Monday 16 June 2014

Remission May/June 2014


I have stopped reacting to starch lately. I had noticed about a month ago that I didn't react to some starchy food that I ate whilst in Fiji (I was hungry, and it looked sooo good). My excuse is that I was eating starch for science - to test myself and see whether I was still sensitive. Quite a valid excuse if you ask me :)

Now this happened again yesterday - we were doing a wine tour around Canberra and the pizza everyone was having for lunch looked really good. I told my fiancé I was going to try some "for science" ;) Well now, the pizza was particularly good and I didn't stop at one slice as planned. I think I ended up eating about 4 slices of pizza all up.

Within an hour or two we noticed my body temperature had improved due to starch fuelling the furnaces of my metabolism (it is much colder than I am accustomed to in Canberra at the moment). Also the wine didn't make me feel like I had been poisoned, as is often the case. Roughly 8 hours later I messaged her that the only negative thing I had noticed was a bit of mild stiffness in my ribs and neck, but no pain. The next morning I was in no noticeable pain nor increased stiffness from Ankylosing Spondylitis at all and had only very mild proctitis.. less proctitis than usual I would say. That was not expected.


Normally if I eat starch then the inevitable reaction is about 99% guaranteed. The only exception is that after long periods of very careful starch restriction the immune system becomes less reactive to the usual mal-fermentation of amylose starch. But this is only for the first time you eat starch as at that time it primes the immune system. After this initial priming, the next reaction to starch will be the usual strong inflammatory reaction.


There are three main things that I am taking regularly that could be the cause of my remission in starch sensitivity:

  • Natto - I initially didn't think it was this as I only just started eating Natto in June, however I had evidence of remission going back to May and even perhaps February of this year. The remission in May would have been due to taking Lufenuron and Mountain Pepper at that time. I stopped taking Natto for a few days, perhaps a week, as soybean gives me eczema. Well, I ate some hummus and went in to full AS inflammation. So I started taking the Natto again and the inflammation was gone in 24 hours.  
  • Lufenuron - Quite likely to be this. This is an anti fungal. I take 2.8g twice a day and use it for a week or two at a time. This is the only thing that I can think of that explains all periods of remission this year. I started taking this on 6th February this year and soon noticed a reduced reaction to starch (15th Feb = 20140215). 
  • Mountain Pepper - Maybe. This contains Polygodial which is also an anti fungal. These days I take about half a teaspoon first thing in the morning on an empty tummy and chase it with a glass of juice (with 1 tsp ACV in the juice). I do this to fix my proctitis and sinus issues, and it seems to benefit my prostate too (my prostatitis seems to follow after proctitis by about 10-14 hours). I started taking this in early May this year, so it can't explain my apparent remission in February.
  • Apple Cider Vinegar (ACV) - 1 tsp once or twice a day mixed with juice. I take this to fix prostate problems and as a general tonic. I have used ACV off and on in the past and have noticed it being helpful but only temporarily and certainly not to the point that I could eat pizza without pain. So for that reason I find it implausible. Still, it may be assisting, and I am using it regularly..



Some recommended reading:





Here are my personal notes from my phone. Sorry but they are pretty long!

----//----


NSD : Remission
Key: Ankylosing Spondylitis.

-- Notes --
Things that may have caused remission:
* Lufenuron - very likely. 2.8g twice a day with fatty food. Only thing that fits all periods of remission this year.
* Mountain pepper - maybe. Third of tsp with water twice a day
* ACV - probably not. Teaspoon with juice on empty tummy in morning.
* Natto seems less likely as it can't explain May.

--/--
20140615 : no reaction to pizza
1.30pm : Ate several slices of pizza
9pm : Mild neck and rib stiffness. No pain.
20140616 : continued ..
7am : still no AS pain. Ribs are back to normal. Neck is back to normal. Very mild Proctitis. No apparent worsening of eczema.
I did try some Natto last week but that doesn't explain the lack of reaction in May 2014
--/--
20140612 : no reactions
No reaction to tea with burnt rice AND Natto.
Likely cause: Lufenuron, Mountain Pepper (Polygodial)
* current supplementation: mountain pepper third of teaspoon mountain pepper 2 or 3 times a day. Fish oil 3-6g a day.  Before this regime I was previously using Lufenuron
--/--
20140513 : no reaction, Polygodial
* current supplementation: mountain pepper third of teaspoon mountain pepper 2 or 3 times a day. Before this regime I was previously using Lufenuron
* see Log:Polygodial & Log:Lufenuron
Ate quite a starchy indian curry yesterday whilst eating out. My partner told me it definitely had besan flour in it to thicken it up, and it reacted immediately to iodine. Decided to try it anyway, "for science!" Hehe. It was just tooo yummy to turn down?
About an hour or two later I started to get very very tired which is a classic symptom for me when eating starch .. But the painful inflammation never came! Looks like the anti fungal compounds I have been taking are keeping this disease at bay!?!




-------=:: older notes ::=------- 
Below we have my older notes from earlier in the year when I had another period of remission. At that point I had suspected Mussaman curry, which now looks unlikely to be the reason. Also of note was that the previous period of remission was NOT permanent.. it lasted about 11 days. I would say I hadn't taken enough Lufenuron at this point to 'finish the job'.




-- 20140215-17:possible remission --
Sometime around Friday or Saturday I started to notice I hadn't been reacting to restaurant food for quite a while. So I tried a small piece of a potato chip on Saturday at lunchtime... No reaction. I very often have trouble with restaurant food since the ingredients are out of my control. Now, when I talk of a remission in symptoms I am only talking here about inflammation from Ankylosing spondylitis, and this inflammation comes back in force whenever I eat even a small amount of starch.

Sunday night I was with friends and decided to try something more dangerous - some glutinous rice dumplings that also contained the added amylose starch which I react to. I ate four of them, and I definitely should have reacted. I had a modest increase in stiffness. It wasn't really painful just a tad stiff, and the next morning I was fine again! No pain in my back, ribs, hips or neck. Perhaps some minor skin issues (but maybe that was from chocolate / dairy). This is unheard of for me. I should have been in quite significant pain for at least 3 days.

What's changed? What helped? :
1. Lots of Massaman curry - almost daily (most likely what helped)
2. Lufenuron treatment (9grams, split over several days)
3. Lots of fresh air (very unlikely)

Massaman curry
Why? Well I had noticed in late December 2013 after eating some curry at the local Indian restaurant (Mantra) that I didn't suffer from the usual dehydration .. dry mouth, eyes, nose and skin that plague me most nights. This problem also causes me significant fatigue, and it has troubled me on and off for many many years.

Now I tried making my own Thai curry and found that it worked equally well (that was in early Jan 2014). I was of course using my new friend - Massaman curry paste. I would eat it and on the very same night the dehydration would go away. The following night if I ate with friends and didn't eat this curry my symptoms would return very noticeably. The following day I would resume eating this and the symptoms would go away again. This would occur again and again over the coming weeks with a pattern that was absolutely reliable.

So since this curry definitely helped one immune related symptom, I think it likely that it healed the root cause of several health problems, and that likely cause is: leaky gut syndrome.

Ingredients of curry paste:
The ingredients are: chilli, lemongrass, garlic, shallot, salt, galangal, fish paste, coriander seed, cumin, kaffir lime peel, mace, cardamom, cinnamon
I would put my money on the spices that I don't use frequently: coriander seed, cumin, kaffir lime peel, mace, cardamom, or galangal

Update 1:
Oh one more thing - I usually made the curry in my pressure cooker with bones, carrots, onions, pumpkin .. And quite a bit of curry paste


Update 2 - 20140221
It is taking more and more Massaman curry to have the same effect on my symptoms of dehydration, and it isn't lasting as long. Oh well, this happens fairly often unfortunately - these things sometimes only help temporarily. What I've noticed is that it stopped having a laxative effect on me, so maybe it was just that.. A laxative. Maybe try Epsom salts!

Update 3 20140228
Three days ago I accidentally consumed some starch (my fiancé's mother made me an omelette but looks like the ham was starchy). Today I'm finally over the pain! Just a few small niggles in my rib cage this morning, but three days of NSD and, as usual, I'm good again. BUT that means I am reacting to starch again. Haven't been making the Massaman curry for about a week (I say curry but when I make it it's more of a soup) and maybe that is why I reacted? Likewise I haven't taken the Lufenuron for two or three weeks.

Lufenuron
I started taking this on 6 Feb 2014 in order to rid myself of a recurring fungal infection. These fungi such as candida have a chitin cell wall which hides them from our immune system and protects them from antibiotics (antibiotics attack cell membranes but these are well protected within the cell wall).

When candida is in the fungal form it is invasive and can destroy tissue in its path, growing in strands of mycelium & hyphae. When this happens in the gut the lining of the intestine is compromised and allows microbes in to the bloodstream, and when this happens then the immune system becomes destabilised. This is what is called "leaky gut syndrome" and Fungi are one possible cause.

Wednesday 11 June 2014

Recipe: Burmese Curry Paste

"This makes my mouth sing"

Curry paste cooked with carrots
and a side of mashed cauliflower

This recipe is still a bit rough around the edges. I received it through a friend who is of Burmese descent.

Ingredients
  • 1 Large Onion. Cut fine
  • 5-6 tbs Canola oil 
  • 1 inch ginger
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • Half teaspoon Turmeric powder
  • Optional: half teaspoon chilli powder 
  • Half teaspoon paprika
  • Half teaspoon prawn paste (can skip if you dont have this, or maybe use fish sauce instead)
  • 1 tablespoon crushed dried prawn (I don't have this so I would just use more shrimp paste)

Method

Crush Ginger and garlic is crushed in mortar and pestle to a paste. Start cooking onion and oil first until soft. Then add ginger garlic, turmeric and chilli 

Add paprika, prawn paste, and dried prawn last as it burns.


Use this curry paste and cook with any of the following:
  • eggplant
  • eggs
  • pumpkin
  • laksa - you can make a kind of laksa by adding coconut cream, chilli, konnyaku noodle, and prawns









Tuesday 10 June 2014

I have Natto !

My kind Korean neighbours gave me some Natto to try. This is basically fermented / cultured soy beans, and it is really good for gut and immune health. Well known for its benefits in preventing heart disease. My neighbour says people also use it to treat diabetes. They suggested mixing it in with yoghurt - I tried doing that and it masks the smell and texture very well.