Nutritional and Microbiome-Level Interventions for Autism

Adapted from episode 67 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

Dr. James Adams is a President’s Professor at Arizona State University and he leads the Autism/Asperger’s Research Program there, where he is researching treatments for autism including nutritional supplements, microbiota transplants, probiotics, as well as yeast and antifungals. He also started a nonprofit to help parents of children with autism called the Autism Nutrition Research Center.

Lindsey:  

So what have you been up to since we last talked?

Dr. James Adams:  

Well, we’re continuing our research on microbiota transplants for children with autism and adults with autism. We’re also doing research on probiotics, and for treating autism. And we’ve also been looking at the use of and the role of yeast and antifungals for autism.

Lindsey:  

Interesting. So I actually just recorded and published a podcast with Dr. Michael Biamonte. And he was talking about autism and yeast. So tell me more about that.

Dr. Adams:  

Sure. 10 years ago, we did a study where we looked at 50 children with autism and 40 typical children; we found that about 25% of the kids with autism had a yeast infection, and about 10% of the typical kids did. And so one of the factors that can contribute to yeast infections is excessive use of antibiotics, because antibiotics can kill off your natural gut bacteria. And then when those are killed off, then there’s more opportunity for yeast to grow in your gut. And so at the time, as the difference wasn’t quite statistically significant, we did not follow up on it. But since then, we’ve learned a little bit more so we went back to look at the data a little bit more, and we found that the children with autism who had yeast infections also had significantly worse autism symptoms. Their gut symptoms weren’t necessarily worse, but the autism symptoms were. And if you think about what yeast does: yeast produces nasty toxins, things like alcohol, that people go and drink in Saturday night, but produces much nastier toxins than alcohol, that are much more damaging. And if you think about alcohol, it mostly has an effect on the brain, and so can affect coordination, but it can affect speech, it could affect executive functioning, and make it very difficult to regulate your emotions. So the bottom line is that we think quite a few children with autism have a hidden yeast infection that does not necessarily cause GI symptoms, but does tend to worsen their autism symptoms. And so because it just manifests as more severe autism then people don’t know to look for it and to try to treat it. And since then, there have been half of a dozen additional studies, which also show anywhere from about a quarter to even half the children with autism have these chronic yeast infections, and so it seems to be a very major concern.

Lindsey:  

Interesting, and how are you measuring their yeast infections? How are you diagnosing it?

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, so we’ve looked at it in a very simple way by doing a yeast culture of the stool. So taking stool samples in our study we send them to a lab. Doctor’s data, it has a standardized stool test, and it tells you approximately how much yeast is present. One of the things I like about the test is that they also can do a sensitivity test. So after they culture the yeast, then they try killing it with different antifungals and that way you can know which antifungals are most effective against the particular strain of yeast that you have. Because some yeast can eventually develop resistance to one or more antifungals.

Lindsey:  

So you know, I talk with a lot of practitioners about yeast and see clients myself. And I’ve noticed that on stool tests, it often doesn’t appear, but when you simultaneously run an Organic Acids Test, the Arabinose marker is elevated and often, you know, off the charts. And I’ve heard from a lot of people that the stool is not the most accurate way to test it. So if I see yeast on a stool test, I think, wow, they must have a lot of yeast.

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, they can set different levels. So different labs can set different levels for yeast as to how much is needed to be a positive. So we found that even a plus one on Doctors Data tests was associated with the worst neurological symptoms. And most of the kids were just a plus one, but again, that was enough to differentiate them from those who did not have significant yeast infection. But one of the other major clues that we found out, which I think is very important, is that body’s main defense against yeast is Secretory IgA, the antibodies that are excreted in the gut. And we found that there was an inverse correlation that if you had high amounts of yeast, you had low amounts of Secretory IgA and vice versa. The reason this is important is that yeast produces proteases that attack Secretory IgA. So basically, once yeast is present, once it’s formed a culture in the body, it then excretes these proteases that destroy the body’s defense against it. So it’s a vicious cycle once you have these yeast infections, they can be very hard to get rid of.

Lindsey:  

Interesting. And then of course, if you have low Secretory IgA, then your gut defenses are down, and you’re probably prone to a lot of other gut pathogens.

Dr. Adams:  

Exactly. And then as time goes on, the yeast within typically 24 hours will form a biofilm, and that biofilm and associated yeast will start dissolving part of the GI tract where it’s landed. It’ll also start damaging the GI tract and caused increased intestinal permeability or what we call leaky gut. So the bottom line is, I suspect that many children with autism have yeast infections for many years, worsening their autism symptoms, and they don’t know it. And so my recommendation would be for every child and adult with autism to have an evaluation of possible yeast infection using a stool test and see if it’s positive, and if it is, treat it with an antifungal. The problem is that, it seems based on the anecdotal reports I’ve had from many physicians is that after you stop treating, it’ll just come back. So some people are an antifungals for years and it seems that going on an anti-yeast diet seems to be important to help keep that gone.

Lindsey:  

Right. Yeah, I have definitely seen that people who just go right back to eating a lot of sweets and white carbs will just grow it right back. It won’t take long. 

Dr. Adams:  

Exactly.

Lindsey:  

Yes. So how have you incorporated that into your research studies?

Dr. Adams:  

So we’ve proposed to the federal government to do a study of yeast levels in children with autism. And to do the first major treatment study. Up until now there’s been only one small treatment study that had a lot of limitations to it. It was a great start, but there has not been a formal major study of the effects of detecting and treating yeast infections. So I think it’s very important to do but unfortunately, the NIH does not feel that it’s very important. 

Lindsey:  

So it wasn’t funded?

Dr. Adams:  

It was not funded.

Lindsey:  

That’s a shame. And who did the other study that you’re referring to? Can you send me a link for that one?

Dr. Adams:  

So there are about half a dozen groups around the world that have done studies of yeast in autism and found higher levels. But we seem to be the only group that’s looked at the correlation with more severe autism symptoms, and we haven’t even published that yet. I don’t have time to publish everything we find, but that’s together an important piece that we need to investigate further. But if we think about the effect of alcohol on the body, and the effect it has primarily on neurological functioning, I think that it’s very plausible that that could be contributing to a lot of the neurological problems, a lot of the behavioral problems that are seen in autism.

Lindsey:  

So when we last talked, I think you were trying to get funding, you were starting Go Fund Me for a study that was involving younger children, I believe, and microbiota transplantation or transfer therapy…

Dr. Adams:  

That’s right. And so we were doing two studies, we did receive funding from the federal government to do a study of microbiota transplant for adults with autism. And that study now is almost completed. We’ve enrolled the last participants, and we’re following them now. They’re in by mid spring. That study, the first part of the study, the treatment portion of the study will be completed. And then we’re still going to follow participants for another 18 months beyond there, because we found in our first phase one study that although we saw great improvements in GI symptoms right away and some improvements in autism symptoms, we saw even more improvement in autism symptoms at a two year follow up, two years after we stopped treatment. So the feeling of many families is that the treatment was very effective in helping their child learn but it then took time for them to learn language to learn behavior, to learn social interactions.

Lindsey:  

And so for the adults, I assume you’re using the same source material that you were using for your previous studies, which is like a purified fecal transplant, essentially.

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, we took a very similar approach. The difference is now we’re using a capsule form. That’s essentially like a typical probiotic that comes in a pill. But the difference, of course, is it’s 1,000+ species of bacteria from very healthy human donors. But other than that, the treatment approach is very similar. So we pretreat with vancomycin to kill off bad bacteria. We use a bottle of cleanse to get rid of bad bacteria. And then we do the microbiota capsules. We’re experimenting in this study to see if longer dosage is more beneficial. We’re also using a higher dose to see if we’ll see more benefit. And we’re also experimenting where some of the people do receive the pretreatment with vancomycin, and some don’t, to see if the vancomycin is needed or not.

Lindsey:  

And how long do you use the vancomycin for?

Dr. Adams:  

We use the vancomycin pretreatment for two weeks in both the child and adult study. It’s what we used from a previous study. There was a study 20 years ago where they used vancomycin for eight weeks, very long time. A normal course for vanco was 10 days. In the eight week study, they used it because their hope was to kill off not just the bad bacteria, but also prevent any regrowth from spores. Unfortunately, when they stopped the vancomycin, within a few weeks, all the GI benefits, all the autism benefits were lost in almost all participants. That just the opposite in our study, it seems that by doing a short course of vanco, and then replenishing with the microbiota capsules, we have not seen any significant loss of benefit.

Lindsey:  

And when you said bowel cleanser, we’re talking about a colonoscopy prep type of thing?

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, we do a very complete bowel cleanse. A lot of Miralax or equivalent. Along with a lot of liquids and bottom line is we try to do to just as complete as for a colonoscopy,

Lindsey:  

And then how many capsules or how much is in a capsule? And for how long are people taking it?

Dr. Adams:  

For the microbiota? 

Lindsey:  

Yeah.

Dr. Adams:  

So we do a high dose for two days. And then we do a maintenance dose for eight to 12 weeks. Well, in the adult study, we’ve been going up to 16 weeks to see if that matters.

Lindsey:  

Okay. And when you say a high dose, how many capsules are people having to take?

Dr. Adams:  

12 capsules a day for two days, and then one capsule every several days. And this is a highly purified form that’s basically 99% gut bacteria. And because it’s in a capsule, it’s specially designed to not be affected by stomach acid. It’s a very high dose that we’re administering.

Lindsey:  

Right. So enteric coated type of thing? 

Dr. Adams:  

More or less, more or less. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, so you mentioned donors, and I’m wondering whether this is a pooled donor situation, or a single donor, or just a couple donors that are going into creating these?

Dr. Adams:  

Our philosophy is to use just a single donor for each batch of capsules that are produced. And the reason is, if you think back to when blood donations where used, they used to pool blood donations. Well, both my mother and my brother developed hepatitis C, when they didn’t know to test for hepatitis C, and my brother almost died from it and my mother did die from hepatitis C. So when you pool donations, you increase risk.

Lindsey:  

Right.

Dr. Adams:  

And so we like using single donations, single donors for each set of capsules. That way we minimize risk. And if there is a risk, we know which donor they came from. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah.

Dr. Adams:  

I mean, in general, we’ve screened extremely carefully, just like you would for a blood donor for the Red Cross with additional questions about GI health. We also make sure that they have a lean body mass, not overweight, or underweight, which we think is also important for the microbiome.

Lindsey:  

And do you have an age limit for your donors?

Dr. Adams:  

Good question. Our donors are characterized by the University of Minnesota. So we use adults as our donors. I don’t think we have an age cap. But I don’t think we use anyone who’s particularly old either. So it’s a good question. I haven’t had been asked that before.

Lindsey:  

Well, I’ve had a lot of people on here who have talked about what a good stool donor would be. And they seem to think an age cap of something like 25 is necessary, which kind of seems crazy to me, because, well, there’s got to be some people with great microbiomes, who somehow missed the antibiotic craze, who are older. 

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, yeah, if I had to guess I would say going up to 65 would seem very reasonable to me. Again, depending on the individual’s health. The advantage of older donors is that will you know if they’re likely to be someone who’s developing GI cancers or not. With young donors, you don’t know if they’re prone to or not in the future.

Lindsey:  

And so if you only have one donor, can you really say this therapy modality is effective? Or can you only really say that this particular donor had a great microbiome?

Dr. Adams:  

Well, we’ve used many donors. It’s just that for any batch, when we’re dealing with a patient, that patient would receive a microbiota from just one donor. Or possibly, in our first study, we used two donors, one for the initial batch for the high dose, and another one for the maintenance. So different donors have different microbiota, I think there may be some benefit to using, say two donors. Because each donor will have their own set of healthy bacteria, but then two donors together, have somewhat more species. So there might be an advantage to that; you might get greater diversity. And in general, higher diversity is associated with higher gut health. 

Lindsey:  

So given that you’re doing a study with adults, are you working primarily with adults who are high functioning enough to be choosing to be in the study themselves or are they typically being enrolled by guardian parents?

Dr. Adams:  

Both. So we do have a few individuals who are high functioning enough that they’re working, living on their own and they’re able to handle the questionnaires in the process. We still have an evaluator to evaluate them. But in other cases, we have some very severe individuals, nonverbal, very limited, who are also undergoing the treatment. 

Lindsey:  

And do you have any preliminary sense of what’s going on with the…

Dr. Adams:  

I’m blinded, but I will say – so I don’t know who has received the real treatment who receives the placebo – but eventually, anyone who receives the placebos switch to the real treatment. So I’ll just say that we’ve seen a lot of good improvement, but until we publish the work, I don’t want to say more than that.

Lindsey:  

Fair enough. Okay. And then the study with children, where is that right now?

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, so both our studies were hit hard by COVID in a couple ways. In one way, simply because we had to stop using the capsules that had already been produced. Because we had not tested the donors to see if they had COVID. So we had to stop and then implement a new process and also the university we’re working with, University of Minnesota, their research labs were closed for many months because of COVID. And then they had to restart them, which took many months. So we had a big delay there. And then we had to also develop new standards to test the donors for COVID. And also test their tools for COVID or SARS CoV-2, but now we’re in good shape with both our studies, and for our child study, we have treated about half of the participants, and we’re getting ready to start treating the other half over the next several months.

Lindsey:  

What was the age on the second study? 

Dr. Adams:  

For the child study, we’re doing a little bit younger now. So our first study was aged 7 to 17. And now we’re going down to age 5. 

Lindsey:  

Okay.

Dr. Adams:  

Again, being a little cautious because most FMT studies have been done for adults. But because we saw really no adverse effects in our Phase 1 study, and we haven’t seen any significant adverse effects in our Phase 2 studies, we’re glad to see the FDA allowed us to go down to age 5.

Lindsey:  

And so was that was that all you were asking for? Or did they choose that cut off?

Dr. Adams:  

We asked to go down to age 5 based on what we figured the FDA would allow.

Dr. Adams:  

Okay. 

Dr. Adams:  

But I’d like go down to an even younger age, you know.

Dr. Adams:  

Of course.

Dr. Adams:  

Interestingly, when we asked these families about when the GI problems began, in almost all cases, we’re hearing that the GI problems began in infancy. It’s a little hard to detect exactly when they occur because infants don’t have normal stools, but it seems that in almost all cases, these GI symptoms have begun in infancy and have lasted many years.

Lindsey:  

And so we were talking in the last podcast about FDA approval for use of microbiota transplantation for autism. And you were saying you have to go through the Phase 1, that you’re in Phase 2 and then you’ve got to go through the Phase 3. Where are you in that whole process, then?

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, so we’re in our Phase 2 studies now. One of our Phase 2 studies for adults is almost complete. And the study for children we’re about halfway through. So we’re making good progress. We were slowed down, as I said, quite a bit by COVID. That also hurt our finances quite a bit, too. But now that we’re past those problems, we’re able to be making good progress. At the end of these, we will then ask the FDA for permission to go ahead and do Phase 3 studies.

Lindsey:  

And Phase 3 is different from Phase 2 in what way?

Dr. Adams:  

It’s usually the same study design; you might make some differences to the study design, if you wish, so you can use your results of Phase 2 to help you choose better assessments or choose better treatments. So for example, for adults, we now know that we need to treat them a little bit longer than the children. Our guess is that because they’ve had these GI problems longer, they take a little bit longer to improve. And also because we’re seeing minimal adverse effects, we’ll probably consider going to a higher dose in future. And so those would be a couple of the types of changes you might consider making. But the main difference is just larger studies. So multiple sites and more participants. So maybe a study with 500 to 1,000 people would be typical for an FDA study.

Lindsey:  

And for your studies is having GI problems one of the inclusion criteria?

Dr. Adams:  

That’s a great question. At the moment, yes, it is. But that’s simply again to be cautious, that is the group that we think of most likely to treat. But in some of our earlier work, I guess it was eight years ago, we saw that low diversity of gut bacteria was present, even in the children with autism who did not have obvious GI symptoms, but they still had abnormal gut bacteria. So we suspect that in the same way, you could have a hidden yeast infection that we think is worsening autism symptoms. We think it’s very possible to have a bacterial infection whose primary effect is releasing toxins that affect primarily the brain and not the gut. So I think it’s very possible that there will be some children who don’t have obvious GI problems, who would also benefit. And that’s why we’re doing the microbiota evaluations to try to figure out exactly what biomarkers are the problem, exactly which bacteria are the problem. Is the lack of beneficial bacteria, in some cases? Is the presence of pathogens? And others, and in some cases, both,

Lindsey:  

And how are you evaluating the microbiomes?

Dr. Adams:  

My collaborator, Rosie Krajmalnik-Brown, is doing that. So we’re using some different approaches. Primarily, she’s been working with 16S. She’s also doing some metagenomics analysis as well. And we’re looking into some additional methods as well. 

Lindsey:  

So even though it’s not part of the study design, you could easily do a post hoc analysis of yeast, because you have those if the 16S is used.

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, you can’t use 16S for yeast, you use different things for yeast instead. But yes, with the samples, we have lots of samples in our freezer, that we would love to do yeast testing on. We just lack a budget to do that.

Lindsey:  

Right. Right. But if you have a metagenomic sequencing, then you’d have yeast. 

Dr. Adams:  

Yes.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. So since not everybody who listens to this will want to go back and listen to the other podcast, can you just give me a summary of if you are a parent of a child with autism, short of trying to get them into one of your studies: what can you or should you do right now, if you have a child with autism who has gut issues?

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, it’s very important to point out that microbiota transplant is viewed by the FDA as an experimental method. And so we’re researching it, but it’s not publicly available. The people that have a proven C Diff infection, the FDA allows them to get a fecal transplant, but it’s not approved yet by the FDA, so the difference is you can’t use it off label. So the pills that we produce, we’re not allowed to give to the general public until we have FDA approval. 

So there are many other things that can be done though. So as I mentioned, I think every child with autism, regardless of whether or not they’ve GI problems, should be assessed for a yeast infection, because about a quarter to a half of them seem to have a hidden yeast infection that’s worsening their neurological symptoms. But for gut symptoms, I think there are many things that can be done. We did a comprehensive diet and nutrition study where we looked at giving our vitamin-mineral supplement that we’ve designed, in addition, followed by fish oil, followed by several other nutritional supplements, and then finally, a healthy diet. And so switching children to a healthy diet, I think is very important: a diet that’s rich in fruits and vegetables, and good sources of protein, and minimal junk food. And then testing. Some children need to go on dairy-free or gluten-free diets, and the best way to know if it’s helpful is just to try it for a month to three months. Probably about half to two thirds of individuals with autism may benefit from this allergen-free diet.

Lindsey:  

Can I stop you just for a second? Because I imagine a lot of parents of children with autism listening will think: I can barely get my child to eat anything but these three or four foods, much less the idea of a diet rich in fruits and vegetables. Any advice there?

Dr. Adams:  

I’d say… the example I’d give is, you know, not giving your child fruits and vegetables, it’s like not putting gasoline in your car. Your car is designed to run on gasoline. Your child’s body is designed to run on fruits and vegetables, so you are nutritionally depriving them of critical nutrients that their body needs. So it is just critical to try to get vegetables and fruit into them. But if you can’t, the major nutrients that the body needs, our vitamins and minerals, essential fatty acids, and protein – you can live without carbs, with limited amount of carbs, most kids with autism are getting too many carbs. If you can’t do a healthy diet, and certainly many children can’t, then that’s why we’ve created a vitamin-mineral supplement. We’ve done four research studies on it now. And that’s why we’ve made it available through our nonprofit. So the first step of our NRC protocol is to put them on a vitamin-mineral supplement, because even if they are on a good diet, our latest study of 160 children shows even if they are on a good diet, they can still very often benefit from the supplement. Kids with autism just need higher amounts.

Lindsey:  

But what about other shortcuts like smoothies, or greens powders or reds powders? You know, are there any of those successful?

Dr. Adams:  

I’m a very big fan of smoothies. I love to do smoothies with vegetables, and some fruit; start out with more fruit so it’s more palatable and tailor back, but I drink a vegetable/fruit smoothie at least once a day. So I think that’s a very good way to go and if the children are needing protein, you can add in protein powder, or even free form amino acids. A few kids with autism cannot digest protein, so they need free form amino acids instead. So I think those are very important. But beyond diet, there’s more that can be done. 

Remember that the main factor in GI health, the main food that the gut needs, comes from fiber. So when your gut bacteria digest fiber, it produces butyrate and that’s 60 to 70% of the energy for the cells that line the GI tract. So most women are getting only half the amount of fiber; most men are even worse, they’re only getting a third the amount of recommended fiber. And so literally there’s cells that line their GI tract that are starving for what we know to be the critical nutrient. So the best form of fiber is your fruits and vegetables. So instead of drinking orange juice, eating a whole orange. But there are fiber supplements, those may be helpful. But once the GI symptoms begin, it seems that calling it a high fiber diet, although it’s probably helpful for preventing these problems, doesn’t seem to be as helpful in those cases for treating them. 

We are experimenting with probiotics. We’re doing a very large, I think the largest ever study of probiotics for children with autism. We’re working with a company called Sun Genomics. And what we’re doing is a metagenomics analysis; we’re looking at 1,000s of species of bacteria in each person’s gut. And based on that, we have an algorithm to try to determine or guess, which are the most likely of the standard commercial probiotics; which particular species of strains might be most helpful. This is very early stages. We have a lot to learn, but we think it’s better than just picking a probiotic off the shelf instead trying to use an analysis of the microbiota in the store, to try to estimate which bacteria is most helpful.

Lindsey:  

So you’re just at the point of analyzing, not yet of giving them probiotics?

Dr. Adams:  

We actually already have several hundred individuals who are in the treatment study. But I’ll say the algorithm is early stage, and we hope from the data that we will be able to learn how to improve it.

Lindsey:  

And are they all getting the same probiotic? Or is it tailored to their own gut?

Dr. Adams:  

It’s custom, the whole point of this study is to customize it for each person. 

Lindsey:  

Wow. Okay.

Dr. Adams:  

I think of it this way: the analogy I like to give is that your gut is like a village and in your village, the village needs to be diverse. The village is not going to be very functional if you have 10 farmers, and no doctors. It’s also not going to be very functional if you have 10 doctors and no farmers. You need a balance of the members in your village; you need a balance in your microbiota. So if you’re very high in one species, you don’t want to be giving more of that. You want to be trying to promote diversity.

Lindsey:  

And you’re working pretty much with the aerobic strains that are available, like the lacto, bifido and spore-based? 

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah, so with Sun Genomics, we are limited to the probiotic strains that are available, but they also use some special probiotics as well.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Are you using spore-based as well as the lacto/bifido types?

Dr. Adams:  

Depends on the individual.

Lindsey:  

Okay. And now it is exciting that there’s beginning to be some products out there with some anaerobic bacteria. I’m taking Akkermansia muciniphila* myself.

Dr. Adams:  

Yeah. So again, we’ll see what is most helpful for people. There have been about 10 probiotic studies for autism and there’s some design issues with some of them, but in general, it’s suggested that some individuals can be helped. And I think rather than trying to say what is the best probiotic, the better question is what probiotic is best for me.

Lindsey:  

Right. Okay. And what about butyrate supplementation? Have you looked at that at all?

Dr. Adams:  

I think it makes a lot of sense. I have not seen any research studies on it. But I think it seems like a very intriguing approach to do.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, that’s actually one of my favorite supplements right now, tributyrin. Okay, and what about oxalates? Have you looked at that at all?

Dr. Adams:  

I’ve looked at the limited research on it. I think it’s an intriguing theory. I’m not convinced yet that a low oxalate diet is necessarily beneficial. I think the data on it that I’ve seen so far – I haven’t seen much. I think it’s an interesting theory. Needs more work. 

Lindsey:  

Okay. So, at the moment, if people want to find out more about just getting help for their kids the autism… what’s it called, Autism Research Center?

Dr. Adams:  

No, they can go to our website, the Autism Nutrition Research Center. And we have there both the vitamin-mineral supplement we’ve developed, and, again, I don’t receive any royalties or salary from them, I just served as a volunteer there. But we also have our NRC protocol, which follows four of the six most important treatments that we used in our 12-month treatment study. And so that begins with the vitamin-mineral supplement, followed by high dose fish oil. Fifteen studies now showing kids with autism are low in omega 3’s. And several studies showing it helps a little bit. But I think they’ve been underdosing. In our study, we found that 80% of kids seem to benefit from the vitamin supplement and also from the fish oil. And then carnitine. We did one study. Another group did a randomized, double-blind study showing that a subset of individuals with autism benefit from high-dose carnitine. So pharmaceutical level dosing. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, how much of that would that be? 

Dr. Adams:  

It’s in the protocol. So it depends on the person’s body weight as to what should be used. So you can look it up on our website to see. Again, it’s all dosed by body weight. And in the first study we did, we used one dosage, and another group followed up on the stud. Instead of three months, they’ve treated for six months, and they use twice our dosage, and they saw even more benefit. So we have a recommended dosage on there; it could be some individuals benefit even more. I think the best clues for who is likely to benefit from carnitine are people who have low carnitine in their diet, because you get about three quarters of your carnitine from your diet. And pretty much the only dietary source is beef, and to a much lesser extent pork. There’s not a lot of carnitine in other food sources. Your body can make a limited amount, but it seems kids with autism need more. And then the other treatment,  the fourth treatment, as I mentioned, the healthy, allergen-free diet. I’ve seen too many families go from eating regular Oreos to gluten-free Oreos. I find that not very good. I want to see them going from Oreos to broccoli. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah. 

Dr. Adams:  

So that’s my radical recommendation is to eat your fruits and vegetables: whole fruits, whole vegetables, that have all the fiber; all the rich vitamins and minerals and vital nutrients in them.

Lindsey:  

And then and if possible, to include that beef in the diet.

Dr. Adams:  

Yes, I think a modest amount of beef is very good for carnitine for the subset of individuals who need it. The other clue as to who needs carnitine is children who seem to have very low endurance, who fatigue very easily. The extreme example we had was a young girl who could not climb into the family van. She could not go up steps and she could walk only short distances like a quarter mile before they’d have to put her in a wheelchair. And then after treatment with carnitine she began skipping around the house, she learned to bicycle, she went on long walks with her families. They put the wheelchair in storage; it was thrilling. 

Lindsey:  

Wonderful. 

Dr. Adams:  

And so it wasn’t just physical endurance, but also mental endurance because the organ in your body that needs the most energy is the brain. So the carnitine is important for boosting energy for the body and the brain.

Lindsey:  

Right? Yeah, it’s actually something that a lot of my clients end up taking because it shows up low in their Organic Acids or they have indications of problems with beta oxidation of fatty acids and creating energy from fats. So it’s a useful supplement.

Dr. Adams:  

Yes, yes, we think it is very important.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Anything else you’d like to share with us before we get off about your current work or future directions or how families can get involved?

Dr. Adams:  

I think those are the major points that we’ve covered about what we’re doing with those areas. We have a few new studies that we’re working on, but not ready to announce them yet. We are doing another trial of a vitamin-mineral supplement to try to better understand who seems to benefit. But from our latest analysis, it seems to benefit children and adults, both genders, doesn’t seem to matter if you had regressive autism or early onset. And surprisingly, to us, it doesn’t seem to matter if you had good or poor diet quality. So that it seems that even if you’re on a good diet, children with autism just seem to need extra amounts of these certain important vitamins and minerals.

Lindsey:  

Interesting. And in terms of staying up-to-date on studies, for people who might want to enroll their children or themselves, where would people go?

Dr. Adams:  

They can go to our website autism.asu.edu. But our studies on microbiota transplant are overwhelmingly filled, we’ve had over 2,000 people apply and be on the waitlist for those. So we don’t have any openings there. But a probiotic study is currently open. It’s an unequal study, because families have to pay to purchase the Sun Genomics, but then to participate in the ASU part of the study is free.

Lindsey:  

And where would they go for that one? Same place?

Dr. Adams:  

Same place: autism.asu.edu

Lindsey:  

Wonderful. Well, thank you so much for coming on for this update. And I’ll just encourage people to go back and listen to the other episode so they get the full scoop on what you’re doing and what you’ve been doing. And this can be a good follow on.

Dr. Adams:  

Very good. Thanks so much, Lindsey.

Lindsey:  

Thank you.

If you’re suffering with SIBO or any other gut issue, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me (Lindsey). We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

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Histamine Intolerance and SIBO – the Missing Link

Adapted from episode 66 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

Heidi Turner, MS, RDN, CD is an Integrative Registered Dietitian Nutritionist at her telehealth-based private practice, FoodLogic located in Tacoma, WA.  She specializes in complex health issues including SIBO, autoimmune conditions, histamine intolerance, Mast Cell Activation Syndrome and food chemical sensitivities.  She spent 12 years at The Seattle Arthritis Clinic at Northwest Hospital-University of Washington where she counseled thousands of rheumatology patients on ways to reduce inflammation through dietary change and manipulation of the microbiome. She is the co-creator of the “Low Histamine Biphasic Diet” with Dr. Nirala Jacobi, and sits on the medical advisory board for the Ruscio Institute.  She has guested on multiple podcasts and professional conferences discussing histamine and chemical food intolerances.   Heidi earned her Master’s degree from Bastyr University in Kenmore, Washington and completed her dietetic internship at Virginia Mason Medical Center.    She lives happily in the Puget Sound area of Washington State with her husband, son and devoted cats.

Lindsey: 

So my readers should be pretty familiar with SIBO, which is one of our topics today, but when we last focused on it in particular was probably the episode with Nirala Jacobi in November of 2019 in Episode 17. Also had episode 36 on IBS and episode 41 with Norm Robillard. But anyway, could you just give us a brief overview of what SIBO is, and some of its common root causes.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Oh, sure. So small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, see-bo, sibo, S I B O, or however you choose to say it, is basically a situation where there is an overgrowth of bacteria located in the small intestine. We basically should have very few bacteria in our small intestine, and the majority of the bacteria that we house should primarily be in the large intestine. So when we have too much bacteria, located in the small intestine, it can start to create a level of inflammation. And that inflammation can start to express itself in a number of different ways. We might get different symptoms that we might deem to be very like IBS, things like gas and bloating, diarrhea or constipation, sometimes heartburn, sometimes abdominal pain, really just depends upon the person and what their specific situation is. There are many potential underlying reasons why SIBO might be present. Iit is usually considered an issue of dysmotility. So we rely upon these peristaltic waves to move the contents of our food as well as the bacteria through our digestive tract. And so when that system becomes more stagnant, things aren’t moving as effectively, we can start to collect more bacteria in that space. And that can be due to a number of different causes that can be from a history of food poisoning that can actually impact something called the migrating motor complex that actually helps us to move our nerves and move those peristaltic waves. It can be related to certain medications; antibiotics can cause this. It can be from high levels of stress. I see this quite often, very high chronic stress, that can impact motility, thyroid issues, long-term proton pump inhibitor use, and then other environmental factors such as living in moldy conditions. There’s lots of different reasons that can feed into this dysregulation of the digestive tract and start to accumulate more bacteria.

Lindsey: 

Thanks. So there are a couple that just come to mind too, that are more physical causes, like adhesions after surgery.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yep.

Lindsey: 

Or Ehlers Danlos Syndrome?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Absolutely.

Lindsey: 

Yeah. And what was the other one? I was thinking about… Oh, traumatic brain injuries?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Sure. Absolutely. Yeah. Anything that gets in the way of those neurons in the gut from really fully expressing and fully moving and communicating with each other can really get in the way. I’d also say, you’d mentioned adhesions, so that can be from say endometriosis.

Lindsey: 

Right.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

So that can be from any abdominal injuries that you’ve experienced. So there’s lots of different things that can lead to those adhesions as well that block that bacteria in the area and make it something difficult to move through.

Lindsey: 

Yeah, I didn’t know what an adhesion was. And I’m not sure everybody does. But I went through endometriosis. So can you just explain that briefly?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, it’s just a basically like scar tissue that’s in our digestive tract. Well, it’s not even necessarily in the digestive tract, so it could be on the outside and impacting other organs. And so if we have a considerable amount of scar tissue, it can actually adhere to our digestive tract, which is quite large in our abdominal cavity, and so we can see those adhesions basically wrap themselves around our small intestine, especially. And so we can see that and it just creates this narrowing. Not necessarily a blockage, because that would create something different, like an actual blockage where things couldn’t get through. It’s certainly a narrowing where it’s more challenging for things to move through these very small spaces.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Okay, great. So second topic for today is histamine intolerance. So let me ask what is histamine intolerance? And when should people suspect that they have it?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Okay, so these run parallel sometimes. So I’ll run over the histamine intolerance. So first, before we talk about what it is, let’s just talk about what histamine is first so we’re all on the same page with what that is. So histamine is basically a chemical that our body just naturally produces. We might think of it in relation to allergies. So if we’ve been exposed to say pollen, and we get a snotty and sneezy and allergic type of thing, we take an anti-histamine. And so histamines are involved in that allergic reaction. So that’s one area where histamines show themselves, but histamine is really involved in a lot of other biochemical processes. It regulates our digestion, it helps us to build stomach acid. It is actually a neurotransmitter that regulates other neurotransmitters like serotonin. It’s involved in our sleep cycle; it helps us to wake up. It’s involved in our menstrual cycle, our circulatory system. So it’s really an incredibly important chemical that our body produces. It regulates inflammation as well. So it doesn’t just create inflammation, it also regulates inflammation. So histamine is a really, really critical compound that’s vital and important to who we are.

Lindsey: 

That makes me stop and say, “Wait a second, if I’m taking an anti-histamine, that’s all my bodily systems!” Because I do that on a daily basis.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Okay, all right, but we’re not there yet. So like in a normal average situation, we are building histamine, we’re using histamine, and then we’re breaking histamine down. And so that’s the key piece in all of this. So if we are building histamine, utilizing our histamine, and then we actually can’t break it down, and we’ll get into why that might be. And usually, it’s because we’re overwhelming our enzymatic pathways. So if we build histamine, in order for us to break it down, we need enzymes to help us do that. So we’re deficient in the two major enzymes that our body uses to break histamine down. One is called diamine oxidase or otherwise known as DAO, or Histamine N-methyltransferase, or HNMT. So if we are deficient, and usually DAO is the one that we’re thinking about more when we’re working with SIBO, just so you know. So if we’re deficient in any one of those enzymes, what can happen is we build a histamine, we can’t break the histamine down. And so we end up with a lot of a lot of circulating histamine and we have more histamine than our body can manage. That’s where we start to see problems. That’s where we start to see symptoms where there’s just an excess of histamine, that’s where we might feel more allergic, or we might feel more anxious and awake, our sleep cycles might get impacted, we might get a lot of digestive issues like heartburn or bloat or diarrhea. So anywhere where histamine regulates different areas, we might see an uptick of those symptoms. And so that’s where things become more problematic. And that is a situation of histamine dysregulation, building too much histamine, don’t have enough enzyme to break it down, I got too much circulating histamine, it’s binding to all these receptors in my body where histamine typically works and it’s agitating and aggravating and making those symptoms much more. That’s histamine dysregulation.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so I’m hearing symptoms that range from allergies to digestive issues to anxiety.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Absolutely. Yeah.

Lindsey: 

So are there any of those that you could say, are very, like you’re not going to see histamine intolerance without seeing them, like an typical allergy reaction, like a runny nose or itchy eyes or things like that?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

I mean, we can have those symptoms without having histamine dysregulation. And let’s talk about what histamine intolerance is specifically, because that’s different. They’re similar, but it’s sort of a different answer to your question there. So histamine intolerance is a situation. So this is going to bring in that SIBO here for a second. So let’s step back. When our gut produces a lot of that diamine oxidase, that DAO, and we use up a lot of that to help to break down the histamine that comes in from our food supply. So we have all of these foods that contain histamine and typically these are foods that are usually aged or fermented, like sauerkraut or wine or aged meats or foods that have been spoiled or hanging around for long periods of time, or just other foods that contain natural amounts of histamine or biogenic amines like avocado or spinach or tomatoes. When we eat those foods, our gut produces all of that diamine oxidase to help us break down those histamines that are in our foods. And if we don’t have adequate amounts of diamine oxidase, then what’s going to happen is the histamine that’s in the food is going to be absorbed into our bloodstream and create more systemic histamine. And it can also exert just a more inflammatory effect in the gut. So if we don’t have adequate amounts of that DAO, it’s going to cause a histamine intolerance, and that’s where we just don’t tolerate the histamines that are in our foods. So there’s the histamine intolerance, and then there’s the histamine dysregulation. I’ve got too much histamine. I’m building too much histamine. My enzymatic system can’t keep up with it. And I’m eating too much histamine. And my enzymatic system can’t do much with that. That’s the difference. Histamine intolerance versus histamine dysregulation.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so is it essentially a spectrum and one is more extreme?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Oh, not necessarily. If you have histamine issues and back to your question, it’s like, if you’re super allergic and snotty, sneezy, you could have other issues going on and feeding into that. It doesn’t necessarily mean you’re histamine intolerant. However, if you do have a history, I mean dysregulation going on, and your body just isn’t making adequate amounts of enzymes to help you break it down, I think looking at other things that could be feeding into that, like gut bacteria, histamines and the foods. That’s where we want to start focusing in on other areas, because it’s possible we could help to reduce some of the symptoms that we experience from allergies by looking elsewhere at other places where the body produces too much histamine.

Lindsey: 

Got it. Okay.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

That makes sense.

Lindsey: 

Yeah. So how can SIBO lead to histamine intolerance?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, exactly. So bacterial overgrowth is a situation, there’s actually a couple of reasons. So you know, the bacteria, if we have too many bacteria in our digestive tract, it’s inherently creating a lot of inflammation. So they produce something called lipopolysaccharides. Those lipopolysaccharides can induce more mast cell release in the digestive tract. And those mast cells contain a lot of histamine, and that triggers more reactivity. So if we have a lot of inflammation from bacterial overgrowth, then we’re using up a lot of that diamine oxidase that our gut is producing. So we’re using a lot of that up. So if we’re using up all that DAO and we take in a lot of dietary histamine, you might not have enough DAO available for that dietary histamine. So that’s the first way. The second way is that we know that in the more recent research, the type of bacteria that are often implicated in SIBO are histamine producing bacteria, so things like E. coli, or Klebsiella. Both of those are implicated as star actors in SIBO. And both of those produce a lot of histamine. So we have an overgrowth of bacteria in our gut that produce a lot of histamine. That too is going to use up all that diamine oxidase. And it’s going to get in the way of our histamine tolerance.

Lindsey: 

Oh, okay. That’s interesting. So how can you address histamine intolerance through your diet?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Right. So there’s a lot of different ways you can do that. And I think we should probably bring the SIBO into this as well…

Lindsey: 

Because you want to get rid of the SIBO.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

You want to get rid of the SIBO, right? Because I just want to make sure that we all understand that whenever you have any dietary intolerance, it’s usually secondary to something else.

Lindsey: 

Right.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Some other dysregulation going on, so we want to make sure that it’s not just about, we’ll take all of these hundreds of foods out of your diet, and then you’ll be fine. Because you might take those foods out of the diet, and you might actually feel a lot better. But that’s not really the answer, because staying on a highly restricted diet for a long period of time is very uncomfortable, and socially isolating, and all of those things that can come with dietary restriction. So let’s just make sure that that’s said before we jump into what do you do with a diet. So before we get there, there’s a number of different things that you can do with a diet. But let’s bring the SIBO back onto the table. Because ideally, if we can treat the SIBO effectively, then we can reduce a lot of that intestinal inflammation, which then buys back a lot of your diamine oxidase, in which case, we don’t necessarily have to eliminate too many foods from the diet. 

So ideally, in a perfect world, we’re going to be able to manage that SIBO, reduce the intestinal inflammation and we don’t have an issue from a histamine perspective. So that alone, we just want to make sure that that is covered. Now, let’s say you need to do a little bit more with the diet, though, because often times, when we are working with SIBO, what’s generally indicated in a SIBO diet is more of a low FODMAP type of diet. So oftentimes, we will do antimicrobial, and then once we’re finished with the antimicrobials or the antibiotics, we will usually follow that up with a low fermentable diet. And so these foods aren’t necessarily high in histamine. But we do know that a low FODMAP diet can actually reduce intestinal inflammation. And again, you reduce intestinal inflammation, you can build a little bit more diamine oxidase back. And so that can actually help you with your digestion of higher histamine foods. So sometimes, just by reducing things, if you’re going to work with SIBO, sometimes by reducing the bacterial concentration, and then actually incorporating a low FODMAP diet, we can actually see a better regulation of histamines in the diet. And we don’t really have to do too much more than that. So that’s one of the first things we can do with our food or just see how it goes for us. That’s number one. 

Now, let’s say that doesn’t work for you. It doesn’t work for everybody. Let’s say hey, I cannot kick the SIBO and I’m doing this low FODMAP diet and it does absolutely nothing for me or it’s actually making things worse. So a low FODMAP diet, which is low in Brussels sprouts and cauliflower and onions and garlic and things like that, is inherently high in histamine foods. So, in some cases, if we’ve got really significant histamine dysregulation in the gut and even though we’re doing all the things we know to do to combat our SIBO, if we’re eating a lot of high histamine foods, because we’re doing all of these practices, what can happen is we don’t have any diamine oxidase. And so we’re going to end up with more intestinal inflammation because of it. So then what we can actually do is go on a low histamine diet. And that’s where we really pull out a lot of these aged foods, the avocados and spinach, and tomatoes and all sorts of different fermented foods that we might be eating because we’re trying to feed our microbiome and bone broths all these different things that are aged or fermented or old, can actually be impacting us adversely. And so sometimes we need to take those histamines out to give the gut a chance to heal and not just reduce symptoms that we’re experiencing, like abdominal pain, or bloat or things like that, but also just give the gut a chance to heal. So yeah, so these are all just different things. I’ll just say, there’s a lot of different dietary strategies that you can make that can impact or actually reduce your histamine intolerance that don’t necessarily just limit you to like taking all the histamines out of your diet. So even like a paleo type of diet, like a low starch diet, or a low sugar diet can actually improve your diamine oxidase and reduce your histamine intolerance as well. So there’s lots of different ways that you can approach the diet. Reducing histamines is one of them.

Lindsey: 

And they serve to do that because they reduce inflammation.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, absolutely. Any time you’re reducing inflammation, you’re allowing the body to support more diamine oxidase production. That’s the key thing. That’s your key guy, diamine oxidase.

Lindsey: 

Yeah. So what I’m hearing is that you’re typically dealing with the SIBO first, and then you’re putting people onto the low FODMAP diet, for example. 

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, absolutely. I really try to spare the diet. I’m a dietitian. And I try not to take foods out of people’s diets, because it’s a challenge, especially things like FODMAPs, things like histamines. It’s not just one food. It’s not just gluten or dairy or starch. It’s like there’s 100 different histamine foods that we’re when we’re working with the lists, and there’s 100 different FODMAP foods when we’re working with the lists. And so it can get really challenging really fast. And so I really try to listen to my clients in terms of what’s possible. Ideally, we’re going to be making some dietary modifications in the short term. And I think that that’s the most important thing for us to highlight, if you’re going to be making any dietary modification, it is for a very short period of time to manage symptoms, and to support healing, right. It’s not to stay on for the rest of your life. Because if you have to, if you have to take FODMAPs out or you have to take histamines out and you can’t get them back in, there’s something we haven’t fixed.

Lindsey: 

Yeah.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

There’s something else that needs to be done. So, from my perspective, back to your question, is that, do you do work with the SIBO first? Sure, absolutely. It’s like, what can we do to manage that? Because if that’s all we need to get at in order to reduce the intestinal inflammation, then how much more do we need to do from a dietary perspective from there?

Lindsey: 

So how long would it, and do you tend to use herbal protocols for SIBO or Rifaximin, or…

Heidi Turner, RDN:

I’ve used it all. So yeah, so you know, I’m a dietician. So I don’t prescribe medication, but I usually do work with other practitioners who do so. I have worked with antimicrobials. I’ve worked with Rifaximin and neomycin or metronidazole. I’ve worked with elemental diets. And then also every other possible dietary strategy you could possibly imagine. We’ve used fasting, you know, there’s lots of different strategies to manage the SIBO.

Lindsey: 

Right. 

Heidi Turner, RDN:

It’s just a question of, there’s a lot where do you start? It’s a question of tolerance. Maybe the person might not tolerate herbal antimicrobials? Well, it’s a question of expense. Rifaximin can be $1,000 investment.right?

Lindsey: 

Right. Yeah, it’s one of those things that has got to be covered by insurance. There’s no logical reason to take that over herbals.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

That’s exactly right. And so if cost is an issue, then your herbals are going to be a better option for you. Elemental diets are also quite expensive. So you always have to just navigate someone’s personal bent, their personal belief structure. Some are just like, I don’t want to do herbals. I’m not going to fast for two weeks. So I’m going to go and get my Rifaximin and I’ll spend my $700 or $1,000. And that’s what I’m going to do versus the next person who might be “No, I’m not taking antibiotics for nothing”. And I’m going to go the antimicrobial route, right so really I do a lot of counseling around it when really trying to figure out what’s going to be the best strategy and working with their SIBO. And then also what’s going to be the best strategy in working with their diet. Because having done this for a long period of time, there’s never one road for one person, everybody is different. And I think that’s the challenge in the US. Practitioners that work with SIBO, or work with dietary restrictions, and not only is it challenging for everyone, but everyone’s so different, right? Everyone’s so different. So you just have to have a lot of tools at your disposal, rather, and then help your client make the right choice. Weigh them in the right direction.

Lindsey: 

Right. So assuming a typical client is doing an antimicrobial regime of some sort, be it Rifaximin or herbals. I’m wondering how long that typically lasts, and then how long you would typically put them onto, say a low FODMAP diet? Or are you using the biphasic diet? And maybe you can just explain that a little bit?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Oh, wow. That’s a big question. That’s okay. So it depends upon the person, depends upon their test results as well, their breath test results and how strong the SIBO is. It is like, what gases are we working with? If we’re borderline SIBO, then we might place them on a protocol for a shorter period of time before checking back in. If these gases are quite high, or methanogenic overgrowth, then it might take a little while longer and really depends upon the person and how they’re doing and how they’re tolerating everything as well. So it’s going to take, it could take anywhere from a month at best to several months. At the very worst, or the very longest, it could take several years, it really just depends upon the person and how they’re responding. So as far as treatment goes, it just depends. Unfortunately, I can’t give you like a, because everybody’s so different, give you like one that’s going to take this long, so it can be a challenging thing. 

The diet I try to make for as short a period of time as possible with FODMAPs. I’ll usually keep a little bit of FODMAP in during the actual treatments. Allow the bacteria to feed. They love to feed on those FODMAPs and then once they’re finished with their antibiotics or antimicrobials, I will then remove those FODMAPs for a period of anywhere from two to four weeks, sometimes six weeks depending upon how long this is taking, I might just use a standard FODMAP diet. There’s lots of different diets out there. There’s Nirala Jacobi, she has the Bi-Phasic Diet, which I think is terrific. Allison Siebecker has more of a specific carbohydrates, low FODMAP diet where you take out both FODMAPs and starches as well. I think you’ve had Norm Robillard on [his Fast Tract Diet]. There’s lots of different types of diets. Cedar Sinai has a different type of diet as well. And then still, Dr. Jacobi and I also developed a low histamine, low FODMAP diet. And so for those who are doing a little bit better on low FODMAP, but we really do feel like there’s a histamine intolerance, that’s pretty severe. And we might place them on that one as well, which is quite restrictive. And even though I helped co-create them, I’m not a big fan of it, because it’s so restrictive, but it can be quite effective if we’re really, really, really inflamed, and we just can’t get that fire out. In which case, again, back to your question. It might be anywhere generally from two to six weeks. And again, if I have to go longer than that, then something else is going on. So I got to keep looking: what’s driving the SIBO, what’s driving the intestinal inflammation, what’s driving the histamine production. You always have to keep digging more and more if you must rely on dietary elimination to be asymptomatic.

Lindsey: 

Right. And is there with low FODMAPs there’s a reintroduction. That’s supposed to be category by category, but with histamines is there categoric reintroductions, or how does one go back into reintroducing them?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

So I guess my short answer to your question is no, there isn’t really any formal introduction, because it is a threshold issue. It can be with FODMAPs as well. But you can also have certain tolerances to different categories of FODMAPs and not to others, whereas histamines, it’s like a threshold, like how much histamine do I tolerate in a given day or even a given week? In which case the question is how much diamine oxidase do I have available? So what I usually like to start with is keep out the foods that are really high histamine like wine or beer or high fermented foods. I’ll usually keep those guys out for a while because they’re going to use up a lot of space. They’re going to use up a lot of DAO. So I like to maybe start with more of the vegetables or the fruits that they might be missing or nuts or things like that they might be missing. And we’ll just start first with like: What do you miss the most? And you know, you miss your avocado? Do you miss a little tomato? And you know, they come up with the answer pretty quickly. So if there’s something that they’ve really dialed down on, then I might introduce those in first. I’m always a little bit judicious with tomatoes to start, because they’re not only high in histamine, they’re high in a lot like acids and things like that, that can be just irritating to the system. So I usually don’t start there but I’ll usually start with maybe a little spinach, maybe a little avocado and just get a sense of what their bodies can tolerate. And then we just slowly build from there. And if they reach a threshold at a certain point where they start to get a little bit more reactive, we’ll keep those histamines in because we know that we’ve got some level of tolerance, and then we’ll just stay below a threshold while we continue to heal the gut.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so I know that there are foods that have histamine versus histamine liberating foods. Can you talk a little bit about that?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, sure. So yes, there’s foods that contain histamine and those are usually the ones that have been fermented by bacteria like our sauerkraut or kimchi or wine or things like that. So those are the ones that are particularly high in histamine specifically, but histamine is under an umbrella of a category of chemicals called biogenic amines, and there are a number of them things like tyramine, putrescine, cadaverine, spermine, spermidine. There’s lots of different types and histamine is one of them and so most of these actually will use up diamine oxidase; they require diamine oxidase in order to get broken down. So these foods, things like oh let’s say banana isn’t necessarily high in histamine but it is high in other biogenic amines so if we’re eating the banana sure we’re not putting in more histamine but we are putting in more of the I believe it’s cadaverine in the banana, I could be wrong perhaps. So we’re putting more of that biogenic amine in and it’s using up DAO. If anything is using our DAO, it’s a problem because we do bring in those other high histamine foods. It’s looking for the DAO as well and so in order to break down, there’s lots of foods that have this ability to use up diamine oxidase; those are your histamine liberators also known as biogenic amines.

Lindsey: 

That’s interesting. So if you were really careful about just the foods that actually have histamine, then you probably could be okay with eating the other ones.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yep, you got it? Absolutely. And sometimes we’ll just do that. So if I see the taking all of these histamine foods out and/or histamine liberators because most of the lists that you find online, and there’s like 30 different lists, they all say different things.

Lindsey: 

Yeah.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Maddening, but what they can all agree upon are the foods that are high in histamine like no one’s going to say that sauerkraut is low in histamine. No one’s going to say that wine is low in histamine. You know, it’s all of those things, so fermented, aged foods are all high in histamine. Where it gets a little murky is in the biogenic amines, but the majority of these lists contain all of them. So if I’m working with someone, and I suspect they’ve got a histamine issue, and I see that they’re drinking bone broth, and they’re taking in sauerkraut, and they’re drinking wine, and they’re eating charcuterie every night and smoked salmon every night and canned tuna all the time, then I’m going to start to think, you know, do we need to take out all of these foods, or is it enough just to dial it down? Let’s make sure your meats are as fresh as possible. Let’s lay off the sauerkraut. And sometimes just making those shifts is enough to reduce their symptoms to reduce that histamine intolerance. And then we didn’t have to take out all of the biogenic amines.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so the diet that you developed, that’s not the same as the Bi-Phasic Diet.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

No, so the Bi-Phasic Diet was developed by Dr. Nirala Jacobi in Australia, right? And so that’s more like straight up SIBO.

Lindsey: 

Okay.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Right. You incorporate that, you treat the SIBO. So it’s very low FODMAP, low fermentable. Basically, it’s a low fermentable diet. When we came together, what we did is recognize that when you’re doing a low fermentable diet, you’re just naturally increasing the level of histamine that’s in there. So like tomato is low fermentable, but it’s incredibly high histamine. Spinach is low fermentable, but it’s incredibly high histamine, in biogenic amines. So what we looked to do was to acknowledge that for those who have both things going on, there’s so much intestinal inflammation going on that they’re not tolerating fermentable or fermented foods. Let’s come together and really give them something where the gut can completely calm for a period of time. And then start going through an introduction process. So it is a bi-phasic diet. It’s just it’s the Low Histamine, Low Fermentable Bi-Phasic Diet.

Lindsey: 

Okay.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

And so it takes off Phase one, Phase two. Exactly. You got it.

Lindsey: 

And they can find that on your website or…

Heidi Turner, RDN:

On my website and on Dr. Jacobi’s websites, both of us have it there.

Lindsey: 

Okay. So, say somebody begins treatment with antimicrobials. And they have an immediate bad reaction. What might it look like if it’s related to histamines, as opposed to say, be a Herxheimer reaction?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Well, if it’s a Herxheimer reaction, because they look really similar. Herxheimer reaction, you know, it can be pain, it can be fatigue, and Herxheimer is when you’re going through a level of die off, you’re killing off a lot of stuff. It’s all going through your liver, your liver is having a hard time catching up, your body’s having just a really, it’s going through detoxification, basically, that’s what a Herxheimer reaction is. I typically will see Herxheimer reactions not last that long. So usually, if it’s a Herxheimer reaction, you’re going to see symptoms start to increase, usually within like maybe two to four days, they’ll intensify and then typically after like a week or more, we’ll start to see things calmed down a little bit. So that would be more of your typical arch of a Herxheimer reaction, they can go longer, certainly, depending on how much bacteria you have to kill off. I might put in something to help support the liver help to reduce inflammation, if it is a Herxheimer reaction, I might put in a little N-acetylcysteine, I might put in a little vitamin C, I might try to put some things in there. Even glutamine, if you know, we just need to calm some inflammation. So I might put some things in there and see if that works and then if it does, then we’re likely working with a Herxheimer issue. If it’s a histamine reaction, which can also be a part of that whole, in that soup. But if it’s just a reaction to the actual antimicrobial, I don’t see it abating. I see it happening quickly, usually within the first day, because the body is going into an immediate reaction. And then I just don’t see it fading. So I will often pull back and maybe start a lot more slowly and see if we can gather a little tolerance with time. But that’s usually the difference if there’s just no tolerance at all. And my clients will let me know. It’s very common with things like oregano or Berberine, which are pretty intense antimicrobials, but we use them all the time for SIBO. And they just know, I cannot do this, there’s absolutely no way I’m going to be able to do this, then there’s lots of other antimicrobials we can use. And I’ll just shift over to different things and see if there’s better tolerance. And if there is then I know that that was probably a histamine reaction, inflammatory reaction that they were having to the antimicrobial itself, versus Herxheimer.

Lindsey: 

And so are you saying that Oregano and Berberine in particular have histamine in them?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

No, they don’t. It’s just that they’re fairly . . . Remember, we’re always working with a level of intestinal inflammation. So if you’re someone that, when you put in an antimicrobial like berberine or oregano, they’re pretty caustic on that gut lining. And if your gut’s just like, I can’t even do that. I can’t do FODMAPs. I can’t do histamines. I got all this bacteria in here. It’s just too much on my system, that it’s more than that. No, they are not necessarily high in histamine.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so the histamine reaction that’s coming with them, then is inflammatory. Okay. Got it. So once people heal their SIBO, are you seeing this histamine intolerance tend to go away?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, often, in most cases, I would say if it’s just related to the SIBO, if their histamine intolerance is just related to the SIBO. And you’re able to manage the SIBO and then get in there with some supportive healing strategies after you’ve cleared out the bacteria. And we helped to regain that microbiome a little bit more. Yeah, absolutely. Because the histamine intolerance should not be a forever thing. It is really just dependent upon the immune system dysregulation in the gut. So if it doesn’t go away, and I see this sometimes where we have SIBO, we have histamine intolerance. We treat the SIBO. SIBO has gone with histamine intolerance is still there, then it’s a question of like, what else is going on?

Lindsey: 

What else might be going on? What are the other possibilities?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Well, I mean, you can just have general dysbiosis. So you can have fungal overgrowth or yeast overgrowth that wasn’t managed, particularly if you did just antibiotics.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Right.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

You can have other types of probably H Pylori, you could have other problem actors in the colon like you could have other things going on in the gut that are problematic. You could be massively stressed out and I know that that’s going around. So if we have considerable amounts of stress going on, and we’re really consistently off, that really sends a signal to the gut that all is not well. And we know that there’s a strong correlation between really high chronic stress levels and not just dysbiosis, but SIBO, as well as mast cell activation of the gut. So you know, we always have to be thinking about our hormones. Some women who are estrogen dominant, or even men who are estrogen dominant, that can trigger more histamine production in the body. Your environment, if you are eating pretty a highly processed diet, or exposed to a lot of different chemicals or exposed to mold, all of these things can impact how much histamine your body produces. So we always have to be thinking about other players that could feed into why your body is making a lot of histamine and using up all of those enzymes that are necessary to break it down. Yeah, so start with SIBO. Hopefully that’s it, but if it’s not, okay, what else is that?

Lindsey: 

Right. Now, you mentioned mast cell activation syndrome. How does this differ from histamine intolerance?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Well, histamine intolerance is just I have diamine oxidase deficiency, and I can’t tolerate the histamines in my food. Okay. And so that’s histamine intolerance. And it’s on the same spectrum as mast cell activation. But mast cell activation is a little different. It’s, you know, the mast cells are these vesicles that carry histamine. We store most of the histamine that we produce in mast cells. We store it in different parts of the body as well, different cells in the body. But we really do store the majority of our histamine in mast cells. And mast cells are the ones that regulate that immune system reactivity. So we have mast cells in our gut, we have mast cells basically in nearly every area of the body. So they’re there to protect us, they’re the ones that basically get stimulated. If we do have an allergic reaction: we have an allergy to peanuts, or to pollen or something like that, we’re going to get a mast cell activation, and that’s going to secrete histamine as well as other inflammatory mediators throughout the body. We also have those mast cells that do line the gut. And so oftentimes, when we do have inflammation going on, from dysbiosis, we can see a mast cell activation. So the mast cells are in this constant state of release, degranulation, release, degranulation, and they’re secreting histamine into the body. And those mast cells can respond to stress levels, they can respond to environmental, they can respond to allergies, they can respond to any number of different activators, sometimes real, like peanut allergy, and sometimes benign, like smells or tastes in the mouth. We can see those mast cells become more susceptible to benign stimulation, and all of a sudden, we’ve got the mast cells exploding all the time and releasing histamine all the time. That’s mast cell activation. That’s very different on the same spectrum, because we’re working with histamine. But on a much more serious note, I would say.

Lindsey: 

So in terms of knowing that someone has this, is there any testing they can do?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

For histamine intolerance or for mass cell activation?

Lindsey: 

Both.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

So histamine intolerance? I mean, yeah, you could, if you didn’t want to take all the histamines out of the diet, you could certainly, there are a few labs that will just measure your diamine oxidase production versus the amount of histamine that is in your blood. So if you’re building a lot of histamine, you don’t have a lot of DAO, then you can extrapolate from that. I never use those. I usually just do the elimination because I find it to be the easiest thing. If I take the histamines out, how do I feel if I add them back in? How do I feel?  And so that I think is good enough without having to spend a lot of money on testing. Mast cell activation is very different. You’re really looking for all of the different mediators that are released by those mast cells. And so one is histamine, but really, they’re looking at other mediators as well. Things like tryptase prostaglandins, PGD-2, PGF-2, chromogranin A, we’re sort of looking at all the different kinds of heparin, you might just look to see if there’s an elevation of those many mediators that mast cells release into the blood that would indicate that there’s some activation going on.

Lindsey: 

Is dealing with mast cell activation similar to dealing with histamine intolerance?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Sometimes, yes, it is. Not everybody who has mast cell activation has histamine intolerance. So some people who have mast cell issues, they can tolerate, their gut is making plenty of diamine oxidase, which means they can eat as many histamines as they want. It’s not going to feed into the systemic histamine that they’re producing. I’d say that that can happen. A lot of people with mast cell activation, do have histamine intolerance. Oftentimes, it’s a good place to start. Take the histamines out, see if it helps. And you can take it from there. Mass cell activation and dealing with that, it’s a different protocol because first of all, if your mast cells are leaky and they are exploding all the time, then you’ve got to get that under control. And so you really need to – so stabilization becomes the first thing that you do. And stabilization can come from dietary elimination. It can come from different medications like over the counter: histamine blockers like Allegra or Zyrtec, H1 blockers, or H2 blockers like famotidine. So we can bring those in to see if we can stabilize, and then mast cell stabilizing medications like Ketotifen or cromolyn sodium. There’s lots of different medications that we can use just to stabilize those mast cells from just telling them to just chill out, so that we can get a sense of what’s going on, what’s our underlying cause, what’s driving this mast cell activation, because it isn’t just unto itself. There’s always going to be something that’s driving that mast cell activation. 

But stabilization is important to get the person through the day because it is a miserable condition. And so the more that we can just help to calm the system, calm the nervous system,  calm people down, it’s really very beneficial. We can also use supplementation as well for that. We can use quercetin, we can use vitamin B6, we can use vitamin C, we can use zinc, we can use lots of different things that help to build diamine oxidase or help to stabilize mast cells. So we can do a lot to calm that mast cell activation. And once we’ve stabilized as best as we possibly can, through medication, diet and supplementation, then we start to look at, alright, what’s driving the situation? Does this person have SIBO? Does this person have fungal overgrowth? Has this person been exposed to mold? Is this an environmental issue? Like, is this a trauma that they’ve experienced? You know, what are all the pieces? Is this high levels of antibiotic use? And that has led to severe dysbiosis? Often it is a combination of all of those things. And it’s a question of how do we address and treat?

Lindsey: 

Got it? Okay, so obviously, there’s some complexity here. 

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Super complex.

Lindsey: 

So I’m not going to go too deep into mast stuff. That’s a topic for another day.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yeah, as you see, like SIBO and histamine intolerance are actually a little bit more, I would simple is the wrong word. They’re just a little bit more clear.

Lindsey: 

Yeah. Yeah.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

In terms of how to manage mast cell activation is its own beast that we have to take on.

Lindsey: 

That might be a topic for a whole other podcast.

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Right.

Lindsey: 

Okay. So anything I haven’t asked about that, that one should know about this?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Let me think. Well, yeah, I’d say that for the at home person who’s dealing with their histamine intolerance, these are just some things that you can work with. There’s… okay, so let’s have a bacterial overgrowth. You want to work with a practitioner who really understands SIBO. I think that’s the first most important thing that someone who who’s dealt with hundreds or 1000s of SIBO cases can really help you to navigate. Really, really important. So that’s the first thing. If you do have a histamine intolerance issue and are looking for, let’s just talk about the symptoms that you might experience because SIBO can be gas and bloating, constipation, and diarrhea and things like that, and so can histamine intolerance, but if you’re experiencing a lot of GI stuff, and you have SIBO, but you’re also experiencing other symptoms, and those symptoms can be more those allergy type of symptoms like itchy skin or eyes or sneezy or sore throat or congestion, or you’re just really anxious. It causes a lot of anxiety, headaches, sometimes dizziness, temperature regulation issues, insomnia, tachycardia, that fast heartbeat or blood pressure issues or temperature issues. And you could have one of these things you could have all of those things, just depends upon the person. If you are having gut stuff, but you’re also having these other things start thinking about histamines. 

And I also put it for the long COVID person who’s still experiencing a lot of symptoms after their COVID diagnosis. And you know, after they’ve recovered, if they’re having a lot of those issues, we’re seeing a lot of mast cell activation, but also histamine issues with that population. So if you’re experiencing all of that, to consider doing a low histamine diet and just see how it feels. And then you know, there’s some supplementation that you can do for yourself to help support your diamine oxidase production. I always start with vitamin B6 – first place I always start. Vitamin C as well, zinc and copper. Those are all things that are really helpful in terms of helping you to build more diamine oxidase and then help to reduce histamine in the body, things like quercetin or other bioflavonoids like luteolin or lutein, stinging nettles, these can all be really beneficial to you and again, it’s just symptom management, but they can just help to abate some of the symptoms that you experienced.

Lindsey: 

I’m guessing there’s probably some products that put together all these things in one…

Heidi Turner, RDN:

That’s right, absolutely. 

Lindsey: 

What are some of those?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

One that I like and it depends, sometimes I’ll just start with one thing, and then see how you do. If you’re super sensitive, I’ll just go with single ingredients. But if you’re not, you can tolerate all those things. There’s one called Aller-All from Protocol for Life Balance (find in my Fullscript Dispensary*), and it has all those things in it, which I so appreciate. So that one I use quite a bit, and then the last thing I’ll say is your microbiome, that there are bacteria that produce histamine in our gut. There are bacteria that break down histamine in our gut. And so if you’re going to be working with safe probiotics, you really want to work with those that contain bacteria that help you to break histamine down, that can be really beneficial and can also improve your tolerance to probiotics if you don’t typically tolerate and if we can use names, things like Vitanica has a great one called Flora Symmetry (find in Fullscript*). And another one from Seeking Health is called HistaminX and Probiota HistaminX Probiotic (find in Fullscript*) and another one from Custom Probiotics – D Lactate Free Probiotic Powder. So these are some of the ones that I might use just to help to regulate that histamine in the gut a little bit more. Just be aware that if you don’t tolerate probiotics well, be aware that there are certain strains that do produce histamine that are found in a lot of these formulations. And if you’re super sensitive, you might just react to those. So do start with some of the ones that are more specific to histamine reduction. And then you can always expand out from there as your gut heals, and starts to tolerate more.

Lindsey: 

Got it? Where can people find you? And are you practicing virtually or in person?

Heidi Turner, RDN:

Yes, I’m not practicing in person. I am practicing virtually. You can find me at foodlogic.org. And right now, I’m a little limited in terms of my availability, but you never know. You never know. I am in the process of creating classes that help to educate people on all of this. So check back frequently. I’m in production now. And so that can just give you some good useful tips on how to move forward with these conditions.

If you’re suffering with SIBO or any other gut issue, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me (Lindsey). We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

Schedule a breakthrough session now

*Product and test links are affiliate links for which I’ll receive a commission. Thanks for your support of the podcast and blog by using these links.

How to Succeed at Healing Your Gut

Adapted from episode 65 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

So recently a potential client asked about my success rate in helping clients deal with their gut issues, and being a data-driven, evidence-based person myself, I wanted to give a clear, honest answer, which I didn’t have at the time. But after thinking about it for a while, I realized that an answer to that question is complex. But it seemed like the kind of question I would ask of someone I wanted to work with and have asked of many of my guests, with less than satisfying answers, especially as it pertains to functional approaches to various gut health conditions. And after working with clients for a few years now I understand why. 

But being a hard core data nerd who loves creating and playing with databases and spreadsheets and running queries and working on statistics, I thought – I’m going to find an answer to that question. 

And in thinking about how to give a fair, honest answer, I realized that I’d have to understand and label what went wrong when I didn’t succeed in helping someone. Which led me to the whole concept of how to be a good client or patient, which will ultimately help you in fixing your gut health issues, which is why this could be a helpful blog for you and not just a giant advertisement for my services, because I’m truly not that shameless. ( :

And overwhelmingly what I discovered as I went through the data on my prior and current clients, there were concrete reasons why I wasn’t able to help some of the people I’ve worked with. 

So let’s start with the first and biggest reason I wasn’t able to help the biggest chunk of people, which represented about 40% of my former clients (excluding those who are still in progress) and that was lack of follow through. So looking over the list of names, I see some who only set up one appointment. Maybe they were working with another practitioner who wasn’t addressing their complaints adequately, or maybe I resolved their complaints and they never told me about it, but in any case, when I followed up with them, they didn’t let me know how things were going and I didn’t know if they followed through adequately on my recommendations. So in reality, some of them may have been doing better but I don’t know. 

Another subgroup of that 40% came to me in very fragile health with very complex health issues, like chronic fatigue, debilitating and very advanced Crohn’s disease, mold illness, multiple autoimmune diseases, or breakdown of multiple body systems. In that group, many were unable to follow through with my recommendations due to their fragile health, being on the conventional medical rollercoaster and not wanting to mix what I was recommending with their doctor’s treatments or an adverse reaction to something I recommended. This can happen often when treating long-term dysbiosis, especially when it involves H pylori or candida. Unfortunately, for someone who only signs up for one appointment, when that happens, they often disappear rather than coming back to try something different. Sometimes the body needs to be ready to handle the killing of bacteria or yeast, and we need to address detoxification ahead of time, go more slowly or try a different product. But if a client doesn’t communicate with me about what’s going on or come back to see me, it’s hard to help them. When you have long-standing, complex health issues involving multiple bodily systems, sometimes there are multiple false starts before you find what’s going to work. So communication with your practitioner and persistence are really key in finding solutions. I’m 100% committed to finding solutions that are workable for my clients, in changing directions, or in trying something new if what we’re trying isn’t working, but you have to be completely honest about what you can and can’t do and how you’re feeling.

Another subgroup of the people I would describe as not following through are people with complex conditions like IBD who weren’t willing or able to make the dietary changes I recommended, or follow supplement protocols that I educated them on. This occurs for different reasons from eating disorders, vacations, family and other life things getting in the way, lack of faith that dietary changes are as key as they are, or not being the person most committed to your own care, which has happened in cases where spouses or parents approach me about helping their loved ones. 

Another subgroup of the non-follow throughers were people with really high anxiety. I’ve had a few people who fit this description, and because of their anxiety, they found it hard to follow my advice, because of fear of side effects of a taking a certain or really any supplements, or being too attached to the conventional medical paradigm and not trusting that alternative treatments are safe or effective. Or when it came to gut stuff they trusted my advice but weren’t willing to try out my advice when it came to other health issues. And almost everyone who sees me has other health issues, usually precipitated by gut health issues, so I have a good bit of experience at this point with those other issues. And when someone has anxiety, if they’re not already on an SSRI, I usually try to start with amino acids to bring up serotonin levels and calm them a bit before dealing with gut issues, because that’s an area where you can have pretty quick impact. And once you’ve brought down anxiety, follow through is much easier for people. But sometimes I just can’t get that far with a client because their anxiety is standing in the way. 

Finally, there’s one more subgroup in that 40% of people who didn’t follow through, and that’s the folks who for whatever reason disappear and don’t use up the appointments they paid for. I have to say I’m really sad when that happens and I usually follow up at least three or four times over time to see what happened and why they disappeared. I know that sometimes there are major life issues going on that need to be addressed before being ready to address health issues. But I also imagine that sometimes there’s a mismatch in my approach and people’s expectations, which is a shame because my approach is totally flexible. If you come to me and want to work primarily through diet changes to address your issue, I’ll do my best to help you do that. If you are open to and willing to take supplements, as most people are, I’m also willing to teach you about that. But at minimum, when I suggest a protocol, speaking up for yourself and advocating for what you’re willing and able to do is so important in being able to help you. Sitting quietly then leaving and never saying why doesn’t really help anyone. I have no ego invested in your treatment. All I care about is helping you get better, so if you think we’re going in the wrong direction for whatever reason, I’m all ears about changing it. 

So to summarize the lessons I can impart to you from the folks who haven’t followed through are: 

  1. Before signing up with a practitioner, count the cost – are you at a point in your life, mental health and medical care where you can follow the recommendations of a practitioner, make hard changes to your diet and lifestyle, afford natural supplements to address your condition and stick with them long enough to know if they’re working?
  2. Can you advocate for yourself and speak up when things aren’t going well or do you just give up and switch to another provider when something gets hard or overwhelming or you can’t follow through?
  3. Does the practitioner that you’re seeing have a flexible approach or are they focused on one solution to everyone’s problems? 

So back to the question of success rates, pulling out the people who didn’t follow through, I was able to come up with a list of people who came to see me for gut health issues and followed through with my recommendations. I calculated that 82% of those people had their gut health issues completely resolved or significantly improved, including diarrhea and soft stool, constipation, bloating, gas, stomach and intestinal pain and cramping, excessive burping, IBS, SIBO, candida, H. Pylori and ulcerative colitis.  The ones where it didn’t resolve only saw me for 2 or 3 appointments, and I’m not really sure how their gut is doing but in the short time we worked together we weren’t able to resolve it. Or in another case, it’s still in progress following a final appointment but this is a case with IBD and I find those require a lot of trial and error to bring into solid remission. 

So as I mentioned above, most people come to me with more than gut health issues. I calculated the percentage of people who had other significant health issues and it was 83%. Those included things like anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, eczema, psoriasis, rashes, autoimmune diseases of all types, including Hashimoto’s, Rheumatoid Arthritis , MS, POTS, spondyloarthritis  and dermatomyositis, joint pain, chronic fatigue, low energy, extreme food sensitivities, incontinence, prostate issues, frequent urination, frequent UTIs, brain fog, type 1 and type 2 diabetes, hormonal imbalances, gum inflammation, arthritis, sleep issues, nasal polyps and congestion, excessive allergies, headaches and migraines, asthma, COPD, mold illness, rashes, infertility, dizziness, heart issues and osteoporosis just to name a few. 

Now some of these things are related to the gut and can be dealt with through dealing with gut health issues but of course others are not, so I don’t claim to be able to help people with all those issues. But of the folks who followed through, half of the people with other issues saw resolution or improvement of at least one of them, including headaches and migraines, dizziness, joint pain, depression, anxiety, fatigue, food sensitivities, inflammation, including in the gums, psoriasis, frequent UTIs, sleep issues, blood sugar dysregulation, hypothyroidism and remission or a decrease in symptoms of autoimmune diseases, including Hashimoto’s, RA and dermatomyositis. And in some cases, I helped people identify potential health issues and recommended tests to have their doctor do that led their doctor to diagnose and treat issues that were underlying their health complaints. 

So if you’re considering looking for an alternative or functional medicine practitioner, I’d give you these few pieces of advice. First, if you haven’t yet seen your PCP or a gastroenterologist about your complaints, that’s the first place to start. Go through the conventional medical system first because it will be covered by insurance and will rule out physical issues and give you a diagnosis. It’s a lot easier to work with people when you know what they have. But don’t let that drag out too much. If you’ve been through that system without positive results, been told there’s nothing else they can do, or been put on a medication for life you’d like to get off, that’s when it’s time to seek out an alternative practitioner. Then look for someone with expertise who is evidence based (meaning they don’t latch onto every new unproven woo-woo thing out there), use peer-reviewed studies to make treatment decisions, and charge reasonable fees for their services. But you have to understand that most of us who are in the field of functional medicine and coaching are self-employed (meaning we have to set aside money for payroll taxes and our own benefits) and spend a lot more time with you than a doctor. For me that means typically around 1.5-2 hours in preparation and follow-up for 1-hour client appointments, checking in every few weeks to see how you’re doing, email support whenever you need it. So keep that in mind when you look at hourly or program fees. And really, you should think of it as an investment in your health because that’s what it is. Because without your health, you have nothing. Nothing else in life is enjoyable when you feel miserable or are in a constant state of anxiety about your health. 

Now if seeing an alternative practitioner is completely out of your league financially and you need to try to self-treat, here are a few pieces of advice. 

  1. Do one thing at a time and follow through for a reasonable amount of time. So for example, if you’re going to try an elimination diet, if you have serious health complaints or autoimmune issues, I’d recommend a very thorough elimination diet like the Autoimmune Paleo protocol, and spending at least 30 days on elimination then systematically reintroducing things. If you have more minor health complaints, you may get away with a smaller set of foods to eliminate and test, but gluten, dairy, soy, processed food, sugar, caffeine, alcohol, nightshades and processed seed oils are some of the big ones you’ll probably need to eliminate and test. The part where people tend to get sloppy is usually on the reintroduction because they’re so tired of deprivation they just restart eating their old diet. I wouldn’t recommend that. Even if you don’t feel significantly better when eliminating, you may forget how bad you felt before and only on reintroducing systematically will you realize what you’re sensitive to. But if you end up only eating 3 foods, then you’ve gone too far and likely you need to address gut issues  beyond what you’re eating. 
  2. So second, if you have significant gut issues like excessive bloating, soft stool, constipation, etc. it’s not likely that just making diet changes alone is going to solve them, although I have seen people on pretty bad standard American diets eliminate those problems when they started eating in a healthier way. But if you’re already eating plenty of fruits and veggies, organic and pastured meats and wild caught seafood, sufficient fiber in the form of whole grains, root veggies, beans, lentils, etc., healthy oils like olive, avocado and coconut oil and your diet isn’t too high in carbs especially white flour and sugar and you’re still having issues, then I wouldn’t say just a basic diet cleanup will take care of your issues. If you determine that you likely have SIBO or candida, then you could try to find and put together a protocol or find a product online or in a health food store to treat your issue. Just don’t listen to every single podcast out there and throw in everything but the kitchen sink. Sometimes I find people on 30 different supplements and when it’s like that, it’s almost impossible to determine what is useful and helpful. But at most 2 or 3 carefully selected things can help you. Just be careful that when you start taking antimicrobials of any sort, you can have die-off or a Herxeimer reaction, which can feel like the flu as parts of dead bacteria and yeast flood your system. If you get really sick, stop taking your supplements and let your body process it out before continuing. Typically herbal treatments for SIBO are relatively quick, say 6 weeks, twice that at the worst, H pylori a couple months, whereas treating bad candida can drag on for 6 to 8 months, so don’t give up. 
  3. And then finally, if you aren’t getting anywhere and want a little guidance but can’t sign up for a whole program of support, know that most practitioners will do one-off appointments, including myself. For me, that includes follow-up support via email to see you through whatever protocol I recommend. 
  4. And if you think gut health testing will help you know better what to do, you can of course take my gut health quiz that will help you determine which gut health or functional medicine tests are most appropriate for you. 
  5. And as always, you can sign up for a free, 30 minute breakthrough session if you want to talk through what’s been going on and see if it’s something I can help you with or you can jump right to a single, 1-hour consultation if you’re ready to get working right away. 

I just hope that you all persist in trying to be as good clients or patients as you can for whoever you are working with so you can see your way to a solution because I do believe that most gut health issues have solutions and that you can get better. And whatever terrible state of affairs you’ve been living with does not need to continue indefinitely. That there are solutions. And I know this from my own life and from my clients so I just want to give you encouragement and hope that you can find the solution to your problems. 

Schedule a breakthrough session now

When your body attacks: Autoimmune Diseases & Gut Health, with Lindsey Parsons on the Colon Health Podcast

Autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, type 1 diabetes, and IBD occur when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body. This often leads people to experience a variety of different systems resulting in a sometimes long and painful journey to experience relief from what they’re feeling.

On my guest appearance on the Colon Health Podcast, I share about my GI and autoimmune issues, the role of a leaky gut in autoimmune diseases, how I found relief, and encourage you in your healing journey.

Candida: Root Causes, Testing and Treatment with Dr. Michael Biamonte

Adapted from episode 64 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

Dr. Michael Biamonte is the founder of the Biamonte Center for Clinical Nutrition. He is a co-creator of BioCybernetics, which is a computer software program that studies blood work, mineral tests and many other lab tests to determine exactly where your body is imbalanced.  He holds a Doctorate of Naturopathy and is a New York State certified Clinical Nutritionist and author of the book “The Candida Chronicles: A Manual for Candida Yeast Infections”. He is a professional member of the International and American Association of Clinical Nutritionists, The American College of Nutrition and is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board for the Clinical Nutrition Certification Board. 

Lindsey:  

So why don’t we start with how people end up getting an overgrowth of Candida in their intestinal tract in the first place?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Usually, it’s from taking antibiotics. From taking antacid medications, steroids, and sometimes chemotherapy, but very typically, it’s induced by medications. That’s been the thought for many years. But it also can occur from excessive stress, excessive alcohol and different types of recreational drugs. And we’re now finding out that COVID can leave people with Candida, which is very interesting because a person gets COVID, he goes through that whole syndrome and then thereafter, he never quite feels right. And the reason why is because now he has an immune vality and it’s the immune hit that COVID puts on the person that allows the Candida to overgrow.

Lindsey:  

Interesting.  

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yeah, essentially, anything that disturbs your intestinal bacteria allows Candida to grow. 

Lindsey:  

Interesting.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Even to the point where if someone goes in a public swimming pool, or a pool that’s heavily chlorinated, by taking a couple of gulps of that water, it could imbalance their friendly bacteria, because in order for Candida to grow, you have to kill the friendly bacteria that’s in your intestines. The friendly bacteria, the probiotics, everybody hears about all the time on TV, you have to kill those off. And then the Candida moves from being a subdominant growth in your intestines to more of the dominant part of your flora, and then that’s where it starts causing all the symptoms.

Lindsey:  

And so why don’t you talk a little bit about what the symptoms are?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Well, you know, there literally can be 150 different symptoms of Candida. It depends on how you want to count them. One article I saw the person was saying gas and bloating, another person, he listed them separately, but the idea is that you can get so many symptoms that it can turn your head spinning, and you would never guess what it is because the symptoms are disrelated. Like as an example, somebody first gets Candida. Normally, the first thing they experience is a decline in energy. They feel like they’re dragging themselves around. And then within the upcoming weeks, they’ll start having either diarrhea, constipation or a lot of bloating and gas, then they could start having allergies, rashes. Brain fog is an extremely common symptom. The symptoms I’m giving you right now will probably be the most common but it can affect anyone in any in any way, depending on their own genetics and where they’re weak. Some people when they get Candida will get arthritis as a result. Some people get MS as a result of Candida. And there are there are overlapping syndromes with Candida that make it even more confusing. 

As an example, if someone acquires mercury toxicity, whether it’s from vaccinations or the fillings in their mouth, or eating too much tuna, whatever it is, the symptoms of mercury toxicity are very similar to Candida, and mercury toxicity causes Candida. So in this way, it can get very confusing. Probably the most difficult case and the most severe type of Candida is where the person then becomes what we’ve called for years a universal reactor, which is somebody who’s just chemically intolerant. The term for this has varied over the years, but it’s essentially a person who’s so reactive that everyone around them thinks that they’re playing some joke or lying about it because they literally can’t go to the supermarket without having rashes, breakouts, headaches and things like that. They’re just chemically sensitive and allergic to everything. That’s the worst case of Candida. And that’s a case where the person would typically have Candida and leaky gut syndrome at the same time.

Lindsey:  

Right, right, multiple chemical sensitivity is what I’ve heard it referred to as. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yeah. There you go.

Lindsey:  

So just to clarify on the vaccine and mercury question, because I’m a supporter of vaccination for COVID and many other things, the only place in which one would find mercury is in the… What’s the preservative called?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Thimerosal.

Lindsey:  

Thimerosal, right, which is typically only in vaccines that are given in multiple doses, like at a community clinic, for example, not in individual dose vaccines.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes, that’s correct. Thimerosal was supposed to be removed from vaccines years ago. But there was a period of time afterwards the use was continued. I don’t know what the present status is. But I can just tell you that the mercury from Thimerosal is something which can induce Candida to. It’s very typical in autistic children that you find that very high in mercury and copper. That’s one of the trademarks, physically. When we look at autistic children, they typically have Candida and leaky gut. That’s a very common thing along with various toxic metals, but most commonly, mercury and copper.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Could you point me to a study that connects Thimerosal and autism?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yeah, actually, actually, I could email you a few.

[Mercury and autism: accelerating evidence? (Sent by guest, note this is a letter, not a study)

Environmental risk factors for autism: an evidence-based review of systematic reviews and meta-analysesMost recent meta-analysis of meta-analyses I could find on the topic of mercury and autism, whose conclusion was: “Current evidence suggests that several environmental factors including vaccination, maternal smoking, thimerosal exposure, and most likely assisted reproductive technologies are unrelated to risk of ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder) . . . . The studies on toxic elements have been largely limited by their design, but there is enough evidence for the association between some heavy metals (most important inorganic mercury and lead) and ASD that warrants further investigation.” (Note, there are many more subsequent studies, so in my opinion this is not a settled question, but I don’t have the time to thoroughly research it. Lindsey)]

Lindsey:  

That would be great. I would, I would like to include those in the show notes to back that up. Okay, so let me ask you, why do you think that Candida isn’t recognized in western allopathic medicine except in the case of severe immunosuppression? 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

It’s an interesting question. If you think about it, if a doctor is giving somebody antibiotics and then if a woman takes an antibiotic, it’s not unusual that she’ll get a yeast infection. 

Lindsey:  

Right. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

So that’s something that can be tied very, very easily. And it’s sort of accepted. It’s different for a person when they take an antibiotic and get a vaginal yeast infection, that’s something that is very common and people are used to having. But when a person takes antibiotics, and then thereafter develops chronic fatigue syndrome, which goes on for years and years, that’s, that’s a tough nut. And that’s something that gets somebody very angry. So I think you’re going to find that a lot of practitioners who use antibiotics, especially indiscriminately, are going to shy away from wanting to take responsibility for the situation.

Lindsey:  

So how do you differentiate candidiasis, say, from SIBO, or other gut conditions?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

They all fall under the heading of dysbiosis. And the word dysbiosis simply means you have an imbalance between the friendly bacteria in your gut and harmful bacteria. And under that umbrella of dysbiosis, you then look to see what specifically is the imbalance and that’s where you would then come up with something like Candida, a parasite infection, or SIBO, which SIBO itself has two different types.

Lindsey:  

But in terms of symptoms, are there symptoms that differentiate for you Candida from SIBO, or parasites?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yeah, well, all of them have gastrointestinal symptoms, bloating, gas, potentially constipation, diarrhea, IBS-like symptoms. All of them have fall into that category. But the one thing about Candida which is a little bit different is because Candida actually ferments alcohol in your intestinal tract, it tends to give the person the brain fog and the cognitive problems. So that’s one symptom that would stand out. That’s quite different. As a matter of fact, there is a Japanese strain of Candida that produces so much alcohol that one man at one point was actually found legally intoxicated.

Lindsey:  

So what tests do you use to diagnose someone with Candida?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

I primarily use three tests, we use DNA stool tests that exist nowadays, but we use them in a little bit of a different way than how you would take them face value. We found that if a stool test shows that the person has no friendly bacteria in their intestines, or they’re deficient in it, it would be an automatic diagnosis of Candida whether the Candida shows on the test or not. And that’s because Candida is much harder to find and detect than bacteria. Gram positive and gram negative bacteria are rather easy to find, but Candida is harder to find. So we can go about it that way, the plus point in going about it that way, is you also selectively see all the other strains of bacteria the person has. Then we use Organic Acids Tests. This is a test made popular by Great Plains and Genova labs. The Organic Acids Test will tell you all the organic acids that are there for different bacteria, and particularly Candida, and then different types of mold. And then the other tests we have that I probably use most frequently is a urine test that I developed myself many years ago, when I was very upset with the lack of accurate Candida testing. And this urine test identifies some of the key organic acids, but very importantly, some of the free radicals that Candida releases into your body. So those are the three tests we use.

Lindsey:  

Oh okay, so tell me a little bit more about this urine test you’ve developed? Is that something other people can access?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes, most important thing about the urine test is that it can be done at home using the patient’s first morning urine. When we originally developed the test, we were doing it in my office, and people were coming in at all different times of the day with their urine samples. And we were finding that the urine samples that were acquired later in the day were not as accurate as the ones that came in in the morning. So we switched it so that the person can do it as a home, self-administered urine test.

Lindsey:  

And is this using some of the similar markers to the organic acids like arabinose, or is this different markers?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

It’s using different markers, but it’s using markers that solidify. You don’t actually get a score like you do with the organics test. You visually see the albumin in the urine, solidifying with Candida antigens and antibodies. So you rate the test based on how much how much it curdles. You get a strong curdling reaction in a person who’s positive. So it ranges from being very heavily curdled to just a curdling that kind of floats to a slight curdling and then to a cloudy milky reaction, which would mean the person has a normal response. Then we have a test in the kit, which is a free radical test, which turns very red in the presence of the free radicals that Candida releases, which are alcohol driven free radicals. Then we also do an Indican test on there. Indican more relates to SIBO. Indican is a test, which tells you that you have putrefying bacteria in your intestinal tract, which is releasing harmful chemicals which are very toxic. It’s essentially a substance called indole. Indole is sent to your liver where it’s detoxified and it’s the placed in your urine and at that point, it’s called Indican. So these are three markers of an imbalance related to Candida or SIBO. And as I said, we use that test very frequently because it’s very convenient and very accurate. And it’s not as expensive as the others.

Lindsey:  

Oh, okay. Do you find that correlates well with the Organic Acids Test?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Directly yes. Many years ago, I did studies with all of these all three together to watch the correlation. So we found that if interpreted correctly, they match identically.

Lindsey:  

Okay, so can people order that test if they’re not working with you? Or do they…

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

No. They can’t. And the reason why is because we tried that once. And we got a flood of phone calls from people who were not patients who were asking questions about interpretation. 

Lindsey:  

Okay.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Questions that you couldn’t really answer unless you were able to spend time with the person and explain the whole process to them. 

Lindsey:  

Right. Okay. So how long do you find that it typically takes someone suffering from Candida to get back to normal?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

It depends on various things. In most cases, you can normalize the person’s intestinal flora in six to eight months. So that would mean you can completely disinfect and kill all the bad organisms there and then get the probiotics to grow again. The problem after that is what might have caused the Candida that might still be in the body as an underlying cause and that’s where we go back to the toxic metals. It’s very common that people with copper and mercury, iron, aluminum, and arsenic toxicity, develop Candida as an underlying cause. So if those metals are still present in the body, when the Candida is handled, you’ve had to correct those metals. If you have a woman who’s very estrogen dominant, or even a man who’s very, very high estrogen that causes Candida as well. Estrogen tends to be very stimulating to Candida’s growth. So if you have that problem, then you need to balance those hormones before you can consider you’re done. And there are some various other issues that can be an underlying cause. So if you eliminate the Candida, but you don’t eliminate these underlying causes, the person could just relapse in a couple of months when they start returning back to a more normal diet. As you know, and most people know to get rid of Candida, you also have to follow some diet restrictions with carbs and sugars to starve the Candida while you’re killing it with the medicines.

Lindsey:  

So I’ve actually heard at least one functional medicine practitioner who I really respect, say that diet other than sort of the basic, yeah, get off of the white carbs and the sugar, but just the diet doesn’t seem to have a big impact in their Candida treatment in their clients. So I’m curious how strict of a diet do you find is necessary, and for how long for people to get rid of Candida?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

We have three different degrees of strictness depending on what how bad the test is. So if a person’s test is very heavy, we have a stricter diet that we call the caveman diet, which is along the lines of what the doctor was saying. And then as the test becomes less severe, the diets are more plentiful in some selected starches and sugars. But generally speaking, the person never is going to get rid of Candida unless they follow to some degree, the dietary restrictions. And you can tell, actually, we have a doctor who worked with us once who used to have his patients do what he called the spaghetti test. When he thought their flora was good and sound and the Candida was gone, he would send them out for a big spaghetti meal, and then see how they felt the next few days. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah, that makes sense. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

That’s before we had any real testing back in those days. But you have to follow the diet. I would disagree with the doctor to the extent that he’s portraying this because the diet is very important. Depending on the person, there are some people that if they even eat artificial sweeteners, or alcohol sugars, which years ago, we used to a permit on the diet, they will react. It’s as though Candida has learned and evolved to react to the sugars and consume them. So it’s really, what the doctor said is not totally accurate. And I can say that, because I see hundreds of Candida patients a week. It depends on the person, I would say he’s mostly correct that you’ve got to follow the basics of the diet, but that’s not going to handle it. See that’s the other side of the coin. You’ll get people on the internet and on YouTube, talking about these Candida diets, and some of them are insane. And some of them are so restrictive, but that’s because that’s what they found worked for them. That doesn’t mean everyone has to be that strict. So it’s really it’s a case by case situation many times. Some people need to be strict, some people don’t.

Lindsey:  

So what are the different layers of strictness? What is the least strict diet look like versus the most strict diet?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

The most strict would be no more than 40 to 60 grams of carbs a day. And it’s mostly things that walk, crawl, fly, climb, meaning animal protein, swim, you see, and then vegetables. That’s mostly what those people need. The most lenient diet is maybe 90 to 110 – 120 grams of carbs a day, and that includes some complex carbohydrates like beans and lentils and Granny Smith apples and berries and an occasional root vegetable, but not that much. 

Lindsey:  

Okay.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

That’s probably the distinction between those two opposite ends. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, so tell me about your protocol and the different stages of it?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Well, you see, when I first discovered Candida, I didn’t really know much about what it was. This was back in 1986 -1987. I didn’t know much about it. I would refer to people to their doctor to try to handle it, because I determined that one of the odd things about Candida is Candida causes people to react strangely to medications and vitamins. When they take vitamins that should be good for them, they actually get very bad, bizarre reactions. So when I had this happening with people, I referred these people to their doctors to handle the Candida, and they were met with “Well, I really don’t know much about that”, or “it doesn’t exist”, or “I can’t help you” or some story. So then I started referring them to some of my colleagues at the time in New York City like Dr. Bob Atkins and Ronald Hofmann and some of the very well-known functional doctors and they had much better results with those doctors, but still not where I wanted it. So I had to take it upon myself to figure out what it was all about that to come up with what the treatments were. 

Now in a lot of the things I learned by listening to my patients and hearing what they were doing that wasn’t working. And when I would hear these things, like one of the first things was a patient would tell me, and I heard this a million times a patient come in, well, “I went to the doctor, he gave me Nystatin, he gave me this other drug. For the first month or two, I felt great, I thought I was cured and then gradually it started to come back.” So I said to myself, “why would that be?” So I would listen to the patient, I would go hit the medical textbook on mycology and yeast. And what I found that was Candida was very, very sensitive to mutation. Candida could mutate very easily, it would genetically switch is what we call it. So I found that what was happening is, the longer the person was on the treatment, the Candida would genetically switch and mutate and then become resistant to the treatment. So this is where I then determined that what we had to do is we had to come up with a way of rotating the antifungals, so the Candida wouldn’t become resistant to the one that you were using. So we came up with the policy of having the person use four different antifungals. And I will have them rotate them every four or five days. This way that ensured the Candida could not mutate. So this is one major thing that’s different in how I treat the Candida than another person. 

The other thing is we don’t use probiotics at the beginning, because they determined thanks to Genova labs many years ago in doing the lab (my patients do some free stool testing) and we determined that the probiotics do not work in a person until you’ve eliminated a good amount of the intestinal yeast. Probiotics are repelled by Candida. So when you have dysbiosis, whatever it is parasites, Candida bacteria, whatever, they tend to repel the probiotics and prohibit them from sticking to the gut lining. So you’ve got to first eliminate those organisms before you can put the probiotics in it. 

We also, very early on when I was researching, found that a great amount of people with Candida had parasites, which is kind of an ugly thing to say, but nonetheless true. And it’s because when you have an imbalance in your intestinal tract, that lack of friendly bacteria that normally protects you from all types of organisms, it’s not there. So we would tend to see in people, you can imagine this, if you could walk through someone’s intestinal tract with a flashlight, you would go through areas where there’s friendly bacteria, everything looks kind of normal, but then you would come across an area of the intestinal tract where there are colonies of bad bacteria, yeasts, and parasites all harbored together, because they all tend to be synergistic in how they work together. So they live that way. So we started to do the very first thing with a Candida patient is a parasite cleanse, not anything grossly elaborate, but something like a colon cleanse that had black walnut, wormwood, cloves, some of the typical things that are used for Northeastern parasites. And we found that we got much better results when we gave the person the parasite cleanse first, then got them into the Candida treatment, the results were quite different. And that became then part of the protocol. So the protocol that I use, that’s explained in the book. And there are many other axioms and logics to it. But all of these things were arrived at by watching people respond, watching what they were doing that was wrong, and then not making the same mistake twice with them, coming up with a different way around it so that it actually worked. 

Lindsey:  

And you mentioned the book, what is the book?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

The book is called The Candida Chronicles*, and it’s available on Amazon, and it explains the history of my research into Candida, how I determined these different modalities and treatments, and it goes over quite a few different examples of treatment plans that a person can use. Plus, there’s a whole section in there on diet and recipes.

Lindsey:  

Oh okay, perfect. I’ll link to that in the show notes. So what kinds of parasites are you seeing on stool tests with Candida?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

The most typical one is Blastocystis hominis, which is a very interesting organism. Back in the 80s, Blastocystis was classified as non-pathogenic by the CDC. And then they, with the advent of all the research into AIDS, looked at differently, and they started to reclassify it as a pathogen. Blastocystis is actually a kind of combination of a yeast cell and an amoeba at the same time. It’s like half protozoa, half yeast, and it’s interesting because on its own, it really doesn’t do that much to you. The symptoms of Blastocystis mostly come about because it weakens your intestinal immune response. So intestinal IgG, IgA, all these antibodies tend to weaken when you have Blastocystis, and that allows other organisms that are there, it magnifies their negative effects. So it’s very common to find Blastocystis and Candida together. It’s also pretty typical that you would find someone who’s had giardia, or who has had any type of amoeba, would then afterwards have Candida as a result of the giardia of disturbing their intestinal flora. Roundworms, tapeworms, flukes, all very common in people with Candida.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

So basically anything that impacts your gut immunity and causes dysbiosis.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

That’s the simplicity of it. Yeah.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. So going back to the Blasto. I’m curious, because I’ve heard that there are strains that are pathogenic now and strains that are not and also, you know, heard about studies where they’re finding it present in plenty of healthy people. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yeah. The difference is whether or not they have other microbes that are there that are possibly pathogenic, that pairing them off makes the whole difference. And that’s what I’ve never seen made clear in any study, because that’s the simplicity of it, the presence of Blastocystis is not a really a big deal, it doesn’t have to be a big deal unless there’s some other pathogen for it to pair with. So if you have Blastocystis and the rest of your flora is healthy, you could be fine. But then if you acquire food poisoning, somehow someway, and you have that Blastocystis there, now you’re going to have something which could go on and on and on. If you develop Candida, well, you have Blastocystis. Now that’s increases the impact of it. So it’s really the pairing that needs to be looked at. That’s what I observed on my own. So if I see someone has Blastocystis, that’s definitely a red flag. But I look and see what else they have in the test and what else they’re manifesting symptomatically to understand how that’s impacting them. Not a good idea to have it in any case, because it does have that ability to weaken your immune response eventually.

Lindsey:  

So the parasite cleanse that you described, the colon cleanse, is that effective in eliminating Blasto?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

No, it’s not. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah, that’s what I thought.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yeah, it’s very hard to get rid of, I actually had a formulate a product, which we called at the time Blasto Off or something like that. I don’t remember, it was very long ago. But the product was meant to remove the Blastocystis because Blastocystis adheres to your intestinal lining; it’s very, very hard to get it off. So I had to look into what nutrients what substances would break the protein bonds that the Blastocystis makes to hang on, and we formulated that product and started using it with some other things. And it worked really well. But then the funny thing is, we found that it had the same effect on Candida, so we changed the name of it, we called it Candi-Loosener. And we made it part of our regular Candida protocol, but the product eventually had come from this research into Blastocystis.

Lindsey:  

Okay, so you still have the product called Candi-Loosener?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Candi-Loosener, which really was meant to help people eliminate Blastocystis because it’s so hard. See killing Blastocystis is not such a tough thing. It’s getting it to come off the lining of the intestinal tract where it hides in the mucous membranes. That’s what’s tough. And that’s what the Candi-Loosener does.

Lindsey:  

Okay. And are there like biofilm busters of some sort that to do?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes, you called it. Half the product is a biofilm buster, and the other half of the product contains different substances, which break the bonds that the Blasto makes. One of them is MSM sulfur. MSM sulfur dissolves the proteins that most parasites make including Blasto to be able to stick to the lining of your intestine.

Lindsey:  

And how long will people typically have to take that in order to get rid of the Blasto? 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Six months.

Lindsey:  

Six months? Wow. Okay, so not a quick process. So that’s kind of part of the protocol for Candida the whole way along?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes, it is. But at least you get rid of it. Because I’ve had people come to me saying they’ve had Blastocystis for years, and they kept bouncing from one doctor to another and they’ve never able to get rid of it. And that’s the challenge with Blastocystis. Yes, you need to try to kill it in a drug or herb fashion. But you also need to be able to get it to loosen up and fall off the intestinal lining. So it’s not affixed.

Lindsey:  

Okay, so back when you were talking about the metals, I meant to ask, what do you use to test for those heavy metals?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Well, you can do it in quite a few ways. The way I like and I’ve always traditionally done is with hair analysis. And the reason why I’m a proponent, I’ve been using hair analysis since 1985. And I’m a big proponent of it because the hair is a tissue and as a tissue, it’s showing you storage. If you take a blood test on someone for minerals, you can have them eat a banana and then take a blood test and their potassium levels will be high. And yet if they go fasting they won’t be high like that. You see. So a hair doesn’t give you this reading that could occur based on an exposure, which is temporary. We had a patient once who went for bloodwork on the same day he went for a jog under the Brooklyn Bridge, and they happened to be repairing the bridge. So there was all kinds of iron being thrown out into the air. So his blood tests said that he had high levels of iron, but when we had him repeat it the next week, it was fine. So it gives a false reading sometimes. Now so the hair is a tissue that you’re looking at, and you’re looking at tissue storage. And tissue storage means when you find something that’s in the hair, it’s not something that just is there temporarily, it’s been there for a long time. 

And when you have experience with hair testing, and you do it for many years, and especially if you’re, let’s say you’re following one patient, you have a patient do the test every three months, you start to see that they have a pattern to their hair. This was used in forensics, which is where we got the idea as nutritionists to use it, because in forensics, they would take care and they would look at it. And this is how they discovered that Napoleon was killed by arsenic poisoning, and how they discovered that Beethoven died from lead poisoning. So when you look at the hair, and you’re following it, you see the pattern that’s there. And as you work with the person’s biochemistry, you can gradually change that pattern and optimize it. But when you look at hair, the bottom line is you’re going to see something that’s in the hair, it means it’s in storage, it means it’s in your tissues. It means it’s not just a very temporary thing; it means you actually really have a buildup of this in your body. And you know to take that seriously. And you know that you can follow it when you detoxify the person. 

We use urine tests when we get the person on the program to check their excretion. And this is the best way to look at it. Hair shows you storage, a urine test for toxic metals and a stool test because both of them exist, would show you excretion. So if you have somebody and you’re detoxing them, because you see they have high metals in their hair, how you can tell the efficacy of your program is by looking at their urine and stool and see how much of this metal’s now coming out. Because what you’ll do is you’ll get an increase coming out in the urine. So if you did it a hair test and a urine test, let’s say it showed high mercury, as the person is on the program, when you do subsequent urine tests that mercury is going to elevate because the body’s pushing it out. It’s dumping it.

Lindsey:  

Okay. And that’s essentially what you want to see when you’re when you’re getting rid of it.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

You don’t want to see it low. Not at all. 

Lindsey:  

Right. Okay, and what do you use to chelate those metals?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

We use EDTA, DMPS, a lot of the standard chelators that have been used for quite some time. But we also have a particular way that we do it. We like to use like three or four things categorically. This way you get a better, cleaner detoxification. We always use a chelator, so let’s say that would be in the case of mercury, it might be DMPS or DMSA. Then along with the chelator, we want to use elements that are antagonistic. So what I mean by that is all vitamins and minerals have an opposition with each other or a synergy. When it comes to mercury, zinc, iron, and selenium are very antagonistic to mercury, they actually help nudge the mercury out of storage in your tissues. Vitamin C is like a natural chelator of mercury. So when we have somebody on a mercury program, we have them on a chelator. We have them on the nutrients which also tend to be antagonistic or supportive to bringing it out. And then we have them on binders. There are different types of substances, which helps bind the metal and take it up differently than the chelators. That would be things like citrus pectin. Typically, it’s called modified citrus pectin, and modified citrus pectin, cilantro, sodium alginate, bentonite, all these different clays also help bind the metals and pull them out. So when you use these things in combination, you get a much more thorough detoxing, because the thing you want to avoid (and this is what happens if the person doesn’t have all these things in the proper balance going for them when they’re chelating the metal), there’s a certain amount of reabsorption of the metal and most of the bad reactions the person has when they’re on a metal program are from the metals being reabsorbed back into their system. But when you have them taking all three of these items together, you get a minimal amount of reabsorption so the person gets through it without feeling horrible. 

Lindsey:  

And I am curious about the cilantro. Are you talking about as a food or is this like an extract?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

You can do it either way.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Yeah, I’ve often sent people to eat a lot of cilantro. But I’m not sure how compliant they are with that. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

I hear you.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. Okay, so once you’ve gone through this six to eight month, or how long is your protocol, typically last? You said six to eight months, right?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Some people six to eight months, some people 6 to 8 years depends on what’s going on. There are genetic tendencies towards Candida. There is a particular SNP called MMP-1 which predisposes the person to Candida. It’s a SNP, which affects the collagen in the person’s intestinal tract. And it makes it easier for the Candida to permeate that collagen and stick. Those people are people who need to manage Candida as opposed to treat it because their Candida is really never going to go away in that way because of the genetics. So they’re managing it. And then you have other people who don’t have that SNP who you can clear of the Candida within six to eight months. And then you can work on as we said before, what the underlying issues might be. Do they have toxic metals that are underlying this? Do they have hormone imbalances, do they have low stomach acid, which is another reason you can get Candida. And as you said, as you mentioned before, there’s being amino deficient, which is also a possibility. So normally we expect with the surprises of life, we expect it to take about a year for us to handle the typical person with Candida, the person who developed Candida because he was minding his own business, he got hit with a lot of antibiotics, let’s say he had dental work, he was in a car accident, he developed some type of infection, something happened, he got hit with all these antibiotics, he developed Candida, that’s the kind of person that’s the easiest. This, they’re going to take maybe eight months, something like that, to a year, they’ll clear it up, they don’t have really very strong underlying problems. 

Now, when you have women who had problems conceiving who have Candida, they usually have lots of underlying hormone problems. And very often I find that they’re copper toxic, and those type of people are going to take a few years to handle because depending on their ability to detoxify, you’ve got to get the copper out for things to be normalized. So I always look at it this way, there’s two parts to my Candida treatment. The first part is getting rid of the Candida, the second part is handling why you got it, and why it became so persistent. Those are the underlying reasons that we look for there. 

Where we’re looking at metals, hormones, stomach acid level, or, you know, parasites, it could be quite a few things, but you’re really looking at two kinds of programs here when you’re dealing with a chronic case of Candida. The typical person that we get, I would say, has been fighting Candida for at least 10 years, they’ve been to at least 5, 6, 7, 8 doctors, and they’re bouncing around. And they’ve never really gotten the correct results. Because you know, everybody that they see has their own hobbyhorse or their soapbox that they get on about Candida. And they don’t really have the whole picture like I’m giving it to you. 

I’m giving you today the whole picture of what happens with Candida from start to finish. Most doctors know a part of this, or they specialize in one part of it. Like there’s a very famous doctor who was in the Midwest, not of course going to mention his name, but he’s very well-known because he preaches that you’ve got to get the mercury out of your body or the Candida will never go away. And what I learned from his patients, when they started coming to me was that the last thing you want to do is touch the mercury first, because all the patients that were going to him and it all made sense, it makes sense to me that you want to get rid of the mercury in order to resolve the case. But when you address the mercury first, what you’re doing is you’re pulling this mercury out of the person’s tissues, it’s coming down the intestinal tract where the Candida is sitting, and you’re basically giving the Candida a bath of this mercury. And not only is the mercury immunosuppressive so it reduces the immune response in your gut. This has been observed for a while. No one’s really fully got a grip on why this is. But Candida absorbs mercury. When you start killing Candida in a person who’s mercury toxic, as the Candida decomposes, it releases Mercury ions into the body. So if you do this as the first action on the person, they’re going to be so sick, they’re not going to be able to continue. And that’s what ends up happening. And that’s how I ended up having all these patients come to me, because they were trying to go through this doctor’s protocol, and it just made them so sick, they couldn’t handle it. So I learned the hard way. Again, from that, there’s a college of hard knocks, I learned at that point, you don’t touch the mercury first, you first reduce the Candida as much as you can, then you gradually pull the mercury out while you’re maintaining the person on a program that will suppress that Candida as the mercury is coming out.

Lindsey:  

And so you mentioned that women who had trouble conceiving are often copper toxic. Is there a relationship between those two?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Well, copper is estrogenic. 

Lindsey:  

Okay.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

In the body, minerals are very interesting. Anyone who wants to make a good study of minerals I would refer them to Trace Elements Lab. Dr. David O Watts has written a great book about trace elements*. And he is the world expert, as far as I’m concerned. Watts has shown in many studies that copper itself as an element tends to be estrogenic. Copper is what stimulates estrogen receptors. Copper also stimulates the production and release of estrogen. Zinc, on the other hand, more stands for progesterone. And while we’re on the subject, manganese is the one that more stands for testosterone. So if you have a woman who’s accumulated copper, for whatever reason, it’s like her body is walking around with more sensitive more estrogen sensitivity or estrogen dominance than one who doesn’t. And that’s the case where Candida loves that; Candida loves estrogen, and estrogen makes babies grow, it makes Candida grow.

Lindsey:  

And where are they getting the copper from?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

That’s a very good question. Many years ago, we had a lot of cases of copper toxicity from people who lived in cities, particularly who lived in old brownstones and what we found was that the copper plumbing after a while it gets old. It leeches copper in the water and people will notice this when they look in the sink or they look down at the drain and they see green stains in that drain. That’s copper.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Now you could also have a vegetarian diet, also very high in copper. So if a woman is, let’s say, a blood type O, who normally would be more of a paleo diet, if they’re being a strict vegetarian or a vegan, they’ll develop a copper toxicity from the diet. And there are some other sources of copper you can acquire but that’s kind of individualized to someone’s hobbies or their profession where they’re coming in contact with the metal. For the average person plumbing is a major reason why they have copper. And then also you have to remember to have amalgams, like everyone thinks of mercury amalgams. Mercury amalgams are actually an alloy of zinc, copper and mercury. It’s not all mercury in there. There’s copper in there, too. So if someone’s amalgams get old and they start leaking mercury, they’re also leaking copper.

Lindsey:  

Yeah.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

What about a copper IUD? Are those problematic?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Highly.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Okay.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Highly, that’s sometimes the underlying reason for a woman’s Candida problem.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. Okay. So can you talk about the major categories or types of herbal products that are used to treat Candida and explain why you use the ones you use?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes, there’s one particular group of products, antifungals, which work better systemically. And there are formulas nowadays made with some of those. A key herb is lomatium, which was used by the North American Indians. Yes, they used it for a condition they called Fairy Tongue, which we now know of as being thrush. A companion herb to that is called spilanthes, which is a little different, but works virtually in a similar mechanism. And as I said before, there are formulations now that exist from different companies. There’s a particular one we use a lot called Biocidin*, which there are three or four different versions now of Biocidin. Biocidin is very effective to kill for killing Candida. But then keep in mind as I said in the beginning, we would rotate these, so would it would not be unusual for us to give someone a rotation where they would take Biocidin, and then they would take lomatium, then they might take spilanthes, then we might use one of the herbs from South America called Kolorex*. And we might we might use something from Metagenics like Candibactin then.  There’s Candibactin AR and BR (find in my Wellevate Dispensary*). It wouldn’t be unusual for us to rotate these things. Berberine combined with citrus extracts, then grapefruit seed extract when you combine Berberine and grapefruit seed extract, it’s very effective against Candida. That’s a product that’s called Tricycline, it’s made by Allergy Research Group (find in my Wellevate Dispensary*). So these all these can be used while you have the person on what we refer to as our basic phase zero. Phase zero was what the parasite cleanse that I told you about originally evolved into. And phase zero was a combination of diatomaceous earth, Candi-Scrub, Candi-Loosener and an enzyme product, which helps digest the Candida. A lot of the Candida patients I’m sure are familiar with CANDI-zyme and other products that physically digest the Candida. We use those enzymes with diatomaceous earth and with our Candi- Scrub and Candi-Loosener as our phase zero. That’s our first phase for Candida elimination, that’s what helps get rid of the parasites, it helps get rid of what I would refer to as the top layer of Candida. And then we would graduate the person into the first phase, which is where they use those herbs I just mentioned, which tends to work very well systemically. 

Hydrogen peroxide is not an herb, but food grade hydrogen peroxide works very well at destroying Candida systemically. We would then eventually graduate the person to phase two, which is where we handle the intestinal candida. This is the Candida that usually will come back and cause the person to relapse if it’s not addressed. And it’s also the Candida layer, which tends to stop the probiotics from being able to stick. Now, when it comes to this, the only thing that’s going to work on deep in the intestinal tract are antifungals, which are fatty acid based and they are primarily just two, which are effective, but you have to get really, really good quality products, you have to use caprylic acid, and then undecylenic acid (find Thorne SF722 undecylenic acid and many options for caprylic acid in my Wellevate Dispensary*) . Because they’re fatty acids, they’re able to enter the cells and enter those tissues where the Candida grows deep into and then eliminate it, just sear it right at the edge. And this will kill it deep enough for the probiotics to be able to stick. 

Now what we found with probiotics is interesting. It’s not as simple as going to the store and buying a probiotic. Once you’ve had Candida, it’s difficult to get the probiotics to stick in your intestinal tract again. So you need to use a probiotic for your small intestine which would be some acidophilus strain, and then a bifido strain for your colon, because the colon is represented by bifidus and the small intestine acidophilus. Then you need to use a host of different things that we call prebiotics, which serve as food for the probiotics to get them to grow. It’s almost like you had a lawn and your lawn was hit with so much sun and bad chemicals and bad things. It just killed the grass and it made the soil infertile to grow grass again. So you have to literally supplement that soil to be able to get the grass to grow. And we find that sometimes we need six or seven different prebiotics in the person’s case. One of the most important prebiotics is fiber, because fiber is with friendly bacteria feed also have in order to make sure chain fatty acids which help regulate your intestinal tract. So when you’re looking at a probiotic, if the person takes probiotics, and they don’t work, it’s number one because they still have too much Candida and number two, it’s because they’re not using enough of the prebiotics to feed the probiotic to get it to grow.

Lindsey:  

And are you using a premixed prebiotic with different prebiotics in it or are you…

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Well, we use about 12 different products on the on the Flora program. One of the important probiotics is Saccharomyces which is a yeast. So it’s also very often referred to as Casper, because it’s a friendly yeast. And it actually it helps other probiotics to grow. And it protects the probiotics so that Candida doesn’t repel it. It is a yeast itself, but it’s not a pathogenic yeast.

Lindsey:  

Okay, so I’m wondering where people can go to find you.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Very easy, they can search me on the internet. My website is health-truth.com. And I also have another website, which is NewYorkCityCandidaDoctor.com. And probably if they just search my name, and then put the word Candida next to it, they’ll come up with hundreds of hundreds of pages.

Lindsey:  

Okay, great. I’m sure they’ll have no problem. And the products that you mentioned that you created, I am assuming they can find those on your website. 

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Yes, they can. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, great. Anything else that I didn’t ask about that I should have?

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

I think within reason no, I think we have a pretty good, I think as far as for the average public who’s suffering with this condition to become more enlightened and to understand why what they’ve been doing hasn’t worked, I think we’ve hit the main things.

Lindsey:  

Okay, great. Well, I appreciate all this in-depth information that you’ve shared with us. And I’m sure people will be looking for you after this if they’ve been struggling with this this issue.

Dr. Michael Biamonte: 

Very good. Okay, great. It was great to talk to you.

Lindsey:  

Thanks so much.

If you’re suffering with candida or any other gut issue, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me (Lindsey). We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

Schedule a breakthrough session now

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Functional Foods for Metabolic and Microbiome Health

Adapted from episode 63 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

Dr. Chris Damman, M.D. is the chief medical officer and chief scientific officer of UR labs and a clinical assistant professor of gastroenterology and medicine at University of Washington.  He previously led the gut health, microbiome & functional food initiative at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.  His research interests have focused on the role of diet and microbiome-targeted therapies in treating gastrointestinal, metabolic, autoimmune and neurologic disease.  Chris earned his MA from Wesleyan University, MD from Columbia University, and is board certified in gastroenterology.  

Lindsey:  

Welcome Dr. Damman. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Well, it’s a pleasure to be joining you. Great honor. And super happy to be talking with you today.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. Thanks for coming on. So nice coincidence. I actually am a Wesleyan University alum as well. Did you do your undergrad there or just your Master’s?

Chris Damman, MD:  

It was actually both combined. Yeah.

Lindsey:  

Okay, cool. What year did you graduate?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Oh, let’s see, it would have been ‘99 for my Master’s, ‘98 for undergrad. How about yourself?

Lindsey:  

‘91 was my was my undergrad so well, distant. Okay. That’s great place, though, isn’t it?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Oh, I love it. Yeah, it’s a campus that embraces diversity and it has a wonderful science program. I was pretty fortunate to be able to get involved in science pretty early, starting with just washing glassware and working my way up in Hall-Atwater. So yeah, I’m indebted to my mentors there and the wonderful faculty.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, my only relationship with science there was studying in the Science Library. I lived In Clark, which is right across the street from it. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Good, quiet place to go. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah. My interest in science came much later. So anyway, I would love to hear more about your work with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on the gut health, microbiome and functional food initiative. Can you tell me a little bit about that, and the kinds of microbiome-targeted therapies that were developed under your tenure? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, absolutely. So first of all, it was amazing opportunity of five years. I’m indebted to my mentors there as well at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, but also particularly indebted to the folks I was working with in low/middle income countries like Tahmid Ahmed, and Assad Ali at Center for Diarrheal Research in Bangladesh, and Ali Khan University and just really want to highlight the in country perspectives that were so important. But with that said, in collaboration, I think we made some really important strides in malnutrition. And I think historically, we have thought of malnutrition as a condition that’s impacted by foods naturally. And by bad microbes, or bugs or things like ecoli, that cause diarrhea. The new lens that we brought to the field was looking at the microbiome and the gut, in order to provide a new lens for understanding how malnutrition works. And we came to realize just how important the healthy bugs are, as well, and how they were depleted in the intestines of children in low/middle income countries and how the lack of those bugs was also very profoundly contributing to malnutrition. So that was the new lens that allowed us to develop some really powerful new therapies.

Lindsey:  

Cool. So I’m curious about that because when I think about people in lower income countries, the one thing I don’t think about is a depleted microbiome, I think that the lack of sanitation is leading to a lot more bugs or, you know, living closer to nature.

Chris Damman, MD:  

100%. And, you know, as we understood, the impoverished microbiomes, you can kind of think of a visual, like, look at a vibrant coral reef. Imagine that in your mind, and then think of one that has been bleached or devastated. And that’s essentially what’s happening in the guts of folks that have imbalances or dysbiosis, or in this case malnutritition. What we were able to do is use that understanding in order to come up with new ideas for therapies that actually in well designed studies panned out to be impactful. And we’re actually following up on those studies right now. But one of the new approaches was a very special probiotic that we were using in children, actually infants, very young children, and that helped them actually grow better. And then another intervention where…

Lindsey:  

Before you go on, let me ask you what, what strain? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, absolutely. This is a strain of Bifidobacterium, longum infantis. And not all bugs are to be created equal. Not all Bifidobacterium are to be created equal, and this one has machinery within it that helps it digest the fiber that’s present in mom’s milk. 

Lindsey:  

HMOs 

Chris Damman, MD:  

HMOs. You got it. Yep. Human milk oligosaccharides. And these bugs are particularly facile at bringing those HMOs inside and consuming them. A lot of other bugs are kind of messy eaters and a bit like Cookie Monster, they might leave a lot of crumbs around for pathogens to consume. B longum infantis is different. It brings those HMOs inside and keeps it all for itself, and then produces healthy factors that help contribute to the child growing.

Lindsey:  

That’s awesome. Yeah, no, that’s the strain that I have handed off to every person I know who has had a baby, especially if the baby was born via C section.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah, yeah. There’s some great companies that are working on strains just like this and are actually making a big impact in the field. 

Lindsey:  

Now, was there a specific strain, like down to like the number or just any infantis would be good?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, it’s a great question. And it’s one that’s unanswered at this point. I think the way we need to characterize strains is by their functional capacity, which basically means the genes that they carry, for taking in fibers and converting those fibers to things like short chain fatty acids, and B vitamins, and even neurotransmitter precursors. And if we can understand that capacity, then that will help us know whether this B infantis is good. And this B infantis may not be as good for consuming those. 

Lindsey:  

Right. Right. Okay. Is there a particular brand that they sell here in the US that you are a fan off?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, so the, the strain that we were working with in Bangladesh at ICRB was a strain, that company called Evivo* (get $10 off with my affiliate coupon code AN-10-00101), has developed. And that is actually available here in the US. It’s available, direct to consumer online. 

Lindsey:  

Great.

Chris Damman, MD:  

And, yeah. There’s a lot of great research that’s been done now that supports the benefit of this specific strain. So the other major category of intervention that we’re working on with food, but not food with sort of a conventional approach, but food in order to grow the right bugs in our gut, and for those bugs, then to provide factors that help us grow. And this other approach was in collaboration with Jeff Gordon at Washington University. And it was so called Microbiome Directed Complimentary Food or MDCF. So pretty amazing line of research that led us to a very specific combination of locally-sourced foods from Bangladesh, that grew the microbes in positive associated with health and then when validated in a clinical trial did, in fact, improve the growth of the children as well. And this approach is one that we’ve taken for slightly older children, so not breast feeding children or children that are consuming mother’s milk, but rather, children that are starting to consume complementary foods.

Lindsey:  

And were these probiotic strains or prebiotics exclusively in this food?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Great point. So there were no live bacteria, it was purely a prebiotic approach. And it was a whole food approach, and basically combines things like green banana and different types of legumes, garbanzo beans, and it was the full component of those foods. But probably, if one were to distill it down to the essence of what those foods were doing, it may actually be the fibers that are present in those foods that are most specifically growing the healthy bacteria in the gut.

Lindsey:  

And what kind of food did you make out of those?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Excellent. So there are two major categories of food for malnutrition, there’s the so called ready-to-use therapeutic foods and ready-to-use supportive foods. They essentially come in a little foil pouch, and it is sort of the consistency of a peanut butter. It’s given to the child and yeah, so these are the foods that we were developing.

Lindsey:  

Okay and I assume you made it more palatable than the combination of chickpeas and green banana flour I would imagine to be.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Exactly, so I mean, there were some other things added like vegetable oils and a little bit of sugar. And yeah, there was work that went into making it organoleptically favorable, in other words, make it taste good.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. And so when you give it to the child, is that enough to help pull them out of a cycle of diarrhea and malnutrition? Or do you also have to give antibiotics?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Excellent. So antibiotics are part of the standard of care in some cases of malnutrition. And so those were given upfront prior to starting therapy. In fact, most children with malnutrition actually do have active concurrent infections that bring them into the hospital in the first place. And we were exclusively focusing on children that were admitted. But beyond the antibiotics, the prebiotics and the ready-to-use therapeutic foods then help promote the growth of the good bacteria over the bad bacteria and reestablish a healthy community or group of organisms in the gut.

Lindsey:  

Okay, and so would they be receiving the therapeutic food at the same time or after the antibiotics? And do you think that makes a difference? Or, you know, what’s your thought on the combo?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, that’s definitely after the antibiotics because most antibiotics that we have are broad spectrum.

Lindsey:  

Right.

Chris Damman, MD:  

And so, you know, equally contribute to decreasing the good bugs as well as the bad bugs.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. Okay. So when you’re done, then you get started. So is there something that you think that people should be taking while they take antibiotics in a developed world context?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, that’s a great question. And there is quite a bit of debate in the field right now as to whether a probiotic approach in the context of antibiotics is a good thing, or perhaps, maybe best to be avoided. There’s some work that’s come out of Israel in the last few years that suggests that taking a pretty diverse probiotic in relatively high concentrations actually impeded the reestablishment of a healthy gut ecosystem of organisms that are normally present there after antibiotics. And that was a big eye opener to the field. That said, I think the best approach is to basically provide probiotics for the natural bugs that are present in the gut. And that can happen at the same time as taking the antibiotics and beyond. And so that is essentially foods that are high in dietary fiber.

Lindsey:  

And what do you think about butyrate while people are taking antibiotics

Chris Damman, MD:  

As a concomitant therapy, like Tri-butyrate*? 

Lindsey:  

Yeah.

Chris Damman, MD:  

I’m intrigued by the possibility of giving butyrate, which is essentially one of the major end products of the bacteria, one of the major things that they’re contributing to the body and health. One of the tricks with butyrate is it exists in the context of other short chain fatty acids in the healthy state. So that’s propionate and acetate. And a balanced ecosystem is going to provide these short chain fatty acids in a balanced way, and in the right spots, so distal small intestine and colon is generally where they’re produced in the highest concentrations. When one takes Tri-butyrate, that is one of the components and one of the components that is probably most depleted. And so it may be therapeutically advantageous to do it. But I just think it’s important to think of the whole context of what a healthy microbiome is producing. And I think the closer we can get to recreating what happens naturally, we may be that much further ahead in preventing and addressing disease.

Lindsey:  

It’s just that, of course, in my work I come across so many people who are suffering from having taken antibiotics, and their problems started at that point. And so, you know, just sort of thinking back, if you can prevent the problems, maybe it’s giving a good probiotic with the with the antibiotics.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah. And I think the other thing to think about is, if you’re starting with a healthy state, promoting that healthy state is very different from being in that sort of devastated coral reef already, and reestablishing a healthy state. And if you’re caught in the trench of inflammation and imbalance, sometimes you need a little jumpstart. And it may be that things like butyrate actually help that jumpstart, while at the same time, starting to reintroduce healthy, prebiotic foods.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, I’m a big fan of butyrate right now. It’s my current fascination.

Chris Damman, MD:  

I would love to hear more about your fascination.

Lindsey:  

Well, it’s the only thing that kind of helps me just stay solid. So for me, it’s like a miracle drug.

Chris Damman, MD:  

That is so exciting to hear. 

Lindsey:  

Because I have post food poisoning IBS. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Post infectious IBS. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah, post infectious IBS, positive vinculin antibodies. So yeah.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Interesting.

Lindsey:  

It took me a while to figure it all out. But I think I’ve got it under wraps now with the butyrate.

Chris Damman, MD:  

That’s brilliant. And here’s another thing, perhaps you’ve already tried, but consider adding to the armamentarium. There’s some really fascinating research that’s just come out on psyllium.

Lindsey:  

Oh, yeah, I used to take that all the time. It’s just disgusting.

Chris Damman, MD:  

It’s just disgusting. Oh, yeah. It’s like drinking sludge. And you have to actually drink quite a bit of it. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

But what’s fascinating is there’s a paper that just came out of the British Medical Journal that suggests, well, first of all, a large portion of folks that have IBS, it’s actually an intolerance to a certain prebiotic, inulin, or fructans, which is kind of the overarching category. And these are things that are found in onions and garlic, and actually added to a lot of processed foods. And when one follows the low FODMAP diet, it is one of the major things that that’s removed, and a lot of people have benefit. Now, I think we’re in this sort of paradigm, right now in medicine, especially food as medicine, of taking things away in order to achieve a therapeutic effect. I think where we could move and ultimately need to move is how we can add things back that are missing, because that’s how that healthy ecosystem is going to be reestablished. If you take things away, yeah, you might have improvement in your symptoms, but it’s going to further entrench you in low diversity, dysbiotic state. So what this paper shows is, if you combine pysillium with inulin, the symptoms of inulin go away. So it’s a new, perhaps very exciting approach to treating inulin-specific IBS. And it’s actually not that new. There’s plenty of studies that have looked at the impact of psyllium on IBS and shown benefit before; it’s just now there’s this new understanding of how it might be working. 

Lindsey:  

Interesting and how much psyllium was it?

Chris Damman, MD:  

A very good question. I would have to take a look at the study again, but most of the studies I think, have been 10 grams twice a day or something around there.

Lindsey:  

Is that like a tablespoon or more? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah

Lindsey:  

A tablespoon. Okay. Yeah, that sounds about right. Okay. And yeah, I would love to see the paper, if you can send me a link for it. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, absolutely. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, cool. So tell me what you think we now know about the microbiome and its role in the body that we didn’t know 5 or 10 years ago?

Chris Damman, MD:  

That’s very good question. And I would say 10 years ago, we were very much stuck in the correlation phase where every study said, you know, microbiome is connected to the brain or microbiome is connected to inflammation, on and on and on. But it was just connections, just correlation, not causation; not certainly moving in the direction of therapies. I think now in the field, we’re actually starting to move in that direction. And the first shots on goal were big guns like fecal transplants. And now we’re moving in the direction of greater sophistication, and more nuanced, fully defined therapeutic bacterial approaches and companies that are leading the charge here, where, you know, they’re collecting a handful, up to even 100 bacterial species in a completely defined approach. So I think that’s a very exciting step forward.

Lindsey:  

So are the, like I know that there are purified fecal transplants that have been used in some studies and that there was a company working on those. But it sounds like you’re talking more about a probiotic that’s just very diverse.

Chris Damman, MD:  

It’s kind of like a probiotic that’s very diverse. The term that’s used in the field is live bacterial products. And this is regulated very differently from a probiotic by the FDA, much like a drug. And they’re basically, rather than either whole stool or purified stool, these are strains that are grown in the laboratory and then combined. So the problem with whole stool and even processed stool is, you know what’s there, but you don’t know entirely what’s there. And so there’s the possibility of transmitting infections or transmitting bacteria that are associated with long-term, adverse outcomes.

Lindsey:  

Right, right. Yeah. No, I occasionally work with people who want to do a fecal transplant from a relative or that sort of thing. Inevitably, they get them tested. And they have C diff, they’ve got H. Pylori, and they’re perfectly healthy. But I couldn’t recommend that you use that stool.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah, there’s certainly a lot of asymptomatic carriage of these pathogens, and some call them actually pathobionts. Because in some contexts, they’re benign, like asymptomatic carriage, and it’s only in the context of some infection or inflammation that they rear their ugly heads.

Lindsey:  

So a lot of my audience, as you can imagine, is composed of people who have issues like IBS and H. Pylori and Crohn’s and colitis and gastritis, the whole gamut. And many of them have already seen  a gastroenterologist and have not been able to resolve their issues within the traditional medical system. And of course, some of them have been given suggestions on dietary changes, but more often than not, especially like with inflammatory bowel disease, I hear a lot more about pharmaceutical interventions coming from their doctors. So I’m wondering what kind of dietary changes and nutritional interventions are becoming more standard of care in traditional gastroenterology? And then beyond that, what nutritional interventions you’d recommend for various conditions that aren’t within the standard of care?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah. Great question. And right now, there aren’t dietary therapies in the context of controlled disease that are necessarily within the standard of care, if you can believe it. It’s surprising. When one is having a flare, it’s actually recommended that somebody go on a very low fiber, low roughage diet.

Lindsey:  

For IBD in particular?

Chris Damman, MD:  

For inflammatory bowel disease, yeah. Which seems, you know, very counterintuitive. And so that sort of often carries through to dietary recommendations in the context of controlled disease, where maybe low fiber, low roughage diets are preferable. There is actually for ulcerative colitis, specifically (very different from Crohn’s disease because, you know it’s affecting just the colon but not the small intestine, as well a subtype of inflammatory bowel disease), there are a handful of studies that support the benefit therapeutically, not just by association, of increasing fiber in the diet. So I find that intriguing.

Lindsey:  

And any particular kind of fiber, or just from foods?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, so from foods, but also, maybe specifically from psyllium.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Yeah, well, psyllium is, you know, it’s funny, I kind of started there, and it’s like, coming full circle. That was one of the first things I did to try and turn things around for myself. And then, you know, one of the first things I recommended to people when I first started doing my podcast, and it’s like, it’s gross. And this kind of got me off it for a bit.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Completely. Yeah, no, it’s definitely not the most palatable. And there’s actually even choking hazards associated with it. And folks that have difficulty with swallowing because it becomes so thick.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, I would just add it to a smoothie but I’d have to add it at the absolute last moment, and then try and drink it really fast, so it didn’t thicken up.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah, absolutely.

Lindsey:  

It’s also somewhat palatable if you throw it in some orange juice. And again, just chug it really quickly. And then just drink more liquid afterwards.

Chris Damman, MD:  

I need to take some notes here.

Lindsey:  

My husband takes it, I think, at least once a day, once or twice a day with water. Like he’s learned to just drink it with water.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah . . .

Lindsey:  

But not me. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

I will say, there’s other approaches to dietary fiber using different fibers that aren’t as viscous or sludgy. And that are a lot more palatable, and put in the context of a pretty delicious delivery system that are being developed that I think are really exciting. And that might make it more accessible and palatable to people to consume fiber beyond whole foods, which at the end of the day is the best way to go. But what I learned, importantly, at the foundation is it’s not always possible to go that way; it’s quite a luxury to be able to eat whole foods. And these ready-to-use therapeutic or supplemental foods are incredibly valuable for their shelf life. And for their, quite frankly, cost of goods profile. And that’s relevant here in the US as well, for certain segments of the population below the poverty line.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, no for sure. So tell me about those, those other fibers and, and what those look like.

Chris Damman, MD:  

So I would say two of the other fibers that I think are most exciting are one, resistant starch and two, beta glucan. Resistant starch is found in a lot of different foods, but is perhaps in highest concentration in of all things green bananas, but also found in beans, and you know, even potatoes and wheat. The other one is beta glucan. And that is found also in a lot of foods, but specifically in oats. And a company that has been leading the charge on some of these other fibers has brought the two together to achieve synergy. Because they are very specific and the types of bugs that consume them in order to maximize the opportunity for producing downstream short chain fatty acids like butyrate.

Lindsey:  

What bugs consume them?

Chris Damman, MD:  

So it depends on the fiber, it’s actually amazingly targeted. And each of the fibers it’s really only two or three bugs that are the primary consumers and so for resistance starch, it’s Ruminococcus bromii and Bifidobacterium, various subspecies. And for beta glucan, it’s slightly different bugs. But what’s interesting is the secondary consumers, so those primary consumers essentially, in some ways, kind of poop out certain products, and then the secondary consumers will eat those, and they’re the ones that are producing the butyrate and propionate. And those are pretty consistent across individuals. It’s just the primary consumers that are the front men and consuming those fibers that are very specific.

Lindsey:  

And who are the secondary consumers?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Oh, yes. So the secondary consumers, they fall into the class largely have what are called Clostridium cluster IV and XIVa species, so you’ve probably heard of Fecalibacterium praznitzii, Roseburia. Yeah, these are the so called Firmicuties of the gut.

Lindsey:  

Are those Clostridia? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Those are Clostridia.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, okay.

Chris Damman, MD:  

So if you go back to the childhood playgrounds and playing tag with your friends and saying you’re it, you’ve got cuties, you’re actually quite right on, you’ve got Firmicutes.

Lindsey:  

That is the worst microbiome joke I’ve ever heard. Congratulations.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Stick with me, yeah.  It’s one of my hallmarks, I embrace it fully. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

I’ve got three daughters at home. And so the bad dad joke is a hat that I wear proudly.

Lindsey:  

Yeah. My kids don’t want to to talk much about the microbiome. They’re just like “Stop talking about fecal transplants!”

Chris Damman, MD:  

We’ll have to invite you and your family over for dinner some night, and we can definitely indoctrinate them.

Lindsey:  

More like terrorize them. So what dietary changes, would you recommend for the average person who’s eating a standard American diet and just having some mild gut issues?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, well, I mean, it goes without saying, increase fiber in the diet. So the USDA in 2020, came out with their dietary guidelines. And I was shocked to see that only 5% of people meet the dietary guidelines. So around 30 grams, a little bit different for men and women per day. And it’s probably one of the most efficient nutrients in our diet. And now we understand what it’s doing and how important it is, more than just helping you have a good bowel movement, but incredibly important for your mental health and your inflammatory health and quite frankly, your metabolic health. So how you process nutrients and whether or not you gain weight, and what your cholesterol is, and whether you have high blood pressure and how your blood sugars are controlled.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, an old friend just sent me a study about black beans, half a cup of beans, you know, bringing down your blood sugar, and as well as yeah, helping restore your microbiome and the good bugs.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Absolutely. Yeah. So I think fiber is incredibly important. And legumes, beans are under-recognized. Invaluable.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, you just can’t get to your bang for the buck on fiber with anything else. I mean you can eat, you know, four cups of lettuce. Probably only get like five grams of fiber or something (Note – it’s actually only 2!).

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah, no, that’s true. But you know, what’s really interesting is specifically in terms of metabolic disease, if you look at the association with different types of plant-based foods, it’s strongest for grains, and for fruit, but less for other categories. So I think that speaks to how different fibers are important for different aspects of health. And for diabetes, and blood sugar control, it may actually be that the fibers that are taken off of whole wheat when they’re turned into white wheat or brown rice, when it’s turned into white rice, are particularly important for your metabolic health.

Lindsey:  

Now, I know you can get your resistant starches from the diet, and one of the ways is cooked and cooled rice and cooked and cooled potatoes. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yes. 

Lindsey:  

This applies to white rice as well though, doesn’t it? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

100%. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah. Because we have a lot of rice in my family. And then there’s a lot of leftover rice and I reheat it but not you know, extreme. Am I still getting my resistant starch?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yes, resistant starch is definitely increased in cooled foods even after they’re reheated. I will say that rice may not still be the greatest source of resistant starch. You know, potatoes are good and really bananas too. But I don’t think many of us are going to go out and start eating green bananas.

Lindsey:  

Green bananas are not only disgusting, but they also make me feel pretty sick. So tell me why green banana powder doesn’t make you feel sick? Because I’ve never eaten a green banana and not felt disgusting afterwards.

Chris Damman, MD:  

But when you have green banana powder, you feel okay?

Lindsey:  

Well, I can’t say I’ve done a lot of experimentation with green banana powder. I do own some and sometimes add it to recipes.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, yeah. I don’t have a good answer for you. 

Lindsey:  

Maybe it’s quantity. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

It could be quantity, it could be all the other things that are present in green bananas that are not present in the powder. So the powder actually is refined to concentrate for the resistant starch.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Got it. Yeah, yeah. Because I guess an entire green banana may have a lot of resistant starch in it.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, you know, it’s surprisingly, it depends, though, on that specific type of green banana. And really, how it’s been harvested and you know, most of the green bananas that you’d find in the store actually are not a good source of resistant starch. 

Lindsey:  

Oh Okay. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah. Yeah. You know, it has to be harvested and processed in a very specific way in order to maximize the resistant starches present.

Lindsey:  

Yeah, no, I think the stuff I have might be green plantain flour.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Interesting. Yeah, yeah. No, it’s in plantains, bananas. They’re quite related and resistant starch is present in both.

Lindsey:  

Okay. Well so this is a sponsored podcast from Muniq and they have products involving this green banana powder and such. So can you tell me a little bit more about those products and what they’re what they’re good for?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, absolutely. So pretty exciting. And this harkens back to a comment that I made that whole foods are great. And they should be an important part of the diet. But there is a role for processed foods. And I think that as we understand the microbiome better, we can actually make those processed foods healthy. I’m a firm believer in that; that’s what I learned at the foundation. And the value of a processed food is it’s convenient, off the shelf, good cost of goods. And that’s the niche that Muniq is filling. We’ve been messaging for the last 10-20 years or longer of the importance of whole foods. And yet, the population continues to increase in obesity and diabetes. Things haven’t changed. And so I think there’s an incredible opportunity here for meeting people where they’re at, in their busy lifestyles. And that’s exactly what I think Muniq can do. And so this is a shake that incorporates two of the most powerful, prebiotic fibers, and that’s resistant starch and beta glucan. It’s quite delicious. It’s very, very low in sugar, and total digestible carbohydrates, and super high in fiber. So 15 grams per dose or per serving. Yeah, super high.

Lindsey:  

That would get me to my 30 or 40 a day. Because honestly, I’m not hitting it.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, no. So that’s just what I mean, it’s convenient. 

Lindsey:  

Yeah.

Chris Damman, MD:  

We have a number of consumers that take a shake a day. And that is sufficient to get them to that daily requirement of 30 grams, and pretty amazing results in terms of their gut health. And in terms of their metabolic health that we’ve seen, anecdotally. And what we’re doing right now, unlike perhaps a lot of other food companies, is we’re taking that next step in validation, and taking a gold standard approach, you know, above and beyond all of the amazing consumer experience, let’s validate this in the most scientific, rigorous way possible. And that’s through a randomized, placebo-controlled trial that you’d see in Biotech or Pharma. And that trial is actually ongoing and I’m super excited for those results.

Lindsey:  

And what conditions are you studying it with?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Good question. Yeah. So we use these technical terms. So inclusion criteria in medical trials, and in this case, two major inclusion criteria that people that we’re evaluating this in are folks that have diabetes, and folks that are overweight.

Lindsey:  

Type two diabetes. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Type two diabetes, indeed.

Lindsey:  

Okay, so you’re looking at it as a potential weight loss aide, as well as bringing down blood sugar.

Chris Damman, MD:  

100%. And we’re also super keen in this trial to look at other health parameters. And so we are looking at things like gut health and mental health, not in as concentrated a way as we’re focusing on, you know, metabolic health and weight and diabetes. But there will be some information that comes out there for future uses.

Lindsey:  

Is there before and after microbiome sequencing?

Chris Damman, MD:  

100%. So we’re super excited to be working with one of the leaders into the microbiome, and that’s Justin Sonnenberg who will be analyzing the microbiome data.

Lindsey:  

Nice. So are you doing a metagenomic sequencing?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yes. So a lot of the historical studies have been mired in 16 S RNA, which doesn’t get you down to strain level specificity, as we were talking about before, that is so important. And even beyond that, understanding the metabolic capacity of the microbes and metagenomics does just that. And so we’ll be able to know who’s there, and what they have the potential to do as well. And that’s so critical and taking these next steps forward and sort of next generation microbiome work.

Lindsey:  

Awesome. And you know, back when we were talking earlier, you were mentioning these live bacteria prep products. And I’m curious whether any of those have anaerobic strains in them, or are they all aerobic strains?

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, no, actually, it’s mostly anaerobic strains that are present in these live bacterial products. And this makes them particularly tricky to work with, but a number of companies that are leading the charge here and some really exciting proof of principle trials that have reported out in the last year to more define their process of live bacterial products that have been effective for C diff, C difficile, and ongoing trials for inflammatory bowel disease.

Lindsey:  

Nice. Yeah, and I’ve been taking Akkermansia muciniphila.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Nice.

Lindsey:  

For the last few months. Seeing how that works out. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah.

Lindsey:  

Hoping I can eventually get off the butyrate.

Chris Damman, MD:  

That would be nice. Well, you should give Muniq a try.

Lindsey:  

Well, I’m waiting for my shakes. My mouth was watering when I saw that chocolate shake picture, and there was one that was dairy free, and I was so excited. So I’m like, I would like to try that one.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yes, there’s both vegan and non-vegan versions and pretty tasty flavors. My personal favorite is the chocolate. But there’s also the vanilla and mocha.

Lindsey:  

Mocha. Oh, nice. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Got some caffeine in it. So it gives you that little, little coffee type pep in the morning.

Lindsey:  

Okay, well, Where would people go to find these Muniq shakes? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah. So it’s online, direct to individual and through Muniq, spelled muniqlife.com,

Lindsey:  

Muniqlife.com. Anything else you want to say about those shakes? And how they are helping people or I know you can’t claim medical things being addressed but . . .

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, I just think it’s super exciting for all the reasons that we discussed. And I think it’s one of the few companies that’s really leading the charge in the area and it’s a company that’s very interested in impact, and in connecting with the consumer like I’ve never seen before. I mean, this was the reason that I was so at ease joining forces with Mark, who’s the founder, and pretty amazing story too, as to what inspired him to start the company in the first place. And it’s on the website in his own words, a very moving story of his sister who passed away from complications of metabolic disease. And that was kind of this wake up call to use his gift in life for reaching the consumer, and his background, leading a large nutrition company, to create a product that can really make impact. Yeah, and I feel like I worked at the foundation before. And, you know, there, it was all about taking the latest and the greatest technology and applying it to underserved communities. And that’s exactly what we’re doing as well. There’s a huge underserved community of folks with diabetes and obesity. And we’re making a real impact in their lives. 

Lindsey:  

That’s wonderful. What’s his full name? Marc.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Marc Washington.

Lindsey:  

Okay, spelled with a “c” and is Muniq going to be sold in stores at any point?

Chris Damman, MD:  

It’s a great question. Right now, the approach that we’re taking is a direct to consumer approach through the website, but I wouldn’t rule out the possibility of ultimately products being available in the Big Box stores, but not where we are currently. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, great. Well, I’m really excited to hopefully try those soon. And, yeah, it was really interesting talking with you. This was fun.

Chris Damman, MD:  

I had a lot of fun too. And that invitation stands anytime you want to join us at the dinner.

Lindsey:  

You’re in Portland? No. Where are you? 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Washington State, in Seattle.

Lindsey:  

In Seattle okay. I don’t know why I thought Portland. Okay. Well, if we’re up there, I’ll be sure to get in touch. If you’re ever coming through Tucson, look us up.

Chris Damman, MD:  

Okay, look foward. 

Lindsey:  

Okay, thanks so much. 

Chris Damman, MD:  

Yeah, thank you, Lindsey.

If you’re struggling with your gut health, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me (Lindsey). We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

Schedule a breakthrough session now

*Product and test links are affiliate links for which I’ll receive a commission. As an Amazon associate, I receive a commission on purchases made through my links. Thanks for your support of the podcast and blog by using these links.

Understanding and Fixing Diarrhea and Loose Stool

Loose Stool and Diarrhea

Adapted from episode 62 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

When we think about diarrhea, we think that it’s just the intestinal flu, gastroenteritis, or just something we ate or drank that had gone bad. However, it’s not always the case. We will take a look at diarrhea and loose stool and the causes and solutions for common functional digestive problems, the connection between diarrhea, loose stool and IBS, SIBO, Candida, IBD, celiac disease, gluten intolerance, lactose intolerance, and supplements you can take to address some common problems.

What is diarrhea essentially?

Most people end up with diarrhea at least once a year. However, we usually chalk it up to eating or drinking something bad or a bout of intestinal flu or gastroenteritis. So we take some over the counter diarrhea medication and usually it goes away. But that’s not always the end of it. There are two types of diarrhea: short-term, acute type diarrhea and longer-term, chronic type diarrhea with loose stool.

The official definition of diarrhea is a condition of gastrointestinal upset or inflammation in which you have at least 2 – 3 or more than loose or watery bowel movements a day. Acute diarrhea is diarrhea that lasts up to a week, but if it goes on for two to three weeks, it can be considered chronic. In most cases, it’s happening because your body is trying to get rid of infections and toxins, so rather than slowing down your stool, it’s better to drink water and electrolytes and let your body do its job. It will remove the offending bacteria or parasites, but in the process it will rob you of important fluids, which you need to replace or risk dehydration.

If your diarrhea is frequent and lasts more than a couple of days, you should either buy a rehydration solution, make your own homemade one, or better yet, consume lots of liquids like homemade vegetable and fruit juices and smoothies, herbal teas, bone broth or other types of broth, water with lemon or lime and raw honey, or sparkling water with fruit slices.

What are the causes of acute diarrhea?

Acute diarrhea is usually caused by a parasitic protozoa of some sort, such as Cryptosporidium, Giardia or Entamoeba Histolytica or worms like roundworm, whipworm, tapeworm or hookworms. Protozoan infections are either treated with prescription antiparasitics or herbal antiparasitics. Two of my favorites herbal ones are Cell Core Biosciences* Para 1 and Para 2* (you’ll need my patient direct code: I0rdLMOm to purchase).

Diarrhea can also come from viruses such as Norovirus or Rotavirus. Viral diarrhea is usually accompanied by nausea, vomiting and fever as well and stomach cramps. These will typically pass on their own and don’t require any special treatment other than staying hydrated and keeping up with your electrolytes. Another virus that may cause diarrhea is Cytomegalovirus, which can include symptoms such as fatigue, fever, muscle aches and sore throat. There are some good antiviral herbs that you can take to speed up your healing if you have a viral infection. I especially like the Biocidin line of products for this, in particular Biocidin LSF and Olivirex (found in Fullscript*).

Diarrhea can also come from certain types of bacteria, like Salmonella, E. coli, Shigella, Campylobacter and Clostridium difficile. Most bacterial infections come from contaminated food or water and can be treated with antibiotics. Clostridium difficile or C Difficile, in contrast is often caught in hospital settings after heavy antibiotic usage. It exists in many of our healthy gut ecosystems, but when completing and balancing bacteria are decimated by antibiotics, it can become pathogenic. It will typically cause cramping and watery diarrhea many times a day, and can be quite serious. About 15,000 people die of it per year in the US, because it can lead to dehydration, severe intestinal inflammation, an enlarged colon and sepsis. The first and second line treatments are antibiotics, but if those fail, in the US you can now get a fecal microbiota transplant (aka, FMT or a poop transplant) sourced from a healthy donor either in the form of capsules or inserted rectally with a retention enema. With 2-3 treatments over the course of 2-3 days, depending on the modality, there’s a greater than 90% success rate for FMT curing C Diff.

If you have ongoing diarrhea and you’re not sure if it could be a parasite or bacterial infection, you can ask your doctor for an ova and parasites test. If that comes up empty, which is often the case, but you still suspect a parasite or bacterial infection, which is of course a more likely scenario if you live in or have recently traveled to a developing country, a stool test like the GI Map* by Diagnostic Solutions or one of Genova’s stool tests like the GI Effects or the Comprehensive Digestive Stool Analysis or Doctor’s Data’s GI 360 will tell you whether that’s the case. Unfortunately, those tests are not typically covered by insurance.

Some symptoms that may help you differentiate a parasite from another type of problem is having trouble falling asleep or waking frequently during the night; grinding your teeth at night; becoming more symptomatic during the full moon; skin issues like rash, hives, rosacea or eczema; pain or aching in joints and muscles; fatigue; iron-deficiency anemia or not feeling full or satisfied after eating.

Could a food sensitivity be causing my diarrhea or loose stool?

A food sensitivity such as lactose intolerance or gluten intolerance or celiac disease, which is an autoimmune disease in which gluten causes an autoimmune attack on your intestines, could also be at the root of your diarrhea or loose stool. Often it’s hard to determine if this is the case by simply stopping the food for a short period of time and reintroducing it because there may be damage and inflammation that has to be repaired over time to see symptoms fade completely. For example, in celiac disease, the villi lining your small intestine which absorb nutrients may be blunted or worn down, which will impact your ability to absorb nutrients other than gluten, and in particular dairy, which may cloud your ability to determine the root cause. Celiac disease testing is an easy test to ask for from your doctor, however. Other common symptoms of celiac disease include bloating, gas, fatigue, anemia, malnutrition and osteoporosis.

Gluten sensitivity is tougher to test for and is best determined following a negative celiac test with a one-month elimination diet followed by a reintroduction over the course of several days. You can also be tested for lactose intolerance by your doctor, but the easiest way to find out, especially if you’re very gassy or have painful or burning, mushy stool when you drink milk, or to eat soft cheeses or large quantities of cheese in particular, is to purchase a Dairy digestant or lactase enzyme pill and take it when you eat dairy products. If it helps, lactose intolerance is likely, and it’s pretty common for adults to suffer from this problem.

Of course an unhealthy diet lacking in fiber and high in sugar, processed foods, alcohol and caffeine can also lead to loose stool. Because this type of diet creates inflammation, dysregulates your blood sugar and feeds pathogenic bacteria, it can lead to dysbiosis, which can create loose stool. If you suspect your diet may be at the root of your issues, try a whole foods, anti-inflammatory diet, with healthy fats like avocados and olives and their oils, grass fed butter or ghee, coconut oil and products, organic and grass fed meats, whole grains, root vegetables, beans and legumes, and plenty of fruits, vegetables and herbs. I have had clients whose digestive issues cleared up once they fixed their diet and their blood sugar became more balanced. Also, be aware that a diet that is completely lacking in grains or starchy or root vegetables but not a ketogenic diet can also lead to loose stool, so sometimes what seems to be a healthy diet may be a root cause.

Could my diarrhea be from SIBO or IBS?

Longer-term diarrhea or soft stool, especially when accompanied by bloating soon after you eat, is more likely to be caused by SIBO, or Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth. This is often diagnosed by gastroenterologists as IBS or Irritable Bowel Syndrome or IBS-D with the D standing for diarrhea. SIBO can also be at play when you have long-term constipation or a pattern of constipation mixed with diarrhea, which usually is caused by what’s called breakthrough diarrhea, where diarrhea is all that can get by the hard stool blocking your colon. SIBO, ironically, is often the result of food poisoning, which may have triggered the original diarrhea. 

The research of Dr. Marc Pimentel at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center has revealed that some people end up having an autoimmune attack on the cells that move food along the small intestine as a result of molecular mimicry following food poisoning. When your body attacks the invader, it produces antibodies to common bacterial pathogens, which are called anti-CDTB or anti-Cytolethal Distending Toxin B antibodies. Because a protein called vinculin in the gut looks similar to CDTB, your body may also produce antibodies to vinculin, which is an important protein for helping your small intestine motility. The antibodies can stay elevated for many years following an attack of food poisoning. For example, my last bad attack of food poisoning that I recall was 25 years ago during my honeymoon, and I recently had my vinculin antibodies tested and they’re still elevated. This autoimmune attack on the vinculin protein impacts your Migrating Motor Complex, which clears food out of your small intestine every 1.5-2 hours. When your migrating motor complex is impacted, it results in stagnation and bacterial overgrowth.

So in addition to diarrhea or loose stool, you’ll often have bloating, heartburn, nausea, vomiting, and will feel full quickly when eating when SIBO is your root cause. If you recall a bout of food poisoning that may have kicked off your issues, the ibs-smart test can tell you whether you have elevated antibodies. If it’s positive, then you know there’s likely bacteria that needs to be killed in your small intestine, which can be done through an antibiotic called Rifaximin, or through herbal antimicrobials. It’s also good to take ½ tbsp. of partially hydrolyzed guar gum, also known as Sun Fiber (found at Fullscript) in 8 oz. of water with each dose of either Rifaximin or bota antimicrobials, for maximum success. SIBO breath testing may be recommended through a gastroenterologist, naturopath or functional medicine practitioner, but I tend to shy away from that as it’s not a terribly useful or reliable tool compared to other stool tests, in my opinion. 

Symptoms and history go a lot further in my opinion to figuring out whether bloating and loose stool could be from SIBO. Food poisoning isn’t the only root cause, however, of diarrhea or loose stool caused by SIBO. Many other conditions can slow or inhibit small intestine motility, including traumatic brain injuries, hypothyroidism, diabetes, mold toxicity, adhesions following abdominal surgery, endometriosis, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and dysfunction of the ileocecal valve, the valve that separates the small and large intestines. Medications like proton pump inhibitors, opiates, narcotics, antispasmodics, tricyclic antidepressants, and cholestyramine can also be at the root of SIBO. And of course many functional digestive disorders relating to your basic digestive organs can also impact your body’s ability to kill entering bacteria or adequately digest food so that there’s not too much left over for bacteria to reproduce on, such as hypochlorhydria or low stomach acid, low pancreatic enzymes, poor bile flow, low brush border enzymes, or low secretory IgA, which is often the result of finding yourself in chronic fight or flight mode due to stress. I’ve also noticed in clients with H. Pylori, the bacteria that can cause ulcers and stomach cancer if it has certain what’s called virulence factors, that after a while their secretory IgA will go low, and then you see a good amount of dysbiosis and overgrowth of opportunistic bacteria like Streptococcus or Klebsiella, which then cause loose stool.

The long and short of it is, if you determine that SIBO is likely your root cause, you will probably want to do something to kill the overgrown bacteria. While you’re working on that, you may want to use a diet called low FODMAPs (that’s FODMAPS) for symptom relief, although I’m less set on recommending that these days since it’s so impractical, as it eliminates onions and garlic, which can be so limiting given our food culture.

In addition, if you determine that your SIBO is from elevated vinculin antibodies, then you’ll need to think about taking something called a prokinetic before bed, most likely in the long-term if not for life, which is something that keeps your small intestines moving. Two over-the-counter prokinetics that I’ve tried and have worked well for me are Iberogast* and GI Motility Complex by Enzyme Science (found at Fullscript*). Other options include MotilPro by Pure Encapsulations, SIBO-MCC by Priority One and Motility Activator by Integrative Therapeutics (find all at Fullscript*). Common ingredients for these types of formulations include ginger and artichoke extracts, various herbs and 5-HTP, or 5-hydroxytryptophan, which is a precursor to serotonin, which is involved in blood flow and motility in your gut. There are also prescription options but to access those you’d need a SIBO-literate doctor (and some do exist) and if you have one of those, they can help you out with those. Just one final note about prokinetics – if you’re used to using something to slow your motility in your colon, the idea of taking something to increase motility may be counterintuitive. But the thing is, prokinetics are meant to work on the small intestine to prevent stagnation upstream, which is causing symptoms downstream. So don’t let that scare you off.

Can Candida cause diarrhea?

So another potential source of diarrhea is Candida overgrowth in the intestines, also known as SIFO, or Small Intestine Fungal Overgrowth. This often follows the use of heavy antibiotics in a clinical setting, but can also happen to immune-suppressed individuals or people eating high-sugar or high-simple carbohydrate diets who take broad-spectrum or many courses of antibiotics. Various species of candida, which are yeasts, are normal residents of our gut but can overgrow when all of the competing bacteria are decimated. Diarrhea or soft stool accompanied by sugar cravings, bloating, gas, burping, abdominal pain, nausea, yeast infections in women and urinary tract infections can point to SIFO as a possible root cause. The only sure way to know if you have invasive candidiasis is to take an Organic Acids Test and see if a marker called Arabinose is elevated. If that is the case, it is often accompanied by SIBO, and there are herbal antimicrobials that will take care of both. If it’s just candida, there are more candida specific natural treatments using fatty acids like undecenoic acid, caprylic acid, horopito (sold as Kolorex) or black cumin seed oil, although I usually recommend those in conjunction with botanical antifungals. There are also various candida diets out there but people I really respect in the functional medicine field contend that going to extremes isn’t necessary, and just the basics of removing added sugars and simple carbs while going through treatment is necessary. I tend to agree because it can take several rounds (with a round lasting 6-8 weeks) of antifungals to get candida in check, and it can be pretty tough to stick with even the simplest changes over the long term, not to mention a really extreme diet.

Could My Diarrhea be Inflammatory Bowel Disease?

One of the remaining most common causes of chronic diarrhea is inflammatory bowel disease, or IBD, which can be broken into colitis, of which there are various forms, including ulcerative colitis and microscopic colitis and Crohn’s Disease. This is especially likely if you see blood in your stool, have unintended weight loss, abdominal pain and cramping, a reduced appetite or fatigue. Usually they are diagnosed using a colonoscopy or endoscopy, but there are also markers from stool that are indicative of IBD, which are lactoferrin and calprotectin. Calprotectin is on the GI Map*, which I often use with clients. Either are good markers for differentiating IBD from IBS or SIBO, although keep in mind that many people present with both at the same time. I’ve got other podcasts that go into much more detail on IBD, so if you want more info on that, check out episodes 15, 35 and 54 in particular.  

What other issues can cause diarrhea or loose stool?

There are of course other potential causes of diarrhea or loose stool, such as liver and gallbladder issues, which can be supported through digestive enzymes and Ox bile supplements, or liver detoxification supplements like NAC. Hyperthyroidism is another potential cause, which would be suspect if you have a rapid or irregular heartbeat, nervousness, anxiety or irritability, or unintentional weight loss. And then certain medications and supplements can cause loose stool. In terms of supplements, the most common that will loosen your stool are large doses of vitamin C or certain forms of magnesium like mag oxide or mag citrate. For prescription medications, you can check the inserts or online for side effects.

What natural supplements can help with diarrhea or soft stool?

No matter what the cause of your diarrhea or soft  stool, one supplement that I’m currently enamored with to help solve this problem is butyrate. Older forms are called sodium or magnesium butyrate, and tend to be really smelly and not as effective. Never forms including tributyrin and pro butyrate don’t have the issue with smell and are released further on in the intestines, which helps slow motility in the large intestine, resulting in firmer stool. I have a few forms I recommend, including Pro Butyrate (which is capsules) or AuRx (which is powder) (find at Fullscript*) or Tributyrin-X*. When you first start these you sometimes have to take a bunch (like 3 two or three times a day of the Tributyrin-X or a couple scoops of AuRx 2-3 times a day or 3 or 4 Pro Butyrate 2-3 times/day) to get your stool to firm up. After that you usually can start tapering down to a good maintenance dose.

Now of course I would be remiss not to mention that butyrate is produced by bacteria when they ferment fiber, so of course eating a higher fiber diet (meaning more beans, legumes, whole grains, root vegetables, and other fruits and veggies) could produce the same effect. Fiber supplements are also an option. Psyllium husk fiber is an old favorite for me although it’s just kind of gross to take, no matter how you mix it in. But 1 tbsp. 2x/day in 8 oz. of water or juice will very likely bulk and firm up your stool and will certainly be less expensive than butyrate.

Will probiotics help with diarrhea?

If dysbiosis is at the root of your loose stool, probiotics may be helpful, either from your food or in supplement format. Generally, if you’re looking to try a probiotic consisting of lactobacilli or bifidobacteria, you should look at something in the 50 billion CFU range and up to correct minor dysbiosis. Visbiome* has been validated in the research for this in particular, and can be purchased in super high dose packets of 450 billion CFU or in lower dose capsules. Spore-based or soil based strains from the Bacillus family are also known for their ability to help reshape a dysbiotic microbiome. S. Boulardii, a beneficial yeast sold as a probiotic, is particularly known for its ability to help prevent traveler’s diarrhea. And or course eating fermented foods like sauerkraut, kim chee, yogurt, kefir and kombucha can help bring a dysbiotic microbiome into balance over time, as well as help stabilize your immune system, provide vitamins, regulate your metabolism, decrease obesity and chances of inflammatory diseases such as IBD.

So obviously if you’re suffering from long standing diarrhea or soft stool and don’t know why, that’s the kind of thing I specialize in. If you’re struggling with your gut health, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me (Lindsey). We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

Schedule a breakthrough session now

*Product and test links are affiliate links for which I’ll receive a commission. As an Amazon associate, I receive a commission on purchases made through my links. Thanks for your support of the podcast and blog by using these links.

The Link Between Oral Health & Gut Health, Explained!

by Jay R. Lopez, DDS, PC

Brushing, flossing, and visiting your dentist every six months are all essential components of keeping your smile happy and healthy. But did you know that your oral health can also affect your gut health? As a Tucson dentist with more than 20 years of experience, I’m here to shed light on the correlation between the two and what you can do to improve your dental health.

How Does Oral Health Impact Gut Health?

At first, it may not seem like there is much of a link between oral health and gut health. Upon closer inspection, however, the relationship between the two is evident. To start, your mouth and your gut are directly connected, so any bad bacteria in one can easily affect the other. Inflammation-causing bacteria, like P. gingivalis or Fusobacterium nucleatum, in your mouth can travel throughout your body via the bloodstream and saliva into your digestive system, weakening your stomach’s ability to fight off infection in the process. In response, your body sends infection-fighting cells to the area. In the long-term, this can damage the stomach and leave the rest of your body vulnerable to disease and inflammation. In short, if you neglect to care for your teeth and gums, you’re at a higher risk of other health issues, like IBD.

The link between oral health and gut health is a two-way street. Imbalances in your gut’s microbiome (a collective term for all of the microscopic organisms in a particular environment) can adversely affect oral health, contributing to things like tooth decay and gum disease. Other gut issues, like GERD, can also have bad consequences for the teeth (GERD can create make the mouth overly acidic, which can cause premature wear and tear to the tooth enamel).

5 Tips for Caring For Your Teeth and Gums at Home

The good news is that many dental health problems, from cavities to gum disease, are largely preventable with the right best practices in place. With this in mind, here are a few to implement:

  • Brush your teeth twice a day – Use a soft-bristled toothbrush and toothpaste with fluoride for two minutes at a time to remove food particles, bacteria, and debris.
  • Floss daily – Brushing alone only cleans about 60% of the surface of your teeth. That’s why flossing is so important!
  • Eat a vitamin-rich diet – A nutrient-dense diet will help keep your teeth strong from the inside-out. Plus, well-balanced meals will promote a healthier microbiome in your mouth and therefore your gut.
  • Drink plenty of water throughout the day – The list of water’s benefits is long, which is why you should be sure to have enough of it. Drinking water can rinse away food particles and bacteria and keep you hydrated. In addition, water neutralizes the acids bacteria create, lessening the impact on the mouth and gut.
  • Quit unhealthy dental habits – Smoking and chewing on ice are just a few unhealthy dental habits that can take a serious toll on the look and function of your smile. So, opt for alternatives, like chewing on sugar-free gum!

Why Your Biannual Checkups & Cleanings Are Crucial

Unfortunately, many patients have adopted the belief that six-month dental checkups and cleanings are optional. In reality, they are essential for both your oral health and overall well-being. During your dental checkup, your dentist in Tucson will check for dental problems, like gum disease, while simultaneously screening for non-dental issues, like oral cancer.

Since the symptoms of each can easily fly under the radar with an untrained eye, these visits have the potential to be lifesaving. The cleaning portion, on the other hand, is designed to remove stubborn plaque, eliminate surface stains, and clean the hard-to-reach areas of your mouth, which in the process helps promote a healthier gut.

So, if your next checkup and cleaning isn’t on your calendar yet, now is the time to schedule it!

If you’re struggling with your gut health, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with Lindsey. We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

Schedule a breakthrough session now

Restoring Your Gut Health, One Breath at a Time

Adapted from episode 61 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

Niraj Naik left his service as a community pharmacist when he was diagnosed with a severe case of Ulcerative Colitis. Rejecting his choices of a colectomy or untested pharmaceutical drugs, he started his own route of healing using diet, breathwork practices and natural supplementation, including bovine colostrum powder*. It was not a quick journey, but after about 2 years, he was completely symptom free. He has since founded a school of breathwork practices called Soma Breath*. He also created a step-by-step treatment plan for fixing and even reversing leaky gut and other digestive issues.

Lindsey: 

So tell us about your gut healing journey.

Niraj Naik:

Sure, I’ll try and put it as concisely as possible because there’s so many different twists and turns of the whole thing. Well, I actually started off as a community pharmacist years ago, in the UK, where I actually worked for seven years in this profession. And it’s actually where I really got an insight into the healthcare profession and how it is and how it operates. And it just wasn’t aligned to who I am, my values and I could feel it. I can freely feel that disturbance inside, that spiritual disturbance. And in the end, it actually took its toll on me. Because I tried very hard to get out of that career and into something more empowering.

I actually had a bit of burnout and went to a Tony Robbins event. And it was through that where I first discovered anyone talking about diet and nutrition and sleep and lifestyle things for health. And I was going to test this out in the pharmacy, right, because if this stuff works and they try it out, and the simple thing that I started to do was just to change people’s diets from a factory based diet, which most people are on, to a natural whole food diet. And I just got amazing results just doing that.

So I started to get actually even doctors calling me up and things like that, and telling me “this is amazing, keep going.” But then one thing led to another. I ended up actually getting promoted to the head office of one of the biggest corporations in the UK, where I was going to come up with this healthy shopping this service that would help a lot of people. In the end, for some reason, they decided to stop the idea and six months into it I was facing having to go back to this career as a pharmacist. It’s literally like working in a cubicle dishing out pills all day long. And it was so disheartening, disillusioned. I was so disillusioned, I’d lost my faith in spirit, everything and boom, that’s when I got a hit with an autoimmune disease myself.

I went from being the pharmacist to being the patient. And I ended up being housebound for almost a year. I was literally going to toilet 40 times a day, bleeding. I remember one time, the doctor said, “You’re going to have to wear a nappy”, because you get some social anxiety about soiling your pants when you’re out. And it’s horrible, horrible. And then I lost like a third of my body weight and it got so bad that the consultant and in the end, who actually initially told me that diet doesn’t make an impact, stress doesn’t make an impact, just basically said shut up and take the pills or have your colon removed. She then said you could be a guinea pig on a drug that hasn’t even been tested before, as a last resort. So she really was encouraging me to sign up for this and this is when I had my big kind of dark night of the soul moment.

And luckily, a dear friend of our family came to the rescue. And she basically said “Look, you’ve got a gift here. If you can change your perception of this and see it as a gift, you could actually really help a lot of people. And you know, first thing is to get better yourself without taking all this stuff.” So, I learned the basics of yoga, pranayama, which is the breathing system from India and then basically the Ayurvedic approach of fixing your health, and then finding the right diet based on you, really focusing on the mantra of know thyself, really understanding who you truly are, and then also understanding the kind of career that you should be going for as well.

And through that I realized that I’m the wrong personality for a profession that’s very left brained and analytical. I’m very creative. And I ended up going back into my passion for music. I decided to combine music with these ancient practices I was learning and started to get really, really compelling results using breathing techniques combined with this special brainwave music. And I started to compose again and that was really healing itself and cathartic. 

But also through the Ayurvedic system, I discovered that most of disease begins in the gut. So you’ll get these symptoms. If you ignore them, that’s your gut instinct telling you there’s something wrong. You’ll get irritable bowel, you’ll get constipation, you’ll get bouts of constant diarrhea, usually when you’re in the wrong place, and you know it, but you’re not listening to it. And you know, when you suppress it, you shut off those symptoms, those feelings in different ways. Eventually it’s too late, boom, that’s when you get autoimmune disease. And it’s often emotions that are unresolved, where you’re not listening to your whole body intelligence that manifests as an illness, that kind of is like a cop out of the system that you’re in to tell you, “Wake up and do something else. Follow your soul instinct.”

Lindsey: 

So let me let me stop you for just a sec. And just make it clear. So your diagnosis was ulcerative colitis, right?

Niraj Naik:

Yes, that’s what I had.

Lindsey: 

And did you know right away when things started happening, that that was a likely scenario given your profession? Or did it take a while to get to the diagnosis?

Niraj Naik:

So be honest, first, the doctor said it’s hemorrhoids. Then I went three times, the doctor kept saying its pyles, so I just ignored it. I thought, “Okay, I’ve just been sitting around for too long.” In the end, it got really bad, the symptoms, I knew this was something else. And I started looking on the internet, and it is like, it’s cancer, it’s this, it’s that, you start freaking out. What could it be? Eventually, you have to wait a long time in the UK to get an appointment. And so eventually I got an appointment. This was after six months of suffering. They did an actual endoscopy and showed that I had ulcers in the colon. She said, “You’ve got ulcerative colitis”, and I had a moderate case of it, which then started to get more severe over time. And so that’s when it was confirmed. Before that I had no idea what it could be. It could be one of those things like colitis, it could be a bacterial infection or something. It could be cancer. That was worse, that was the thing playing on my mind the most was it could be actual cancer.

Lindsey: 

Oh, yeah. No, I when get something, I go straight to cancer. And I work my way back.

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, exactly. And it usually isn’t that.

Lindsey: 

Yeah.

Niraj Naik:

So yeah. So that was crazy. Because I if I knew about this, what it was early on, I knew how to fix it. I wouldn’t have gone anywhere near down the pain that I did you know, the anguish that I did, and you get suicidal when you’re going to the toilet that many times a day and you can’t go out. I remember going on a date once when I finally plucked up the courage, and I actually ended up soiling my pants during that. And I had to leave early. Luckily they understood. So you know, stuff like that you have to deal with this. Horrible, horrible.

So yeah, that was my big wake up call to get out of that career as well and follow my real heart. And I was lucky because I managed to combine my passion for music with healing. You know, when I was in the music industry, it’s a really brutal industry. It’s very, very challenging. It’s a bad culture. There’s a lot of sharks involved. And I knew that that wasn’t me either. But I kept trying to make something out of it. But it was when I actually finally woke up to the power of music for healing. That’s when I realized actually that there’s a whole new world out there where I could actually combine it and make it into a practice for wellness.

Lindsey: 

You mentioned brainwave music. Tell me a little about that.

Niraj Naik:

So you see most people spend their day in a high alert state, a Beta brainwave state. And this Beta brainwave state is associated with active thought, but it can also be associated with stress. And if you don’t have enough of the lower brainwave states, like the Alpha, Theta and Delta, which is sleep, what will happen is that you will end up getting chronic stress because you need those lower brain muscles, which are associated with relaxation, to better heal and rejuvenate. Now, the reason why we say in these high alert brainwave states is because, it could be because we take a lot of stimulants, it could be that we’re doing a job that’s very stressful. It could be that our mind is constantly active, and we’re constantly mulling over thoughts over and over and over again. And when you switch that off, and you you calm down the monkey mind, the part of the brain that worries about the future, the past, it’s the ego part of the mind. It gets caught up in thinking thinking thinking. When you can calm that down and music is a very amazing way of doing that, especially brainwave music that has special frequencies that can help train your brain to those lower brainwave states. And also breath. When you breathe in a certain pattern. It also takes you out of this Beta awakened state into more relaxing healing states.

So I started to experiment with this music. I found it all on YouTube first and then started to compose my own and started to create my own guided meditations with it. And I then eventually created my own library of meditation, brainwave tracks myself, that I could compose. And I noticed as well that a lot of the music that was out there was kind of a bit dated, sounded like it had been made in the 70s with panpipes, you know. So I was like, right, let’s revamp all of this. And, and this would make it more accessible as well to more of a younger, more mainstream audience. So, that’s why I started to do and it really took off, I ended up making the soundtracks for like, people Anil Sapere(?), who’s a hypnotherapist. He’s quite well known, and then healing centers around the world. Now it’s used by like top spa brands, like Rituals. And actually, there’s a place called Six Senses where I’m facilitating tomorrow; they’re going to be using it. There’s all these different locations around the world which use this therapeutic music I developed, which is amazing.

But it started after my own view first, that was the inspiration and then combining breathing with it. So that’s actually what got me also connected to Wim Hof, who’s a famous guy. I produced all the soundtracks to the Wim Hof Method. He’s known for the breath work and ice baths techniques; he’s an amazing inspiration. So I did all that. That got me to really understand the power of the breathing and music combined even further. And then eventually, I developed a protocol of my own, which is to teach people for healing their own guts and optimizing their health.

And then I also developed techniques for getting into altered states where you can have this deeper spiritual experience like using higher yogic ritual practices, which are very powerful. When you do it with an instructor in a nice safe space, you can go really deep and have real powerful awakening experiences, really heightened states of inspiration. And this is where you activate the Gamma brainwave state, the Gamma is the frequency which is associated with heightened inspiration. And it’s like what meditators are trying to strive to achieve in long meditation sessions, but with the breath combined with music, with special music, you can activate these states actually pretty quickly. We’ve actually had studies done showing this and this has actually sparked the interest of Cambridge University, who are now doing a trial with our sessions. So these are really cool breakthroughs that are coming.

But when it comes to healing the gut, there’s a combination of that. And there’s a special breathing technique in pranayama, called kumbhaka, breath retention. When you hold your breath beyond a certain point, which you can create through fast breathing followed by fast rhythmic breathing, followed by breath retentions, you activate a state called intermittent hypoxia. Intermittent hypoxia lowers your oxygen levels for a short period in your blood. And this creates an adaptive change where your body adapts to a low oxygen environment, producing more red blood cells. You get better blood flow around the body, and you actually wake up blood flow to your heart, your brain. It’s like an awakening, a physiological awakening happens. And you actually strengthen your entire nervous system and physiology over time when you practice it as part of a protocol.

They actually do this with machines, called intimate hypoxic therapy, which simulates high altitude training, when people go up to mountains and go into low oxygen environments and they come back down. They get these benefits with their health and they’re trying to figure out why this is because they get the state of internet hypoxia, lower than normal oxygen, and your body adapts. And what it does is it naturally brings your breathing rate down, it slows it down. And it raises your ability to handle carbon dioxide. Higher amounts of carbon dioxide is what tells your brain to breathe again. And when you actually can increase your carbon dioxide tolerance and slow your breathing rate down, you actually will find you can hold your breath for longer periods of time and your breath rate slows down and there’s a strong correlation between breathing rates. The slower and calmer and more rhythmical your breathing is and the longer your breath retention times are, the better you are at getting oxygen to where it actually needs to go. Not being stuck to your red blood cells but getting them off the blood cells, the oxygen into your body tissue cells. That’s where healing happens.

Lindsey: 

So I imagine then if you are getting an increase in red blood cells and oxygen going where it needs to go, you probably feel a lot more energy.

Niraj Naik:

More energy, you get better blood flow to the gut, remember your intestines as well are filled with blood vessels. But when you’re stressed, these blood vessels shrink. Oxygen as well, you overbreathe, right? When you over breathe, you get in too much oxygen, you take out too much carbon dioxide. You need the right balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide to get blood flow where the oxygen goes from your blood cells to the cells. And if you don’t have enough carbon dioxide, you have too much oxygen, your blood vessels narrow; it causes constriction and hypertension; it actually increase your blood pressure. What happens is when you’re stressed, and if you’re not listening to your gut, the blood flow to that area, it really diminishes. And you will then get disease happening in those areas, they cells start to, to degenerate basically.

And also what happens is you get tension in that area, you feel that pain in your gut. And if you get diminished blood flow, it messes up your gut flora as well, your microbiome goes out sink out of whack. So just by learning to slow your breathing down, to use techniques like kumbhaka, breath retention, you can actually dramatically improve blood flow back to the gut. And what happens as well, you actually wake up the natural intelligence of your gut, and you can actually start to resolve emotions. They get trapped there like anger, frustration, causes your gut to kind of get paralyzed, and you lose that energy like in the Ayurvedic system. Your gut is your driver, it’s your force, your lifeforce, it’s what drives you, produces energy. It makes sense, because that’s where you digest your food from, produce energy from digesting food.

So if you don’t listen to your gut instinct, eventually you’ll paralyze, and you will not move and you’ll become apathetic, you’ll become depressed, you would be able to get out of bed You’ll have no drive for life, your gut essentially stops you from doing things. But when you follow your gut instinct, you get courage, you become really able to take on the stresses of life without fear. So with me, because I’d stopped listening to my gut, and I had, I lost my courage to leave my job. And I became apathetic, turned into a robot, and I was just repeating the same cycles and patterns. When I started to tune back in, it’s my gut instinct. And when I went into the healing journey, I had this unstoppable energy and drive to succeed in doing what I really want to do. And through that came a real passion.

And our truth really is for everybody, I think, the true will, not the conditioned, the conditioned will is what society tells us to do, the true will is we want to be healthy, we want to be happy, when you surround ourselves with people who make us feel healthy and happy. We want that to rub off. And we want to be around community that we trust and makes us feel safe. And we want to give that back to others. And we want to create a world that’s harmonious. But society has made us polarized and split us apart from each other. And my job, what I’m trying to do is bring back the community.

One of the most amazing, actual things that happened to me when I was going through my healing journey, because Tony Robbins always says is study success, model success. And what I was doing at the time, which is really bad, was I was going on all the forums, and reading all the horror stories. And reading all the horror stories made me feel even more lonely and scared. And then everyone in my environment’s telling me you’re not going to get cured unless you take the pills. And I felt even more trapped. What I did was I actually started to look at people who had healed themselves. And then I started to find communities of people that are like mine through Facebook. Thank God for their community, that you can prey off Facebook. And then that in itself was part of the healing process, finding people to connect with and sharing my truth with people, and how I feel, and people listening and acknowledging. That was a huge part of it. So what I’ve done with Soma Breath* is we’ve created this amazing, thriving community of 1000 plus instructors now and the world is growing really fast, and everyone feels safe and everyone has a place to share and connect. And we have instructors who become like community leaders, bringing together people who are like-minded and building that cool sense of friendship and trust, which was what we were really desperately need.

Lindsey: 

Right. So is that is that all online? Or is that in person as well?

Niraj Naik:

Well, that’s the cool thing, because we have instructors around the world who are real people in real life, they build their communities around them, wherever they are, you know, whether it’s in a yoga studio or a community center or fitness center or gym, wherever they can do sessions, they tend to bring together people. In Copenhagen there’s an amazing community there. And I’m now I’m in Ibiza. So yeah, it’s like in person and online. Online, we have a really thriving Facebook community as well.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so backing up a little bit about your healing journey, did you try various diets and what ultimately helped you the most diet-wise?

Niraj Naik:

Okay, so what I said about in Ayurveda is know thyself, and with know thyself, what that means is really understanding who you are, and we’re all individual. So, in the Ayurveda system, we are all composed of different energy types. So Vata, Pitta, Kapha. Vata is air, Pitta’s fire, Kapha is Earth. For me, the Ayurveda system is the most powerful and wise system that has developed. And it focuses on this whole mantra of there’s no one size fits all. So what works for one person may not work for another and but you can get somewhat of a guide of a lifestyle to follow based on your energy type, which you can figure out through simple profiling of two questions that you ask about how you think, your likes, interests, and also down to your how you look, you appear, there’s a bunch of different questions you’re asked, and you find out your energy. So through that you can determine who you are.

Now, at the time, I was very sick, I had not really got into Ayurveda or known much about it. And I got caught up in this whole raw vegan diet movement thing. And I thought that was a cure to everything. So I went down this hole, even actually, believe it or not, I was on that kind of vegan raw diet prior to getting sick. And the last the first few months leading up to being sick, I was on that raw diet. And then I got sick. I don’t know, maybe it had something to do with that. But everything was just going through me; the food just goes through, boom, you’re going to toilet so many times. And then I tried a fruit only diet, tried all of that. That was even worse, the gas beyond belief; it was horrible. It was so painful, cramping, like it’s the worst thing ever, especially things like lettuce and salads were just a nightmare for me. And I thought all this time this was good. This is meant to be doing good.

Then when I read the Ayurveda system, I discovered that actually, the completely raw diet is terrible for Vata types. Vata-Pitta disorders is what causes ulcerative colitis. And I’m a Vata-Pitta mix. And it’s the worst thing to go on a raw, cold food diet. So what I had to do was actually go for grounding, nourishing warming foods. And also it says the meat is okay for people who have a Vata disturbance, which is what I had, I had a Vata imbalance. So I started to use bone broth, because the people who had healed themselves, they went on paleo diets, they went completely on paleo diets, or they went on to complete beef diets and things like that. And I was like, this goes totally against the whole Hindu culture and my parents would go crazy, you know, but I thought I have to do this for my own health. I had no no other choice.  

And that’s when I also discovered colostrum* . Colostrum is the first milk that comes from a cow, it’s a  bovine colostrum. We actually all consume colostrum. The first thing we consume as a baby, when we’re born, is the mother’s colostrum. And it gives you your immune system, it actually heals your gut, allows your gut to actually digest adult food. Without it babies, children suffer in childhood, they get allergies and all these health issues. And look, there’s a huge movement of mothers moving off natural breastfeeding onto powdered milks and all sorts of other nonsense. And kids are suffering as a result. It’s obvious, I’ve seen the link myself.

Lindsey: 

I thought we were moving in the opposite direction, back to breastmilk.

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, we need to be moving back to that. So colostrum, super essential. And then what I realized was that actually, we don’t have to go and find pregnant mothers. Cows produce 1000 times more potent colostrum in humans, the same translation to humans. But also, thankfully to nature, and this is why cows are worshipped in India and considered holy, is they produce four times the amount of the colostrum the calf needs. So it’s actually the excess of the excess because they also use colostrum in the banks for calves where maybe the cow didn’t produce enough. So they’ll give excess to the calf to make sure the calf always has enough, but the excess of the excess is given to humans for human consumption, because of its powerful healing benefits.

So I discovered that and you get it in a powdered form, you have to get certain type, it has to be whole fat, full, whole colostrum, none of the fat removed. Otherwise, it loses a lot of its power. And so I started using that. And I literally went on a colostrum fast for like a week and just had some bone broth with it. And the healing benefits were just so fast – nine day fast. So that and a combination of the lifestyle changes and the breathing techniques and changing to a paleo diet is what got me back into full health within a few months. Then I started to teach other people that and I’ve now had hundreds and hundreds, if not thousands plus success stories over the years. People with things like ulcerative colitis, leaky gut issues, Crohn’s. Any autoimmune issue usually resides quite often from spiritual disturbance and also issues with digestion, which is often a result of spiritual disturbance in the first place, not listening to the gut instinct. So I help people rehabilitate that, get back onto the right path, follow their life passion. And we train instructors on delivering these techniques through our Soma Breath Community.

Lindsey: 

Great. So tell me a little bit more about the colostrum because I have tended towards recommending something like MegaIgG (from Microbiome Labs* or buy from my Fullscript Dispensary*) , which is just the IgG. The immunoglobulins coming out of colostrum because of people being lactose intolerant. So I’m just curious, how do how do people react to a full colostrum who are lactose intolerant?

Niraj Naik:

So colostrum doesn’t really contain enough lactose in it to cause any of the symptoms. It’s not even the lactose in the form that you find in milk, it’s very different. Because children actually, before they consume colostrum, cannot really digest, babies can’t digest lactose. So the colostrum actually helps them. It seals, it helps the lining of the gut form properly, so that they can actually digest mother’s milk, right, which contains lactose in it. And same thing with a calf. The calf won’t be able to drink the full milk, they need the colostrum first, that helps the digestive process to be able to consume larger particles like lactose. Now, quite often, lactose intolerance is a result of the fact that maybe they didn’t get enough colostrum as a child or, or over the years they’ve done abuse to their bodies, to their guts through processed foods. And prescription meds is one of the big culprits, and stress in general is a culprit for rupturing that, and then we lose this lactose digestive ability. What I found is that when you seal the gut, and you fix it with colostrum, people are now able to digest things like gluten, and lactose again, although I still recommend, don’t have dairy milk because it can be contaminated with so much other stuff. They can start eating things like bread in small doses again, which is a lifesaver for a lot of people. They love bread, and can’t do without, but I always say, go on a colostrum fast, do our protocol and see how you go and then slowly, slowly, once you’re confident, bring in little bits of the things you really love. And you’ll be okay.

Lindsey: 

Yeah, yeah, no, I find too that now that I’ve mostly healed my gut I can eat gluten every now and then. But it’s not going to be an everyday thing. Never.

Niraj Naik:

A staple. Yeah, an IgG, that, what you’re talking about, is one of the active ingredients. But what I love about colostrum is that it’s very broad spectrum. It has so many other things. That’s why I don’t like to meddle with nature too much because it has everything symbiotically working together in harmony. So you have the immunoglobulins, you have cofactors, you have all the vitamins and minerals that you need, you have all the whole fats that aids the absorption, so that’s why I really I just stick with Mother Nature.  Mother Nature’s the most intelligent thing that is, that exists. So let’s trust in nature’s intelligence.

Lindsey: 

Yeah. Transfer factors. Is that in there?

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, everything’s in colostrum, because all of these things come from, they actually use bovine colostrum medicinally actually, in drug development, where they’ll create immunoglobulins from concentration then from colostrum. And they can also make it targets. This is actually a new field. They’re using colostrum to create targets for specific diseases but the thing is, colostrum itself is quite potent, and maybe the drugs will help one day. And there are people who get very good benefits from  being injected with these immunoglobulins. And lactoferrin is also a very, very important ingredient in colostrum, extremely important. So, that I don’t know if you get in other things, but it works in harmony with everything else. But people get a lot of benefits from these injections. But these injections are one injection and they have to have a month, costs the patient right on the NHS, it costs the NHS taxpayer 1000 pounds per shot.

Lindsey: 

We’re talking about IV immunoglobulins, right?

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, which is insane.

Lindsey: 

Yeah, no, I know. That’s, that’s one of the treatments I think they use for PANS and PANDAs in the traditional medical community. And I can imagine that’s pretty tough.

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Yeah.

Lindsey: 

Yeah. Expensive and hard to deal with getting injections for a kid. Yeah, all of that. So tell me about any other supplements you use? Is it just the colostrum? Or what else do you recommend for people?

Niraj Naik:

Oh, yeah. So my protocol. So what happens in these sorts of issues, I suppose the gut microbiome gets messed up. So there is this amazing probiotic I discovered called Visbiome* . It also was VSL3, but somehow the company split into two, I don’t know. There’s some controversy over who actually invented and owns it. I think what they’ve done is each one’s claiming that the other one is your original origin. They’re still making the same thing. They’re trying to steal customers off each other or whatever.  

Lindsey: 

The one that was the VSL3 that all the studies were done on is now called Visbiome*, right?

Niraj Naik:

Yes, apparently. So I basically recommend that now. I think that’s that. I think they’re both probably still the same, but I recommend that because I took VSL3, and this megadose of probiotic is really high like, like hundreds of 1000s. Right?

Lindsey: 

Billions. It’s like 450 billion or something a packet.

Niraj Naik:

It’s insane. Yeah. Yeah. So that combined with the colostrum and all that, so I recommend that on our protocol. It’s expensive. You don’t have to do it forever. It’s just a cost you take. So I actually put this all in my guidelines. So I recommend that as part of the course if you’re healing. But I don’t think that you need large doses of probiotics for long. Because colostrum in itself propagates, it acts like a prebiotic, it propagates a good microbiome, and natural flora.

Also, just listening to your gut, trusting your gut, finding your dharma, your life path, following your instincts, and doing breathing techniques where you’re switching off stress, aids the gut. Getting rid of sugar in your diet, getting rid of processed foods, getting rid of factory foods, and all that stuff. And eating a whole food diet will actually improve naturally your gut microbiome. So there’s other ways you’re doing it. There’s billions of bacteria around you all the time that we have. We’re literally wearing a suit of bacteria wherever we go. The bacteria is not the problem, it’s whether they want to reside in your gut. That’s the problem. And you know that there’s a lot of people who just take probiotics and don’t do anything else and think that that’s going to help them alone. But we need to think holistically. And you’re going to think that these are like entities that have a choice whether to live with you symbiotically or not. And if they’re not choosing to live somewhere, symbiotically, there must be some reason. It’s because you’re toxic. So you need to clear that out, you need to and it’s not just our physical body, it’s the mind. If the mind becomes toxic, we need to clear that too. So my whole system is all about helping heal the mind, heal the body, connect with the Spirit. And through that, the bacteria naturally comes to you and wants to live with you. This is the laws of nature.

Lindsey: 

So I love the story of you being able to leave this profession that didn’t suit you and go do this other great thing. But I kind of feel like this is sort of like the privilege of the upper middle class to be able to just leave their job and go found a breathwork program. You know what I’m saying like, how does the average Joe who’s really sick and cannot afford to leave their job and branch out as an entrepreneur,  how do they implement things in their life like this?

Niraj Naik:

Fantastic. I love, that’s a really, really good question. Let me just tell you about my story. I didn’t come from money. I actually was quite a lot in debt at the time. And my dad was completely depressed. And my mom as well, you know, they never had any money. I also had no job. And I had no financial support, actually at all. And I had no idea when the next income was going to come. I had sick pay for a bit, for about six months, but then that was stopped. But I literally had to do it. It was a do or die situation for me, I had to make this work.

Now what I had, I was smart enough to be able to study a course that taught me how to build an online business and do all that, and get off my ass and focus on that. And I had an ability to put it all together and make something successful out of it. But it really was a do or die situation. And I know, a lot of people may not have the means of access to a computer or, you know, be tech savvy, or even be able to understand what it takes to start a business and all that. I totally get that.

So there’s other ways of doing this, okay. And it all comes down to changing the perception of your situation. Okay. So, for a lot of people, let’s say the circumstance, and because I’ve helped a lot of everyday people as well, I believe that when you believe first and think small. Like first think in terms of just one goal. One goal that I’ve got to put into my mind is, I want to heal this illness. Don’t even think about oh, I need to get a new career or I need to quit my job. I know this job is stressing me out. We’re going to look at this healing journey as a game. And here is a system, if I follow this system, I do a little bit every day, the end result, the reward of that is I’m going to be healed, and I’m going to have more energy, I’m going to have a better sense of well-being and I’m going to then have more ability to do work, do the kind of work I need to pay the bills and all that. And through that, you can then start to ease the stress of it.

So what I give people is like a plan of action where first do this, alright, first do this, do this, you’ll get benefits from this. Get yourself here. That’s the first goal. And up. And you can actually do that with just the colostrum, the probiotics, and the breathing techniques. I really believe that. You may not completely be cured. But you can get close to it. And I hate using the word cure, because we don’t cure people, we transform people because a cure basically means bringing people back to who they were before they got sick. That’s not what we do. We take people, we change people at a spiritual level, right at that point of the ego. And from a cellular level, they become a totally different person. And they have a new set of habits, new lifestyles, new aspirations.

What happens is, you actually vibrate, without sounding too woowoo, at a higher level when you are feeling healthy and happy. Your vibe goes up so you start to attract things into your life. And when you trust that, what could happen is that you could turn a job that you don’t like into something that you start to enjoy. And what happens as well is because you’ve got the story now, you just healed yourself from chronic illness. And when you focus on that as your first thing, I want to tell a story, where I’m now healed and I can inspire other people. When you start inspiring people, you watch it becomes like a domino, like a butterfly effect, that one small change will start to impact other things in your life. And you will naturally start to attract things that will create more abundance in your life, more sense of well-being or you may naturally move from one career part of your career that you hate into a part of the career or company that you’re working for where you enjoy it more.

Right and through the Ayurvedic system, actually, you can find out what you’re really good at. Like actually so with me, I was doing a left brain job and I’m a right brain, very creative person. Totally the wrong type of job for me, and I find a lot of people who get autoimmune issues are in the wrong job that they’re spending eight, nine hours a day doing a kind of task, super repetitive, very robotic, that isn’t suited to them. And they may be more creative and more into doing roles where maybe it’s about talking to people, connecting with people. And when you start to know who you are, and you can communicate that to whoever your employer is. Actually, also, employers also want the best for their for their employees. Usually they want their company to thrive, they don’t want it to stifle. So quite often when you find the right person to speak to, they will start helping you transition to a better role.

Or you’ll get the courage inside to listen to your gut to apply for another job or company that you want. You’ll be surprised at how many amazing stories we’ve had people manifesting what they want, going through our 21 Day awakening journey, which lays this roadmap out for you, and is led by an instructor as well. The breakthroughs people have, you know, it’s amazing. Like the money thing, I understand, I get it. I didn’t have as many responsibilities. I didn’t have kids, didn’t have a mortgage, but I didn’t have any money. And I didn’t have a job. So I made it work. I had youth on my side and tenacity, things like that. But people can develop that. And it comes from getting one little result first, when you start to see some results, you start to trust yourself a bit more. And then it grows from there.

Lindsey: 

Yeah, I listen to the One Thing podcast a lot. And, and their whole philosophy is, just keep breaking it down to what would make this step in my life easier or unnecessary. Until you get down to well, maybe just stopping and taking a deep breath when stressed out would be the one thing that I can do that would then get me to the next goal. And so it’s just really starting super small.

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, I think I’ve been on that podcast. Yeah, I was on that one.

Lindsey: 

Okay, so we have maybe 12 more minutes. Do we have time to maybe hear about a healing story of somebody who’s gone through your program and then do a quick demo of the Soma Breath?

Niraj Naik:

Sure, sure. So for the demo, it may be better that I can play an audio because we’re very audio driven. And I could give you a session, which you could play to your listeners, what do you think?

Lindsey: 

Sure.

Niraj Naik:

Yeah, so you can slice that in. And what I actually did recently was I interviewed a remarkable client that we had. She basically was one of these people you were talking about who has tried everything. She was struggling for money and all of this stuff. She had lost all hope. She’s got kids, got family. She was on 36 pills a day. She had fibromyalgia. She was so sick. She was puking up her own feces. That’s how bad it was. She was ruled out. She was written off by all the doctors. She basically found us, started on my free online meditations. And she started doing our protocol. And literally just did that every day, to a tee. And she wrote an amazing story in our group, about how she managed come off all the pills. She had regained a lot of body weight, but she was almost back to full, normal body weight. She had lost a third, like me, she had lost like a third or more of her body weight, and all of the diarrhea had stopped, she wasn’t getting all those symptoms anymore. And she hadn’t even at this point taken colostrum yet. She had just done the breathing techniques. Wow. So I was blown away by this. I was like, “This is amazing!” But just with breathing techniques.

That’s one recently, then there was another one who’s a stunt actress, who actually happens to be in the same studio at the moment where Alec Baldwin killed one of the directors or something of this movie. She’s like a stunt actress in Hollywood at the moment. She also suffered immensely from leaky gut issues, kind of autoimmune-like symptoms, really burnt out, really grueling schedule, trainings of a  stunt woman, you can imagine, very busy. She even owned like part in the gym, very, very busy gym and all this. And she started doing the colostrum protocol. So she hadn’t done the breathing, actually just did the colostrum. And she has had remarkable benefits just from that, from the leaky gut protocol. So, you know, that’s two different stories, but then we have so many, you can go on our website and see, we’re getting new ones every week.

Lindsey: 

Great, yeah, I’m sure people love that. And I’ll put a link in the in the show notes to the website. So I’ve got the affiliate link. So if people can follow that, they’ll be supporting the show.

Niraj Naik:

Fantastic. For sure. Okay. Beautiful.

Lindsey: 

So anything final thing you’d like to say to my audience before we get off?

Niraj Naik:

So I love this mantra, which I got from an amazing doctor, if you want to get an inspiring doctor who really understands health, check out Dr. B.M. Hedge and head down and give him a shout out on YouTube. He is India’s top doctor. He’s won loads of awards and all this stuff. He’s a real Renegade. Basically, he says this one mantra, which is I is the first letter of ill, we is the first two letters of well. And the more I we become, the more I-centered and kind of selfish we become, you know, the more egotistic we become, that’s when we start to get ill. But the more we-focused we are, the more community driven we are, the more we actually realize that, actually, we’re part of the whole.

And the more we give back, selflessly, and this is Karma Yoga, Karma Yoga is healing, forgiving by just giving, giving, giving and through that, you reach a state of enlightenment or healing where you heal yourself of all past karma. And you look at disease, and it’s just a result of karmic things, actions you’ve taken, they’ve resulted in that illness. And what we like to do is, we like to go a layer deep to where the results in your life come from. And that comes from how you think, the quality of your thoughts, and if we can take charge of the thoughts at a cellular level, that’s the nervous system. Now, that’s where thinking comes from. We can actually improve the decisions we make, increase, improve the actions we make, and increase our results, the quality of our results, and heal ourselves and things and get back to our best. So with the breath, you have a tool where you can consciously actually gain control the entire consciousness of the entire body. Because every cell has a consciousness, has a brain, has a mind, it thinks, each one breathes. And when we bring that into harmony with just a few simple rhythmic breaths, which you can do every day, okay, we bring balance back to the body. And what that allows us to do is to start thinking less about just us, but the entire community of our entire planet and tap into them. The super consciousness of our planet. Imagine that there’s a whole mind, there’s a collective consciousness of everyone that exists on this planet. And when we start to become refocused, and we become harmonized within, in our inner world, we have a better connection with the outer world and that’s when abundance flows effortlessly and easily to each one of us. So there you go.

Lindsey: 

Wonderful. That sounds like a good plan. Well, thank you so much for sharing about this with us. And I look forward to sharing the demo with my listeners. You take care.

Niraj Naik:

You too. Really great talking to you. Thank you so much.

If you’re struggling with ulcerative colitis or any type of gut health problem and are ready to get some professional help, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me. We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.

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Natural Healing from Crohn’s, One Mom’s Story

Adapted from episode 60 of The Perfect Stool podcast and edited for readability.

Lindsey: 

How old your son was when he was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease and what were his symptoms that led doctors to suspect a Crohn’s diagnosis versus just calling it something that was normal for growing kids? Like with my son [when he had stomach pains] they said, “it’s just normal, rather than getting headaches, some kids get stomach aches.”

Heather Hausenblaus:

He was 16 when he was finally diagnosed, and it really was a process. Looking back, we could see it almost years in the making. But it was in the fall of his junior year that he really became quite sick. We honestly just thought it was a virus. It wasn’t until he finally said, “Mom, Dad, I have diarrhea all day.” He was really trying to hide it and live in isolation about it, because it really is something you don’t tend to talk about. We don’t tend to talk about how many times we go to the bathroom. It was my husband and I pushing and pushing and pushing through health care, when we weren’t happy with answers that we were getting. That’s really how we came to finally getting his diagnosis. We were not accepting that he’s going to be okay in a few days, he was not okay, there was something really, really wrong. It was us being an advocate for him and not giving up and having many, many doctor’s appointments until we finally got the diagnosis.

Lindsey: 

Was he having pain as well? Or was it just the diarrhea?

Heather Hausenblaus:

He was having pain. It really became around the last month that he was having excruciating pain. It was really, if you can believe it, in his throat. He was saying that he had never experienced throat pain like that. We honestly thought he probably had strep or something along those lines. It wasn’t until we finally got the diagnosis we had the realization that he had ulcers because of his Crohn’s disease.

Lindsey: 

Now that’s interesting, I’ve never heard of that. Were there Crohn’s ulcers all the way that high up, or was it that it was pushing up acid?

Heather Hausenblaus:

It was pushing up acid and being in the constant pain that way that was causing those ulcers literally in the back of his throat.

Lindsey: 

When did it start?

Heather Hausenblaus:

The problems got really, really bad in about middle of October, and he got his official diagnosis, the beginning of December. It got to the point where we knew something’s wrong. He began to eat dinner, and then not eat anything until about lunch the next day. He would skip breakfast in hopes to get through a period or two at school. And then it became almost clockwork where I get a call from him asking me to sign him out from school, he’d come home for a couple hours, literally lie on the couch, try to eat a little bit and then get back to school for the last period. We just thought he had some weird kind of virus and we couldn’t figure it out. This went on for a few weeks. And then it was finally us going to the doctors and not leaving until we got answers. We were actually beginning to get what we felt were tests that needed to be run; not your standard tests. We said we need more. There’s something wrong. We need a stool test. We need this, we need that. And it was finally at that point where we had his pediatrician finally really listen and say, “okay, there is something wrong.”

Lindsey: 

Had this been going on since he was like five or was it just a relatively new problem at 16?

Heather Hausenblaus:

Looking back, we could see signs and symptoms when he was really really young, where he would have these emergency trips to the bathroom. I have vivid memories of us leaving a restaurant, getting in the car, pulling out of the parking lot, and him speaking up in the backseat saying he had to go to the bathroom. And my husband would say, “let’s just wait till we get home.” Well, he couldn’t wait till we got home. It got to the point when he was really young, that we would always say before we leave the house, “you have to go to the bathroom.” He’d go to the bathroom, and still, almost like clockwork, we were in the car for a couple minutes and he would have to go. It usually happened after he ate. It seemed like he would go from feeling great to all of a sudden having strep or having pneumonia or having bronchitis. It was this recurring pattern with him. It seemed that stress would often trigger it. Things like the start of a school year, we could almost guarantee that he would be sick for at least a couple of days at the beginning of every school year. Looking back I can see the signs and symptoms growing over time. This didn’t happen overnight.

Lindsey:  

It sounds like you started out with his pediatrician, within the traditional medical care system. Did you eventually move to seeing a naturopath or a functional medicine doctor?

Heather Hausenblaus:

We did do the traditional route with health care. He had his pediatric gastroenterologist that we felt did help with getting the diagnosis and some medical tests that he needed, but it pretty much stopped there because they really the pushed for medicine. I felt it wasn’t working. I was able to, with my background, search the drug that he was on and realize that it really was not efficacious. So, it was me using my connections within the health and wellness and functional medicine area to seek out these experts and meet with them and talk with them and realize that there’s many ways to become healthy. What we did almost instantly after he was diagnosed was dramatically change his diet. We feel that in large part was what led him on the road to recovery quickly,

Lindsey: 

Had you already done your PhD? Were you already in this field?

Heather Hausenblaus:

I got my PhD about 25 years ago. So, I have been in this field of health psychology and health behaviors for a long time, doing a lot of research. My research largely focused on the psychological effects of physical activity and moving, and honestly came from the training in the background that if you exercise, you’ll be healthy. Well, it really wasn’t until he was diagnosed and we changed his diet that I realized that diet is the most important thing with this disease and with many, many diseases or conditions. If you don’t change your diet, it’s going to be very difficult to be healthy or maintain health.

Lindsey: 

It’s interesting you say that, just because I do see a lot of people, my husband, for example, has a perfectly good diet for somebody who doesn’t have any health issues. But there’s this idea that if I exercise a lot, it’s okay if I eat an entire bag of potato chips (not that he does that that often). Because I’m exercising and because my weight is stable, I should be able to eat what I want to eat, no matter how junky or crappy it is.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Exactly. It’s really interesting. I fell into that category, and this is what I researched. I really felt that exercising and moving was one of the most important things we can do for our health. If you exercise, then you’re fine. My son played varsity baseball, so he was extremely active and we ate healthy. But when you do a deep dive, you realize it’s shocking, honestly, how disturbing our food actually is.

Lindsey: 

Yeah, so tell me about the diet changes that he had to make and that you made as a family.

Heather Hausenblaus:

The family was a challenge, because we have three boys and Tommy’s our oldest. I’m lucky to get one meal on the table, let alone making different meals for everybody. So that became a bit of a challenge and the running joke with his younger brothers became if Tommy could eat it, then they didn’t want to eat it because they felt that it was just too healthy. We’ve come a long way. What happened when Tommy was first diagnosed, I immediately reached out to a friend whose son also had Crohn’s disease. At this point, I didn’t even know what Crohn’s disease was. She met me the following day. I talked with her and she talked about diet. She put her son on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. I’d never heard of this diet, but I went home and began to research it. I really needed to grasp onto something and that was something that I could grasp onto. I read up on it. There was minimal science on it, but there was enough for me to say, “I need to do this,” it intuitively made sense. We went bare bones with him and followed this Specific Carbohydrate Diet for several months. Now, you fast forward two and a half years later, and he eats what I would consider a very clean diet. We’re talking about organic, lots of fruits and vegetables, grassfed meats, eliminating pretty much all sugars, anything that’s processed. Basically, if you look at an ingredient label and you can’t pronounce it, we’re not buying it. Also, he’s eating as much as possible in the house as opposed to eating out.

Lindsey: 

I know that one of the things that’s particularly bad for people with Crohn’s are these gums and emulsifiers. Is that something that you had to focus on a lot with him?

Heather Hausenblaus:

I did in the sense of just going bare bones with his diet, so cutting out all sugars, all types of additives and really taking a deep dive into ingredients and honestly spending hundreds of hours trying to find products out there that we trust and didn’t have all these basic added chemicals in them. That in and of itself took so much time, and I was lucky because I was able myself to take medical leave for work because of a sick family member. I was able to take a medical leave to get my son healthy and a lot of people don’t have that opportunity. It almost became my full time job, and it’s just not right for other people not to have these opportunities to be healthy. So, my goal is to try to create awareness and make it ally’sa little bit easier for people to regain their health or the health of somebody that they love if they become sick.

Lindsey: 

I may be wrong on this, but I think under the changes to the Family Leave Act that came under Clinton, we all got the ability to leave for six weeks for a family illness. Maternity leave, for example, I was able to do six weeks of that and use my sick leave time. So I think if you have a workplace of above 50 people, that applies.

Heather Hausenblaus:

I believe that is the case also.

Lindsey: 

So this Specific Carbohydrate Diet, people may not be familiar with what that entails. Can you just dig a little deeper on what kinds of things are included and excluded that diet?

Heather Hausenblaus:

Yes, it’s a restrictive diet. It’s based largely on eliminating your processed foods, clearly a focus on organic, but it went much more beyond that with focusing largely on fruits and vegetables and meats. There is a list for the legal and illegal foods, and I would almost use this as a Bible and continually go back to this list to determine what are legal foods. So, foods that somebody with IBD could eat on this Specific Carbohydrate Diet. Interestingly, what continually kept coming up on this SCD or Specific Carbohydrate Diet was yogurt. Not just any type of yogurt, but a homemade fermented yogurt. I learned to make this yogurt myself, and that was something that my son was eating multiple times a day because it was almost comforting on his gut and didn’t hurt him. He ate this continually for several months. Now, you fast forward to two and a half years later, and he can’t stand the yogurt. He ate so much at the beginning. This probiotic yogurt played a really, really big role. I began to make a lot of things from scratch. For example, almond milk. I bought almond milk, because I thought it was healthy, from the grocery store but then if I looked at the label, oftentimes it was made just with almond extract, there wasn’t even almonds in it. There were all these added preservatives. So I began to make almond milk from scratch, orange juice from scratch. If I could figure out how to make it from scratch, even coming down to salad dressings, I would do that. Knowing that I had control over the ingredients, and then what he would be eating, I almost felt like I was becoming the sneaky chef and trying to sneak healthy things into the food to try to make it taste a little bit better. With this diet, you cut out all types of sugar except for natural sugar from honey, so that was a sweetener that was used in his food.

Lindsey:   

When I think about the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, and I was talking on one of my previous podcasts with Dr. Steven Sandberg Lewis about this, that it’s essentially some combination of low FODMAPs and Specific Carbohydrate, right? I think it was low in a certain type of fiber, soluble or insoluble? That points to the fact that at the root of Crohn’s and Colitis may be overgrowth of bacteria. That, in essence, you’re starving out some of those bacteria by pulling out some types of fiber.

Heather Hausenblaus:

You know, it is a good question. We really don’t know enough at this point, because unfortunately, when you take a look at the research, the medical research, meaning things typically with drugs and surgery, dwarfs research within diet and nutrition, but that is changing because there have been some pretty interesting studies that are recently coming up on these different types of diets, including the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, maybe the FODMAP diet, a gluten-free diet and testing to see if this actually is an efficacious treatment for individuals with IBD. In part, they’re showing that yes, diet does play a role. Does it need to be the Specific Carbohydrate Diet? Is that the only diet to follow? No, that was the one that we grabbed onto at the beginning. It’s a difficult diet to maintain in the long term. Once he began to feel better, we loosened up a little bit and increased the number of legal foods. Now that he’s at university, and he’s on his own a lot more, he has a little bit more freedom. He’s at a point where he tells me, “Mom, I try my best to eat as healthy as possible, but sometimes it’s a little bit of a challenge.” That’s where he is right now.

Lindsey: 

Was he gluten-free as part of that?

Heather Hausenblaus:

We did start off with him being gluten-free for the first couple of months. He came to me saying, “I think I can eat gluten, I don’t think that’s the problem.” So we slowly began to introduce gluten into his diet, and when I say we introduced gluten back in, we were eating really healthy to begin with. It was oftentimes sourdough bread from the local bakery that I would get that he really, really liked. So even though I say he was eating gluten, he was eating really, really high quality food. And I think oftentimes, the whole gluten thing gets couched within a lot of unhealthy foods as well.

Lindsey: 

We have a local baker here and I was talking to him about the bread and he told me they use this sourdough rising process. It’s a complete process that eliminates most of the gluten from the bread by the time you’re done with it. So, right at the end, the bread that you have is a lot healthier than maybe a quick-rise bread that didn’t ferment for 24 hours or 48 hours or however long.

Heather Hausenblaus:

I even began to make my own gluten free bread for a while as well at the house. Luckily I found a bakery that was making this type of sourdough bread that you’re talking about, which was excellent for him to eat. So it’s a process. I think the take home message is that everybody is different. No one diet is necessarily going to fit everybody. So it’s trial and error, and you need to figure out what’s going to work for you. What worked for was, I don’t want to say going bare bones but, really stripping out additives and then slowly beginning to reintroduce foods to see if he could eat them. Then staying completely away from sugar and fast foods and trying to eat at the house as much as possible, because that’s where you really have control over what you’re putting in your mouth.

Lindsey: 

So you said you did eventually get some more complex testing? Was there anything they found on that testing like candida overgrowth or bacteria, like SIBO or anything like that?

Heather Hausenblaus:

It was eventually treated with the testing that we did, it was a diagnosis of Crohn’s disease, and then getting the inflammation out of his body and to a level where it was normal. The cause we’ll never know 100%. Looking back, I think that it was related to early antibiotic use. I really think that’s what the cause was, because as a very young child, I remember before the age of one, he had an ear infection, and he got an antibiotic. Many times when he was young, he was getting antibiotics for different illnesses that he had. And I think that threw him off and then it was becoming worse and worse until the point where he was diagnosed.

Lindsey: 

Just looking at the one pager from your book, you mentioned some simple tips that people suffering with autoimmune disease can follow to find their way back to health. What are some of those tips?

Heather Hausenblaus:

You have to listen and trust your body. Go and take a close look at your diet and what you’re eating, what you’re putting in your mouth first and foremost. If we take a look at what makes us healthy, about 50% of our health is related to our health behaviors, with the top three being our diet. Whether you smoke or don’t smoke, how much you exercise, your environment counts for about another 20%, your access to health care only accounts for about 10% and then your genetics account for about 20%. So that encompasses what makes you healthy, but the bulk is our health behaviors, making up 50% of why we’re healthy.

I want people to know that they have a lot of power over their health, because we can control our health behaviors. You have control over what you eat, you have control over how much you exercise, whether you smoke or not. Also, your sleep, which is something that we tend to forget about, but sleep is vital and it is so important to make sure that you’re getting enough sleep and keeping your stress level down.

There’s many different simple health tips. You need to take a look at your diet, how much you move or exercise during a 24-hour period, how you’re sleeping, and your stress level, as well what is causing you stress or anxiety. We saw this with our son firsthand when he was experiencing stressful periods during the school year. We saw his symptoms increase, especially when he was first diagnosed. One example was, he was supposed to take the LSAT one night. He was in pain, he wasn’t feeling good, he was running to the bathroom. It was the stress caused by having to take the LSAT, so we ended up canceling it and he took it at a later date. He finally came to us and said that he was really worried that if he had to go to the bathroom during the LSAT, what was he going to do? We never even thought about this, but then we got paperwork done so that he could get a “stop the clock.” If he did have to go to the bathroom, they would stop the clock on his LSAT, so if he was in the bathroom for 10-15 minutes, he wouldn’t lose that time on his test. These were things that we began to do for him. Getting these types of accommodations done, not only when he was taking the LSAT, but also at his high school and university as well. If he does need it, it’s in place. That actually reduces his stress, knowing that there is that opportunity for him and that if he does get stressed, or if he has to go to the bathroom during an exam, that he’s not going to lose any time on his on his test.

Lindsey: 

You know, I imagine there are a lot of people who don’t think like, “oh, I’ve got this gastrointestinal thing, that’s a disability.” They could go to the Disability Services office at their school or their counselor at their high school and get those accommodations.

Heather Hausenblaus:

You’re so right. You tend not to think that this is a disability, but there are things in place to help if you’re in pain, or you’re spending that much time in the bathroom. There’s even Ally’s Law, for example, that was passed where if you’re in a store, and they have a restroom, if you have the Ally’s Law card, then you’re able to use that restroom. A lot of people don’t realize that when some people say they have to go, they have to go. There’s no waiting till later. It is an emergency.

Lindsey: 

I’m totally not familiar with this Ally’s Law. Where do you get the card?

Heather Hausenblaus:

You can apply online and you’ll get it in the mail. It’s an interesting story of a girl named Ally and she had Crohn’s disease. She was shopping with her mother in a retail store, she had to go to the bathroom and she had to go right away. There were no restrooms anywhere close outside the store, so they asked to use the employees’ restroom. They were denied access and she had an embarrassing accident in the middle of the store. Her mother advocated that this would never happen to anybody else. She went through the steps to get this passed as law; it’s passed as a law in many states. You can get this card, you keep it in your wallet, and when you’re out saying, “I need to use this washroom, it’s an emergency, you can’t deny me access,” and you show the card.

Lindsey: 

So, one of the topics that you seem to be passionate about is journaling for health. Can you tell me a little bit more about that?

Heather Hausenblaus:

It was a process for me when our son was first diagnosed. I was experiencing a lot of stress and anxiety and having a difficult time sleeping at night because I’d wake up in the middle of the night trying to think about what I needed to do to keep him healthy and keep some level of normalcy. This began my routine of keeping a gratitude journal or a thankful journal. It would literally only take a couple minutes, not a lot of time. It was a simple process, but it actually set my day off on a more positive note and reframed how I thought about things.

What I also immediately started to do for my son is tracking his food. I kept a food sensitivity log, basically keeping track of everything that he was eating during the day, how many times he was going to the bathroom, if he was having any symptoms and how he was feeling so that I could try to pinpoint if there were certain foods that were triggering his symptoms. I feel that was so important, to be able to track and look back at his diet and see what potential symptoms were there. That really helped him on his road to recovery. I began then, of course, as I do with most things, to dig into the science. There is a great deal of science showing that keeping a gratitude journal is extremely powerful for people’s overall health, making them more productive, putting them in a better mood and just being kinder and overall healthier, and the same thing with a food sensitivity log as well. I’m a very strong advocate for these because they are really, really simple to do. They don’t take an extreme amount of time and they’re not expensive. You can create your own journal if you want, or you can go on Amazon and buy a journal for less than $10 that will last several months. I’m a really big fan of science-based health techniques that are easy for people to do and are not overwhelming. To me, journaling and health journaling is a very simple thing to do that can create a lot of positive health effects.

Lindsey: 

You know, it’s interesting, because when I began my training as a health coach and launched my business, one of the questions that they suggested we asked new potential clients is, “what are five things you love about your life?” At first, it just felt fluffy to me at the end of the questionnaire, but I left it on there because I liked hearing the answers.  I’ve noticed as time has gone on, that there are people who are really suffering, and yet can still find five things that they’re very thankful for and that they love about their life. Then there’s some people who are just so down in the dumps, that they can’t find a single thing to put there. You know, I think about what the prognosis is for someone who’s got not a single bit of hope to begin with, if that it’s almost the necessary precursor to healing.

Heather Hausenblaus:

I love that you said that. You said you felt like it was almost hokey to do it, it almost seems fluffy. The simplicity of it is so brilliant, and that it does work. I know for myself, especially at the beginning, when our son was really sick, I’d have to dig deep some mornings to find even a couple things that I was thankful for. As simple as my morning cup of coffee. Over time it grows and becomes bigger, and you realize that you do have so many things to be thankful for. By keeping this gratitude journal, it really reframes how you think about things, you begin to find the silver lining in a lot of things. We do know the power of the mind, and the power of positive thinking has an incredible effect on our health.

Lindsey: 

After I went through sciatica, just feeling so thankful for having my body back, and being able to walk, I’m still constantly just amazed that I’m not in excruciating pain every day, and how thankful I am for that. How thankful I am to be able bodied and, it’s one of those things that sometimes you have to have lost to understand what it is to get it back.

Heather Hausenblaus:

It’s not until we’ve lost a piece of our health that we really appreciate it. We take things for granted. A gratitude journal reframes how you think so that you’re not taking these little things for granted. You’re not taking your health, your wellness, maybe it’s your walk with your dog, your morning cup of coffee, sitting quietly or peacefully, or watching your favorite TV show, whatever it may be, that you begin not to take those things for granted.

Lindsey: 

Every night before I go to bed, I just thank God for each of the things that I’m grateful for. And some of it’s just the basics, that I’m in a safe house and that I have a warm bed. I think about refugees and people who have none of that. I try and keep my perspective to be thankful for even the very basics, and we tried to do this with our kids too, we tried to have a gratefulness circle going around the dinner table. For the life of me, I couldn’t get them to look at the simple things and just be thankful. Whatever they were currently unhappy about was what they wanted to complain about rather than find something to be thankful for.

Heather Hausenblaus:

We do tend to focus more on the negative, but you bring a great point about around meals around the dinner table. When you actually do finally slow down and sit down, it’s a great opportunity just to take a couple minutes, even just a minute, to express what everyone is thankful for the day. It just kind of sets the mood and sets the tone and makes everybody sit back and say, “okay, we do actually have a lot to be thankful for.” We get just so caught up in the stress of our day-to-day, thinking we need to do more and more and more. That’s not the case, we need to really slow down and reset.

Lindsey: 

And the impact on your health, I mean, what is it? What does the science say about the impact of gratefulness on your health?

Heather Hausenblaus:

It’s really quite impressive. There are hundreds of studies now showing that individuals who express gratitude, whether it’s journaling every day, being thankful, has incredible health benefits for them. It’s so simple and easy to do. It’s something that I recommend people do, whether you want to create a journal yourself or buy one that’s out there. All you literally need is a pen and some paper and you start doing your journaling.

Lindsey: 

Are there any other lifestyle practices that you found were helpful for your son?

Heather Hausenblaus:

The main one was this incredible change in his diet. Trying to eat at the house as much as possible, jumping onto a diet that we felt was going to work and going bare bones and then beginning to lessen up on it over time and include more of these legal foods. I recommend people get support, you need help. I was somebody that was able to reach out to individuals within the health and wellness community and to find other parents that were going through similar things that I could meet. I actually meet for lunch or talk on the phone or go for a walking meeting. To have that type of support is extremely important not just from your health team, but also from family members or friends or people that you can relate to that are going through something that’s really, really similar. There’s so often you feel really alone, and by having or creating this community, then that will lessen. I know there’s incredible support teams now out there on the internet as well, so there is that type of support as well. My husband and I, we joined the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation and join their walks and try to create awareness and raise money for the organization as well so that we can help other peers who are going through this.

Lindsey: 

Is that foundation functional minded? It’s not just traditional medical?

Heather Hausenblaus:

There is some functional-mindedness in it, there is a large medical focus as well. You do see a focus on the diet and importance of exercise. They really do have some great outlets for family members and even for young kids who are suffering.

Lindsey: 

Did you have some mentors or authors around the topic of Crohn’s disease or autoimmunity in general that you’ve followed?

Heather Hausenblaus:

At the beginning, no. When he was first diagnosed, I’d heard of Crohn’s disease, I couldn’t have even told you exactly what it was. I was really starting almost at ground zero to try to learn the disease. It was connecting with individuals, connecting with organizations. I reached out to a medical doctor, David Susskind. He actually responded to my email, and I talked with him because I was really impressed with what he was doing. He’s a medical doctor who deals with pediatric issues, in particular IBD and IBS, and he was researching SCD. I was really impressed with the fact that he listened to his patients when they came in, and as patients’ parents were saying that diet does play a role, he began to hear them talking about the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. So, he began to research it. Now he’s a very strong advocate for it, because he knows that diet does play a really big role in the help of healing from this disease. He also realizes how difficult a strict diet is to follow. He’s doing some really cutting edge research on modifying the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, meaning, what happens if you include some illegal foods? Are you going to be okay? He actually has a clinical trial going on right now that hopefully will be published sometime in the near future that will bring even more light to this. I’m a big advocate of that. I began to read, honestly, everything I possibly could on Crohn’s Disease, buying a lot of books on IBD, IBS, reading people’s stories and listening podcasts. I was just trying to soak in as much information as I possibly could to try to understand what would be the best path for us.

Lindsey: 

Besides David Susskind, were there books that you found particularly useful?

Heather Hausenblaus:

I think the books that I was drawn to the most were from these health, wellness, functional medicine, more naturalistic doctors’ books that were out there. In particular, I became a very big fan of Dr. Mark Hyman, he’s a functional medicine doctor.

Lindsey: 

Cleveland Clinic.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Yes, I love what he has done. The books that he has written, his podcast are phenomenal. Dr. Josh Axe was another individual. I went to his website, knowing that things were going to be science based. His books are phenomenal. An individual who’s a big leader in the health/wellness industry named Naomi Whittle, as well, who’s done a lot and written some New York Times bestsellers on specific diets and how they help with overall health.

Lindsey: 

Yeah, those are great resources. I hadn’t heard of Naomi, I will have to check her out. Tell me about the research that you’re doing now.

Heather Hausenblaus:

My research most recently is focusing on sleep and how sleep affects our overall health. Focusing on whether there’s a supplement, potentially a type of music, that can help us sleep better. Most recently, I’ve actually begun to take a look at some of the health effects of journaling, and how keeping a gratitude journal or keeping, for example, a movement journal, how that will help people overall on their health path, whether it will help them move more, to sleep better, to be more thankful, to be more productive or to lower their stress.

Lindsey: 

On the topic of sleep, what do you find are some of the biggest obstacles to people getting good sleep and what are some of the solutions related to these obstacles?

Heather Hausenblaus:

I would say one of the biggest obstacles right now is how much we’re plugged in during the day with our life. Sleep is a behavior that we do every single day, so you would think that we’d be experts at it. Most of us are not very good sleepers. A few simple tips to help with sleep, get your electronics out of your room and do something quiet before you go to bed, read for a couple minutes. You want to create a sleep environment where you’re sleeping in a very quiet dark room and begin to have this consistent bedtime and this consistent wake time. Try to go to bed at about the same time every night and also try to wake up at about the same time every morning because we have our circadian rhythm, a circadian clock that resets every day. We’re creatures of habit. I know myself, I used to fight this for years, because I’m really more of a morning person, I love to get up around five in the morning. On the weekends, I would feel this pressure to stay up till midnight or beyond. I just stopped doing that. It didn’t work for me and would really throw off my health. For people to say, “my sleep is important and I need to make it a priority during my day.”

Also, know that what you do during the day is going to affect your sleep at night. If you don’t move enough during the day, you’re probably not going to sleep as well at night. You should try to exercise every day. You should be getting outside every day and getting that natural light, which is so important. You do need to watch what you eat as well, because certain foods can throw off your sleep, especially eating a large meal right before bedtime. These are things that people have control over. People think about sleep as a really, really important health behavior, and if they don’t get a good quality of sleep, it’s going to affect everything that they do the next day.

Lindsey: 

I’ve talked to clients who are completely exhausted and they have brain fog, and they’re only getting five hours of sleep at night. That seems like it’s probably the first thing you need to address because it may not be because of the gut issue that you’ve got brain fog. It may be that the five hours of sleep are a bigger culprit.

Heather Hausenblaus:

It’s all related, your body’s going to have a hard time healing properly if you’re not getting adequate sleep. It is really, really critical. It’s important for people to say, “I’ve got to take my sleep time and know that it is so important for my health. If I’m not going to sleep well at night, it’s going to affect everything. The next day, I’m not going to be as productive. I’m going to be grumpy, or I’m probably not going to eat as healthy.” Have you ever noticed what type of foods you begin to crave when you’re tired?

Lindsey: 

Oh, yeah. An instand pick me up with the carbs.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Exactly. People need to realize that sleep is important. There’s many things that I can do to sleep better that are in my control that I do have control over.

Lindsey: 

One thing that I hear a lot from clients is, “I don’t have any trouble getting to sleep, but I’m waking up at three in the morning.” Is there a solution for that one?

Heather Hausenblaus:

Oh, gosh, I wish there was a simple solution to that. It’s really common that people say, “my problem is I wake up in the middle of night, have to go to the bathroom, or I just wake up and then my mind goes into overdrive, I begin to think about everything that I have to do. And it will take me an hour or two to fall back asleep. And by the time I fall back asleep, it’s time for me to get up.” Once again, take a look at your entire sleep environment. If you do wake up and you begin to get a little bit anxious, you’re having a difficult time falling asleep, don’t just lie there for an hour or two. Get up out of your bed, go somewhere quiet, pick up a book begin to read or listen to some really relaxing music. You’ve got to do something just a little bit different until you begin to get groggy again, and then go back to bed. I find for myself, that’s what works.

Lindsey: 

You need to associate your bed with sleep not with agonizing over the details of your life.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Exactly. You don’t want your bed and your bedroom to be this stressful environment that provokes you. There’s many individuals who almost dread going to sleep because they fear that they are going to wake up in the middle of the night, it’s going to be the same routine and they won’t be able to fall back asleep. You have to ask, “what can I do about it?” Maybe it’s as simple as picking up a journal and writing in it for a few minutes; that may make you tired. Again, don’t turn on the TV. You certainly don’t want to do that. Do something quiet, and what’s often recommended is reading or listening to soothing types of music. We do know that listening for example to relaxing types of music, like classical music or like something like wholetones, does actually promote sleep.

Lindsey: 

I had a yoga nidra CD I scanned in ages ago and I will put that in my earphones if someone else is in the room or just out loud if not, and that will be my go back to sleep or at least if not go back to sleep do something relaxing that is supposed to be somewhat equivalent to sleep.

Heather Hausenblaus:

That’s so important to do and I know this might sound a little kooky, but I now typically sleep with a sleep mask on so that everything is dark in my room. Sometimes I’ll even put in earplugs, because I can hear the noises, my kids may still be up or whatever, because I do tend to go to bed a little bit on the earlier side.

Lindsey: 

Speaking of circadian rhythm and going to bed early, I think that’s a battle that many people struggle with, which is, waking up at 5 in the morning, well, then you’re going to have to go to bed at like 8 at night, right? There’s only so many ways to add up to 8 or 9. And it’s not going to be going to bed at 11 and waking up at 5.

Heather Hausenblaus:

That’s a good point that you bring up because not everybody needs the eight hours of sleep, some people can actually operate on less sleep, some people may need a little bit more. But that’s on average, the average person needs between seven, eight hours of sleep. What I recommend people do is, if you wake up without your alarm clock, that means that you’ve had enough sleep. If your body wakes up naturally, then that’s telling you’ve had enough sleep. If you’re waking up with an alarm clock, then you didn’t have enough sleep that night. I know, we can’t do this every day, but potentially on the weekends, try to see when is that time or when is that point that you wake up naturally, and then count back and say, “this is how many hours I seem to need on a regular and consistent basis to get an adequate amount of sleep.” We’ll say it’s seven hours of sleep. Then take a look at that and say, “if I need to get up at five in the morning, then this is the time that I should be going to bed so that I get those seven hours of sleep.

Lindsey: 

You have to keep in mind too, that you’re not falling asleep instantly, and that you may be lying in bed for a few minutes after you wake up. So you have to add in a little fat, you can’t just go to bed seven hours exactly before you’re going to wake up.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Factor in that buffer period. Typically, it doesn’t take us too long to fall asleep, it shouldn’t be taking more than five to 10 minutes. When your head hits the pillow you should be out and then when you wake up in the morning, you should pretty much be ready to go if you’re waking up without an alarm clock.

Lindsey: 

For me, if I don’t take melatonin, then I can’t fall asleep within five or 10 minutes. It’ll take me 15 to 30 minutes.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Everybody is so individual. Maybe it’s, you know, a hot cup of chamomile tea. One of the tricks that I have that I learned from Dr. Michael Bruce, who’s a sleep expert and has written some wonderful books on the science of sleep, recommends hot water and you put a banana in in the hot water and just let it seep for a couple minutes. The banana still has its peel on, you just cut the ends off of the banana, put it in a cup of hot water and just let it seep for a couple of minutes. And then you take the banana out, you drink this hot water that has a hint of banana. It’s actually enjoyable to drink, but it’s the potassium that’s in it that actually helps with sleep. And that’s a really simple easy thing to do.

Lindsey: 

Organic banana, unless you want a glass of pesticides.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Yes, exactly. Good point.

Lindsey: 

I appreciate you sharing your story about your son with us. I know there’s probably a lot of parents out there struggling to help their kids get back to health. Crohn’s is a very serious diagnosis, I know someone whose child died of this, so I’m glad to hear about your story and that it turned out so much better and that you’ve written a book to help other people. Where can people find you and your book?

Heather Hausenblaus:

They can find me at https://www.heatherhausenblas.com/. That’s where the book is. For information that I have on journaling and health and blogs that I’ve written, people can go to https://www.healthymovesjournaling.com/.

Lindsey: 

Any final thoughts for our readers?

Heather Hausenblaus:

If anything, I want to tell people that they have the power to be healthy and to really take control of what they’re doing and to critically take a look at their diet and how much they’re moving and sleeping at night and really take a look at journaling as a  positive health thing that they can do.

Lindsey: 

Great. Well, thank you so much for talking with us today.

Heather Hausenblaus:

Thank you so much for having me and thank you for everything that you do.

If you’re struggling with Crohn’s Disease or any type of gut health problem and are ready to get some professional help, you’re welcome to set up a free, 30-minute breakthrough session with me. We’ll talk about what you’ve been going through and I’ll tell you about my gut health coaching 5-appointment program in which I recommend lab tests, educate you on what the results mean and the protocols used by doctors to fix the problems revealed. Or if you’re ready to jump in right away or can just afford one appointment at a time, you can set up an 1-hour consultation with me.