The benefits of eating a low Fodmap diet
The best way to address any autoimmune symptom (outside of your docs treatments) is to make appropriate changes to your diet and lifestyle.
The benefit of making changes is clear. When we take inflammatory stimuli out of the body we see new healthy possibilities that allow us to focus our healing efforts.
Knowing which substances and circumstances are affecting our condition negatively can help us pin down the causes of inflammation and refine our treatment options.
This newly acquired knowledge helps us to make better choices and that means making fewer unnatural interventions.
We don’t need to treat the inflammation that we don’t cause! Understanding how our actions affect our condition is vital, and diet is the major component in this conundrum.
Avoiding trigger foods can make you feel better and produces fewer flares, it might even put some conditions into remission
I can make these statements confidently because I’ve spent the last 15 years diligently researching food and its effect on disease.
The thousands of articles and studies I’ve consumed from various nutritionists, scientists, doctors, and naturopaths leaves me in absolutely no doubt that biochemistry is directly affected (negatively and positively) by the foods that we eat.
My experiences of helping people change their diet show me that biochemical reactions don’t always work the same across different people.
Therefore, we have to treat “every body” differently where food and supplementation are concerned.
Using a personalised trial and error approach in combination with diagnostic tools like allergy tests can reveal our sensitivities, and give us a window on symptom resolution that using drugs could never do.
Diagnostic tests help us determine the severity of our condition, the pathways involved, the phenotype, and which allergies and sensitivities negatively affect our our bodies when they are presented with a particular compound.
One of the diets which is often found to be helpful for a large percentage of the population who have intestinal-based autoimmune diseases is the low Fodmap diet
This “low reactive” nutritional approach has a fabulous track record of relieving irritable bowel syndrome and other autoimmune disease symptoms
Foods containing short-chain carbohydrates like sugars (natural and processed) are often poorly absorbed by the intestines in IBS and other intestinal disorders.
This failure of digestion can occur for many reasons, but it almost always triggers abdominal pain, bloating, diarrhoea, constipation, and gas which can lead to higher levels of inflammation and disease symptoms.
What does “FODMAP” mean?
Fermentable
Oligosaccharide
Disaccharide
Monosaccharide
And
Polyols
The F in Fodmap describes”fermentable” foods.
These substances are carbohydrates which fail to get digested properly by the bacteria in the gut.
This fermentation process produces intestinal gases which cause discomfort.
The O in Oligosaccharides denotes things like GOS (galacto-oligosaccharides or galactans ) and fructans and.
Legumes, onions, garlic, wheat, and rye are the usual sources of these substances.
D is for Disaccharides!
Dairy products like milk cheese yoghurt‘s contain the disaccharide lactose.
M is for Monosaccharides
One of the challenges of this diet is the removal of the natural sugar fructose. Many fruits and our friend natural source of sugar (honey) contains fructose. Processed foods such as high fructose corn syrup’s also contain fructose and should be avoide.
P is for Polyols.
Polyols are things like mannitol and sorbitol which are found in vegetables and fruits. They are also used in processed foods as artificial sweeteners
An estimated 10 to 20% of the global population is affected by these disorders
So, the role of the Ford map diet is vital in trying to change the way we eat to this less reactive system of eating.
We know that these types of gut-based conditions can be triggered by food because we have the well studied and documented case of coeliac disease which is caused by gluten sensitivity