Sometimes a Little Change Can Make a BIG Difference

February 19, 2013 in 2013, Sarah's Personal AI Struggles

(created as a guest post for The 21-Day Sugar Detox Blog)

21DSD_CoverDid I just call the 21-Day Sugar Detox a “little change”?  I guess I did.  I realize that it’s not a little change for most people tackling 3 weeks of no-sugar eating.  But going into this, I was already following the paleo autoimmune protocol, eating very few starchy vegetables and almost no paleo treats.  I didn’t feel like my eating was out of control and I didn’t feel like sugar cravings were controlling me.  That being said, I was completely in the habit of grabbing a piece of fruit (or two) any time I felt like a little something sweet.  I didn’t limit fruit consumption or the types of fruit I ate.  So, maybe I was in a little denial about having a sugar problem—because 5 or 6 pieces of fruit per day adds up to quite a bit of sugar!  I had known for a while that I was going to have to test what effect this large amount of fruit per day was having on my body and, in particular, my autoimmune disease.  The 21 Day Sugar Detox was the perfect experiment.

If you had talked to me during the first week, I would have privately told you that nothing had changed.  My skin was doing some funny things, but it wasn’t better.  My energy level was about the same.  My sleep was about the same.  I wasn’t having headaches or carb flu type symptoms, so it didn’t feel like change was around the corner.  I was feeling some resentment that I couldn’t just eat those delicious berries or grapes that my kids were eating.  And it felt like I was depriving myself for nothing.

And then week two came.  I lost a couple of pounds.  Bloating that I didn’t even realize was there went away.  My skin completely cleared.  I started to notice differences in the skin lesions from my autoimmune disease.  My sleep seemed deeper.  I had more energy during the day.  My brain seemed to be working faster.  I seemed more productive.  And it just kept going into week three.  I lost a few more pounds.  My clothes started fitting way better (probably more because I wasn’t bloated anymore rather than weight changes, but I’ll still take it!).  My skin lesions looked better than they had in months.  I felt like everything was coming together.  I was seeing dramatic improvement in my health.  I felt great.

And then it hit me.  What all this amazingness actually meant.  I did have a problem with sugar.  Sure, I was choosing vitamin-rich whole food sources of sugar, but I was in a cycle of craving, feeding the craving, then craving more.  I am healthier when I eat less fruit and more vegetables.  Dang.  That first week I kept telling myself was that the upside was I wouldn’t have to change anything when I was done with this whole detox thing.  Now, I know that I need to be more moderate with my fruit intake.

So, what now?  I have relaxed some, but really most days look pretty much like how I ate on the 21-Day Sugar Detox.  I’m working on some autoimmune protocol-friendly dessert and treat recipes for my book and notice that on days when I have that extra dessert, I don’t feel very well (for the rest of that day and the next plus then I crave more sugar).  I’m looking forward to having these recipes done so there won’t be so many tempting sweet foods in my house, because I really do think these need to be much more occasional treats than how I was eating before.  I’m already planning on doing another 21-Day Sugar Detox when the recipes for the book are done.

So, what are great recipes that are both AIP-friendly and 21-Day Sugar Detox-friendly?  Actually, most AIP-friendly recipes are automatically 21-Day Sugar Detox-friendly and a quick browse through the AIP Recipe Section of my blog will provide you with lots of great options.  And of course, there will be over 100 new recipes in my book.  During my detox, I greatly enjoyed eating Egg-Free, Tomato-Free (Hidden Liver) Paleo Meatloaf (made with the suggested AIP-modifications in the recipe and made without the molasses).  I also enjoyed Lemon-Dill Poached Salmon and Greek-Inspired Slow-Roasted Leg of Lamb.

My Journey to Health: From Low-Carb to Paleo to the Autoimmune Protocol

January 31, 2013 in About Sarah, Sarah's Personal AI Struggles

(Created as a testimonial for RobbWolf.com)

I used a standard low-carb diet to successfully lose 100 pounds.  But, I had to lose those 100 pounds twice.  Even though low-carb helped me to lose weight, it did not help me to get healthy.

My name is Sarah Ballantyne.  I was a medical researcher before becoming a full-time stay-at-home mom and the blogger behind www.thepaleomom.com.  I spend much of my free time researching the many nuances of the paleo diet and lifestyle.  This accumulating knowledge has helped me form a better understanding of why I wasn’t healthy following a low-carb diet.  It has also helped me to see the links between the different health issues that I suffered in my early twenties to early thirties.

I was an overweight teenager.  By the time I discovered how effective a low-carb diet can be for weight loss, I was 22 years old and 265 pounds.  Eating a low-carb diet combined with excessive exercise and iron willpower allowed me to lose 100 pounds over the course of a year.  I maintained my weight loss by training for marathons, practicing karate, and working out in the gym twice per week.  And as I continued to fight for a smaller waistline and to survive the rigors of graduate school, I watched my health deteriorate.  At my peak physical fitness, I suffered migraines, frequent colds, anxiety, mild depression, Irritable Bowel Syndrome, seasonal allergies, mild acne, scalp psoriasis and eczema.  I had no idea that these health conditions might be related to my diet and high stress levels (in part caused by graduate school and in part by overtraining) or even that they could be interlinked.

A health crisis in the summer of 2002 robbed me of my active lifestyle and my ability to keep my weight down.  I had adult-onset asthma with inflammation so severe that I was coughing up blood.  I was put on extremely high doses of oral and inhaled steroids.  I was apartment-bound because I would get completely out of breath just walking from the living room to the kitchen.  I became severely depressed.  Writing my thesis and preparing for my dissertation caused me even more stress.  I was now able to add severe asthma, severe allergies, acid reflux, and a new skin condition called lichen planus to my list of health complaints.  I gained back all 100 pounds (plus a few more for good measure).

I stopped weighing myself at 260 pounds.  I can only guess at how heavy I was at my biggest based on the fact that I gained a full clothing size (or maybe two?) after that.  This photo was taken of me at my biggest in the summer of 2004.

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My blood pressure was elevated, my blood triglycerides and fasting insulin were borderline high.  I ached constantly.  I was always tired and drank copious amounts of coffee to keep me going while I worked 12-18-hour days as a postdoctoral fellow in a high-profile research laboratory.  My eyesight deteriorated, and I found myself needing glasses and getting a stronger prescription every year.  I started suffering from mild arthritis, carpel tunnel syndrome, and stenosing tenosynovitis from repetitive motions in the biology lab.  I started to get rashes from sun exposure after eating processed foods.  I developed varicose veins.  I found my normally optimistic and cheerful demeanor replaced by a cynical and jaded person I hardly recognized.  I was miserable, uncomfortable all of the time, and sick.

It was years before I had sufficient motivation to lose weight again.  My first pregnancy was complicated by gestational diabetes and preeclampsia.  My daughter was colicky and a very poor sleeper.  But, when I discovered that I was prediabetic, I found that iron willpower again and used a low-carb diet (but without the excessive exercise) to get my weight back down to 165 pounds.  Some of my health conditions improved simply by losing weight.  My blood sugars were good.  My blood pressure was back in the normal range.  My cardiovascular risk factors were normal again.  But even though I was once again lighter, I wasn’t healthy.  I was still taking 6 different prescription medications every day.

Frustration with lichen planus is what propelled me to search for answers beyond what my doctors prescribed.  Learning that eczema is linked to gluten sensitivities, I started to research diet changes that might help.  This was when I found paleo.

I noticed a dramatic improvement to my overall health when I started paleo.  I lost some weight.  My symptoms of IBS and acid reflux disappeared.  I stopped getting migraines.  My mood and my ability to cope with life were better.  My energy increased.  I slept better.  My asthma and allergies diminished.  My immune system seemed stronger and I no longer got every single cold my children brought into the house.  I was able to stop taking all of my prescription medications, some of which I had been taking for 12 years.  But my lichen planus GOT WORSE.

I started searching for answers again.  By now, I was a firm believer in the fact that dietary changes should be able to solve this problem.  But I was at a loss for what I was doing wrong.  I tightened up my diet in every way I could.  I switched to grass-fed meat and pastured butter.  I increased my vegetable intake.  I stopped eating paleo baking. I increased my Vitamin D3 supplement. I reduced my starch intake to help treat a suspected case of Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth.  I went to bed earlier.  I continued to feel better and better except for the spreading lichen planus.  And then I learned a very valuable piece of information, something that no doctor I had seen in 5 different cities had bothered to mention:  lichen planus is an autoimmune condition.

When I first started eating paleo, I ate 4-8 eggs every day.  Nuts became my go-to convenience food.  Almond butter and sliced apple was my favorite snack.  Bell peppers and tomatoes featured heavily in my meals.  I wasn’t buying very much grass-fed meat in the beginning, and instead supplementing with high doses of fish oil.  My lichen planus likely got worse because even though I had removed the worst food offenders from my diet, I was continuing to eat foods restricted in the Autoimmune Protocol due to their ability to perpetuate a leaky gut and drive antibody formation in sensitive individuals.  I had to admit that I am one of these sensitive individual.  I had to get over my autoimmune denial.

After 5 months following the Autoimmune Protocol, my lichen planus has mostly healed.  It took over three committed months before I really started to see a difference, but when my lichen planus lesions started to heal, they improved quickly.  Any remnants of asthma and allergies are gone.  My eyesight has actually improved.  My energy is even better.  I have started to slowly lose weight again.  I now weigh 148 pounds, practice yoga regularly, and can easily keep up with my two young daughters. I may not be exactly where I want to be yet, but I am finally healthy.

I used to joke that I would be dead at least 100 times if it weren’t for the miracles of modern medicine.  But, as I reflect back on the health conditions I suffered, I now see the links between them. I clearly see the linear progression of one pathology. I see that my gut was getting progressively leakier, that my body was getting more and more inflamed, that my hormones were increasingly poorly regulated, and that auto-antibodies were being formed in higher and higher quantities. Everything seems connected. And the Paleo Diet Autoimmune Protocol is my solution.

Following the Autoimmune Protocol is tough going.  I find it very hard to comply 100% of the time.  I have a very hard time avoiding seed-based spices and paprika.  If I am developing a recipe for my blog, I feel obligated to taste it even if it contains eggs and almond flour.  There are days where a square of dark chocolate is not a desire, but a need. However, this level of compliance seems to be working.  I wonder if I may have to reign it in next winter when I can no longer benefit from so much sun exposure.  Or maybe I will be healthy enough that I can start trying to add some foods back into my diet.  I am not optimistic that I will ever be able to eat eggs, nuts, seeds and nightshades again.  But, even if I can’t, I still get to eat tons of wonderful, delicious foods.  My health is worth skipping the bolognaise sauce over spaghetti squash.

What have I learned from this experience?  Sometimes, out-of-the-box paleo is not enough.  Undiagnosed food sensitivities, gut dysbiosis, or autoimmune disease may mean that further tweaking is required.  And it might not be obvious to you or your doctor that you have any of these complicating factors.  If you are frustrated that your paleo diet isn’t addressing all of your health concerns, trying out the Autoimmune Protocol is a good place to start.  It worked for me.

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Update:  I wrote this post last summer and have learned so much about myself and what foods are triggers for me since then.  I follow a very strict version of the autoimmune protocol now, with the exception of the very occasional use of fennel seed, anise seed or caraway in my cooking, all of which seem to be okay for me.  I won’t touch paprika any more, don’t drink coffee, don’t eat chocolate, and won’t even have those bites of egg- and nut-containing baking any more.  Heck, I don’t even eat whole coconut products any more.  And, I’m much more cautious about my sugar intake!  Perhaps it was the lack of sun exposure in the fall that meant I had to go so much more strict.  Or stress when I started working on the book. Or maybe it was getting over some denial and dealing more with the relationship with food part of all of this.  It is much easier for me to comply 100% now than it used to be, I think because I feel so good when I do and maybe because I’m just so much better and cooking delicious food that complies with the autoimmune protocol.

Guest Post by Mickey Trescott: What is the Role of Th1 and Th2 in Autoimmune Disease?

January 14, 2013 in FAQ

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This is the first of two guest posts written on the subject of Th1 versus Th2 dominance in the context of autoimmune disease by Mickey Trescott, blogger behind Autoimmune-Paleo.  The second post will be posted this Wednesday.  But first, let me introduce you to Mickey.  Mickey is a personal chef and blogger from Seattle, WA who has both Hashimoto’s and Celiac disease. She writes about her struggles with autoimmunity, alternative treatments and protocols, and shares many AIP-friendly recipes on her blog. She is busy writing a cookbook for the autoimmune protocol that is coming out early this year (and yes, I will let you all know when it’s released!  how exciting!). You can also find Mickey on Facebook and Instagram.

Those that suffer from autoimmune disease commonly experience symptoms that stem from imbalances within the functioning of their immune system. There are many factors that can influence this balance – stress, nutrition, vitamin and mineral deficiencies, gut flora, and allergies, among others. This way of looking at autoimmune disease is a growing trend in the alternative field, highlighted through the work of Datis Kharrazian.

In this series I hope to give readers a basic explanation of how the T-helper cells work within the immune system, as well as what factors can cause them to be more or less in balance.

What are Th1 and Th2?

T-helper cells (abbreviated as Th) are a vital part of the immune system. They are lymphocytes (types of white blood cells) that recognize foreign pathogens, or in the case of autoimmune disease, normal tissue. In response to this recognition, they produce cytokines, which are hormonal messenger proteins that are responsible for the biological effects of the immune system. They are divided into subgroups as follows:

Th1: Th1 cells are involved in what is called “cell-mediated” immunity, which usually deals with infections by viruses and certain bacteria. They are the body’s first line of defense against pathogens that get inside our cells. They tend to be pro-inflammatory and are involved in the development of organ-specific autoimmune disease.

Th2: Th2 cells are involved in what is called “humoral-mediated” immunity, which deals with bacteria, toxins, and allergens. They are responsible for stimulating the production of antibodies in response to extracellular pathogens (those found in blood or other body fluids). They tend not to be inflammatory and are involved in systemic autoimmune disease and other chronic conditions.

In a well-functioning immune system, both groups of these T helper cells work together to keep the system balanced. One side might become more active to eradicate a threat, then settling back to a balanced level.

How does this affect autoimmune disease?

In some people with autoimmune disease, patterns showing a dominance to either the Th1 or Th2 pathway have been shown. Although there are exceptions, the following table shows the conditions that are most commonly associated with a Th1 or Th2 dominant state:

TH1 dominant conditions:

Type I diabetes
Multiple sclerosis
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Grave’s Disease
Crohn’s Disease
Psoriasis
Sjoren’s Syndrome
Celiac Disease
Lichen Planus
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Chronic viral infections

TH2 dominant conditions: 

Lupus
Allergic Dermatitis
Scleroderma
Atopic Eczema
Sinusitis
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Asthma
Allergies
Cancer
Ulcerative Colitis
Multiple chemical sensitivity

When the th1 cells of the immune system are overactive, they can suppress the activity of th2 and vice versa. This can be problematic because these two components of the immune system function in a delicately balanced relationship. In the case of autoimmune disease, imbalance can further the attack on healthy tissue, thereby worsening symptoms.

Although research can lump those with certain conditions under the Th1/2 categories, in reality they can be all over the map. For instance, although most Hashimoto’s patients present a Th1 dominance, some can be Th2. It is also possible to have both Th1 and Th2 simultaneously overactive or under-active. Pregnancy can shift the immune system temporarily to Th2, which is why a lot of women find out they have Hashimoto’s after they give birth and their immune system returns to Th1 dominance.

How do I find out if I am Th1 or Th2 dominant?

There is a Th1/Th2 cytokine blood panel that your doctor can order to find out if your immune system is imbalanced. You can also do a challenge with certain nutritional compounds that stimulate either Th1 or Th2, although this can be tricky and is best done under the supervision of a practitioner.

In the next article, I will cover these nutritional compounds along with other strategies of balancing and modulating the immune system.

References: 

Why Do I Still Have Thyroid Symptoms? by Datis Kharrazian 

Immune Balancing for Hashimotos - Chris Kresser 

Research Review: Could Green Tea Actually Be Bad For You? – Dr. Bryan P. Walsh

 

TPM Tidbit: Dangit! It’s the chocolate! (My face palm moment)

October 5, 2012 in Sarah's Personal AI Struggles, TPM Tidbits

I love chocolate.  Sometimes, I feel like I need chocolate.  Very dark chocolate is one of the ways I satisfy sweet cravings without actually consuming many carbs.  Chocolate is my Go To stress food.  Yes, these aren’t great habits.  But it’s better than what I used to do.

So, even when I started the autoimmune protocol in January, I ate some chocolate (so many people report tolerating chocolate).  In April, I learned how ridiculously high in phytic acid it is, and cut it out completely.  This is also when I saw dramatic improvements in my lichen planus, but I never linked it to cutting out chocolate.

But then, the stressful summer hit (refrigerator leaks, mold growing in the floor, replacing kitchen floor, sick cats, family dynamics, finding out we need a whole new HVAC, finding out my husband’s car is on its last legs, the stress of the kindergarten transition…).  I once again turned to chocolate as my buddy, my confidant, my friend through thick and thin.  I wanted to tolerate it so badly that I ignored the warning signs that my lichen planus was no longer healing (although not getting worse).  And then I had tomatoes.  I think that was kinda like adding gasoline to an already roaring fire.

Last Saturday, I posted a post about my frustration with my current lichen planus flare.  I received dozens of wonderful comments, many with suggestions on what I might be able to change to address it.  One e-mail I received, pointed me to this paper showing that high Vitamin-A consumption can exaggerate a gluten reaction.  Seriously?!  Well, I am consuming a ton of Vitamin A, so this got me thinking.  And I consuming gluten?  Or a food that cross-reacts with gluten?  I was already aware that coffee cross-reacts with gluten, so I just needed to see if any other foods I was consuming were also gluten cross-reactors.  On this list was chocolate (which I consume frequently), yeast (and I’ve been drinking kombucha, eating homemade sauerkraut and eating a little yeast-based paleo bread), and tapioca (which I’ve been using in baking a lot lately).  A light bulb turned on in my head.  And then the cursing began.

The difference in my lesions in just 5 days is astounding.  Many of the smaller lesions higher up my shins are gone.  I actually took before pictures this time, so in a week or two I will post them with after photos to show you the difference.  I am really ticked off that I can’t eat chocolate, but I am happy to have found my missing link.