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leaky gut

Thanks for your continued interest in evolving mind/body science! Stay tuned for more details on how neurotransmitters, immune system challenges and hormones create problems with mind-balance.
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Gluten, Immunity, and Neurotransmitters

You might miss this comment on an earlier post on celiac and gluten withdrawal - quite interesting question. The approach of Turkey Season serves as a great reminder for what-not-to-do with psychiatric medications and supplements, and how to consider withdrawal from gluten with neurotransmitters.

Peter asked:

I have been Gluten free for a 1 and a half weeks now and think I’m having withdrawal symptoms.  A year and a half ago I had glandular fever, since when I haven’t fully recovered, suffering from, insomnia, anxiety, extreme fatigue after lunch (normally bread based) and digestive disturbances (bloating, flatulence, loose stools, etc…).  So last week I started taking a Betaine HCL supplement and went gluten free.

Initially, I felt much better but after a couple of days I started to get really tired and depressed and anxious!  I then had a better day then a worse one and then a better one again.  Today I’ve got really tired and was a bit anxious but generally better than yesterday.  My flatulence and loose stools have completely gone since going gluten free though I still see a large amount of undigested bits in the stools.  What I would like to know is your thoughts on my self diagnosis and whether these symptoms sound ‘normal’.  I’m hopeful that they will continue to clear up in the week to come.  I’ve been taking many vitamins too and also am eating in excess of 8 fruit/veggies per day to speed it up.

My Reply With Some Neurotransmitter Details

Peter,
Sounds like you are doing well all around, and does sound like you might be experiencing gluten/opiate withdrawal. Also, well done on recognizing that you must ‘replace’ as much as ‘remove.’ Healing is a two step process with immune challenges.

The opiate sites with celiac will set the neurotransmitters off, as the immune system dysregulates a number of the neurotransmitters, both acutely with the gluten discontinuation, and over time with the overt depletion of amino acid precursors. Cytokines aggravate/dysregulate neurotransmitters If you don’t have neurotransmitters you will not only feel the pain, you simply won’t improve with SSRIs or other antidepressants.

Your recovery journey would be significantly supported and accelerated by precise measurement of exactly what you have on board, both excess and deficiency are possible – as stress over the years could have pushed up norepinephrine, epinephrine or your cortisol, & DHEA levels. On the other hand, you may have simply bottomed out on serotonin and the opiates would have kept you blissful, and somewhat up.

Over time with adrenal fatigue the neurotransmitters uniformly bottom out as does the cortisol. Listen to this Adrenal Fatigue podcast over at CorePsych Podcast for any easy review. We have many in-the-dirt, refractory folks who come in, almost in wheelchairs, with cortisol levels thru the day completely flat across all levels. They simply can’t get out of bed and everyone is mad at them for being lazy. And guess what, many of them suffer from gluten sensitivity.

Taking out the offending antigen has neurotransmitter, hormonal and direct cytokine consequences. The antigen removal will help with the healing, but very well may reveal the covered, underlying nutritional and neurotransmitter imbalances.

I am including all the links in this note for you to see the multiple possible consequences, not forming a conclusion. A simple interview would direct the informed practitioner to the correct testing and then would guide your team to the easiest intervention strategy with the fastest turn around.

Easy supplements for the inflammation would be to add Omega 3 Fatty acids, and Probiotics may be helpful in restoring bowel integrity – they are available as a Missouri Turkey Shoot – scattershot intervention without precise parameters. But why just throw supplements when you can be precise with the new technology?

Interesting how some on both sides of the functional/traditional fence just cookie cut the intervention strategies.

-Many comments on the gluten post over the years, just thought it might be of renewed interest with the Neurotransmitter perspective.

cp

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Autism and Leaky Gut: Often Together

by Dr Charles Parker on June 24, 2007 · 2 comments

If we do any work ASD, Autism Spectrum Disorder, we really must know gut physiology.

Just looking further at Autism Info and thought we should review some of their comments on this remarkably common presentation. And – you don’t have to have autism to have a significant leaky gut.

The leaky gut syndrome is the name given to a very common health disorder in which the basic organic defect (lesion) is an intestinal lining which is more permeable (porous) than normal. The abnormally large spaces present between the cells of the gut wall allow the entry of toxic material into the bloodstream that would, in healthier circumstances, be repelled and eliminated. The gut becomes leaky in the sense that bacteria, fungi, parasites and their toxins, undigested protein, fat and waste normally not absorbed into the bloodstream in the healthy state, pass through a damaged, hyperpermeable, porous or "leaky gut."

You can be leaky with leaking fecal material into your peritoneal cavity.

Constipation or diarrhea, it doesn’t matter, that bowel, the first line sewage treatment plant, is rusty if not broken.

And if it isn’t working, who picks up the slack with all that trash? Your liver. And if your liver continues to try to handle all that mess for a long period of time… one significant result: a bulletproof liver, noted here at CorePsychBlog previously.

Bulletproof liver? Even the supplements won’t work – much less any psych meds – to control behavior.

Make sure you take a look at these pages!
ADHD Medication Rules Purchase
“Rules” Affiliate Link
Neuroscience Details

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Metabolic Moments: 101 Nutrition and Neuroscience at CorePsychPodcast

June 21, 2007 Autism Spectrum

At CorePsych we often find in the first visit that clients have had years of trying different meds and “nothing seems to work right.”
Three basic reasons that happens:

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