredients (e.g. garlic, onions). If you eat something and feel gross, bloated, cramping, etc, you're probably sensitive to something in that food. Fortunately, you can work around some of them by cooking/preparing an ingredient to breakdown wherever you're sensitive too!
Oh yes I think I've heard of certain enzymes you can take to offset this. I will look into it, thank you.
Mostly it's just treating the symptoms because the gastroenterologist just says everything is "healthy". What symptoms are you having specifically?
Reducing dairy helped for me. I switched to almond or oat milk wherever possible and when I can't, I keep lactaid on hand including in my purse.
I also take a stool softener once a week and stay hydrated to make sure I stay regular. I take Adderall for the ADHD side of the AuDHD, so hydration is always difficult because then I pee a lot. But the Adderall means I dont need as much coffee, which is an irritant for me.
For the reflux that didn't get resolved by reducing dairy and coffee, I make sure not to eat or drink anything, including water, near bedtime and if I still have some feeling like it's going to come up I take supplements with alginic acid recommend by my vocal therapist. And I take pantoprazole prescribed by my gastro.
Like others, medical stuff has revealed everything 'looks fine' for me but I've basically gone down the road of eliminating everything from the diet and bringing in safe foods one at a time to see how you react. I realised for me certain things are a no no, cut out most dairy, onions etc. Then just make a routine diet out of the stuff you know works, making sure you're getting enough protein, fat, carb, fibre etc.
I found out recently I have a contact allergy to nickel and started wondering if that might have been related to my issues (people with contact allergies also sometimes have systemic allergy to nickel). Reducing nickel intake while getting enough nutrients with my picky eating is difficult though...
Yeah ive been in chronic stress mode for several months now. I know this is the main issue, but unfortunately my stresses aren’t going away soon.
Ive been staying away from garlic and onions, but I probably need to start logging my food and tracking my reactions in a more deliberate way
Thanks
I found I should only do coffee 1-2 times a week. I switched to chai in the morning.
Also tomato sauce kept to a minimum (pizza, spaghetti, etc).
Activa yoghurt from Danone does wonders.