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Hello, my name is Jackson, I'm 17, and I was recently diagnosed with Crohn's disease, although I've been exhibiting symptoms since late 2013.

After months without answers, I was finally diagnosed after a colonoscopy and blood tests. After that, I was put on prednisone (started on 40 mg) and I thought I was saved. I was still having some abdominal pain, but the diarrhea was much improved. Better yet, my appetite had returned and it seemed like, as long as I was careful, I could eat a restricted diet.

I finally got to visit an actual GI and, coincidentally enough, that's when my health went to hell again. Like, that night. I have no idea what triggered the sudden freefall, but my abdominal pain became unbearable and constant. I'm up throughout the night with vomiting and diarrhea.

After my blood work finally came back, my GI wanted to put me on biologics. Unfortunately, they're way outside of my family's price range and my parents are VERY concerned about long-term medication. We turned down the biologics and instead tried to redo my food intake. In the beginning, we followed exactly what the doctor recommended. We took out the basics: dairy, fried foods, other common triggers, etc. No improvement. After talking to a few other Crohnies, we started the Maker's Diet. This, paired with other Crohn's restrictions, has left me with a VERY limited diet. I am losing weight like crazy and my symptoms are only getting worse, even though I'm still on 40 mg of Pred.

I don't go back to the GI until the end of April and my parents still are counting on the diet fixing me so that I don't have to go on any maintenance meds. I'm starting to worry. Am I doing permanent damage to my system without actual medication? Why isn't the prednisone helping anymore?

There's really nothing more to eliminate from my diet. I have no idea what could be triggering me. Some advice would be so very welcome.
 
Prednisone can be great at dampening the inflammation for most but my son had no improvements on it, only the horrible side effects.

If you are against hitting the inflammation with medication you could look into the SCD diet or Paleo diet. For most it does take a maintenance med to keep active disease at bay and from causing damage.

It can also take some time to find the right treatment. My son has been on remicade since he was dx at 15 and also another med, methotrexate. He was doing well symptom wise but simmering inflammation progressed so he is now on enteral nutrition while we decide the next step, more than likely surgery but not entirely sure.

I hope you find some relief soon.
 
I know the idea of taking meds forever can be scary and/or overwhelming, it was for me when I was first diagnosed, but for many diet alone will not control this disease. It sounds like you need some medicine at least to get it under control. To suffer like you are doing is not something you want to do forever. Maybe you could at least try some meds to see if any help you. There are many varieties available so even if you don't want to do certain kinds (like the biologics you mentioned) hopefully another kind can give you some relief.

I'm sorry you are suffering and hope you find something that works for you soon.

If you are absolutely against the meds, there are many diet theories out there. A currently popular one seems to be the low fod map one. Best of luck in however you tackle it.
 
This is how things went for me. I was diagnosed with crohns in 2006 and I have always had to be on long term medication. I started out with Asacol, then Remicade and now Lialda. The Lialda I believe is starting to lose its effects and I'm going to have to go back to my GI to figure something out. I have been on diet after diet and nothing works. I have been on prednisone many times and I feel like a million bucks while I'm on it and I can eat like a horse, but it has done some real damage to my bones and does not seem to be as strong as it used to be because my system has is getting immune to it which is not good.
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but your most likely going to have to be on some type of long term medicine or you will never get better or go into remission. I have spoken with a lot of other people who have crohns and they say the same thing they the cannot live without the long term medication. I take so many supplements and yes they help in certain ways, but even they will not keep my in remission. You can get financial assistance from some of the companies that make the medicine, so you may want to check into that as well. Good luck:>)
 
you do not say where you are from?

If you are in the US have a look at this link http://www.crohnsforum.com/showthread.php?t=60661

I do watch what I eat, but this seems to only help with the pain and bloating. I still need meds to keep my crohns under control. Not keeping it under control long term can cause damage, especially scarring of the guts (which may need to those areas being removed) as well as increased chances of cancer as well as other problems if you are not recieving the right nutrition.

I think the likes of remicade and humira have cash fund to help reduce the costs for certain people. I'm not quite sure who can apply but their websites will tell you
 
He's a minor by both Canadian and American law and his dx is too recent.

Just because you're not eating anything that doesn't trigger you doesn't mean your Crohn's magically goes away, only some people get symptom relief from dietary changes. Even then the disease is still there, eating away at your innards. If you don't get medication you will almost certainly need surgery for fistulas or obstructions. Right now you're gambling with your future in a big way.
 
I agree that it sounds very much like you need serious meds for yours. Not sure if rygon's link outlines programs that remicade has in place to assist or not, but they have helped me significantly with the costs of my medication. Speak with your doctor and see if they have a contact for Schering Plough, the manufacturer (although I just read they were bought out by Merck). Without assistance, I wouldn't be able to afford it either. For me, remicade and imuran have been responsible for the best health I have had in the last 30 years. It's well worth following up.
 
In the US the program that help with Remicade is remistart, you can Google it. It isn't based on financial means and does not require for you to be uninsured.
 
I don't think there's any harm in the Maker's diet (Bible diet), but you might want to combine it with a strategy to avoid those foods that hurt your condition specifically. For example, if every time you eat meat, it hurts you, discuss it with your doctor and maybe it's an antibiotic situation or maybe you just need to stay away from too much meat. Your digestion is still a physical fact. There are also old diets that were used before medications to help Crohn's patients. One of those is SCD.

About the Maker's Diet:
http://www.webmd.com/diet/features/meet-makers-diet

I myself use the Zone diet with the SCD diet, and add various elements from other diets to keep healthy.

However, a diet is not a replacement for medical care. You did not do this to yourself with bad food. And it is not a visitation for sinful ways. It might possibly be an aftereffect of food poisoning, or the MAP bacteria, but the cause is not known. What is known is that without treatment, it tends to get worse and not better. So if your treatment isn't helping you, please do what you need to do to get the correct treatment.

I will say a prayer for you. I hope it works out.
 
Clearly the Makers Diet is not working for you.

As others have noted, some people seem to be able to control this disease with diet, and others need drugs such as Remicade.

Since you and your family are open to dietary changes, I'd like to suggest that before you embark on the expensive Remicade treatments, you give the Specific Carbohydrate Diet a wholehearted try for one month.

We had spectacular results for my daughter (age 13) with the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, after attempting a more general low residue diet for several months.

We had previously been avoiding the things that "everyone says" you should not have with Crohn's, and also selectively eliminated any foods that seemed to disagree with her. After a while it seemed as if there was hardly anything she could eat. She was miserable, and still had stomach aches and fever every day, despite taking Prednisone, which we were unsuccessful at tapering.

It was desperation that brought us to SCD, which hadn't seemed to make any sense to us. Honey is OK, but not sugar? Huh? (Eventually, though, we learned the science behind it, which is very sound. I'll get to that.)

Because her diet had been so restricted before, SCD was incredibly easy and seemed positively luxurious. Wow, she could have shrimp and beef and salad again? More to the point, in a matter of days it brought about a complete turnaround of her condition. No more stomach aches, no more fevers. At all. Period. After two weeks, the blood work showed all the inflammatory markers to be back to normal, in fact LOW normal. Prednisone is down to 5 mg and we are still tapering without difficulty.

Now we fully understand why the people online who write about SCD, sound a bit like wacky cult people. We are absolutely true believers now. A disease that the doctors wanted to treat with chemotherapy drugs, and called incurable, helped to this extent by making a dietary change? Wow!

My husband recently wrote a review of Elaine Gottshall's book, "Breaking the Vicious Cycle," on Amazon. I thought it was a good summary and will take the liberty of reproducing some of it here:

"I'm a scientist, I work in health services research, I understand the potential for mistaking spontaneous remission for the effect of a treatment. But this change was so abrupt and so clear, against an extended history of no definite effect of any treatment, that I'm convinced. This diet worked, for my daughter, full stop.

That said, I'll offer some advice. We looked at and dismissed the SCD early on in my daughter's disease. And it's largely because parts of this book are confusing and unclear -- until you understand enough of the underlying science. And parts are unclear because the legal/illegal list in the book does not clearly distinguish foods that you can try, once the gut has healed (e.g., beans, which are in fact a starchy food). And these apparent inconsistencies are highlighted by critics in mainstream health care.

If you want some understanding of the science behind this, you should Google up this article: "The Link between Ankylosing Spondylitis, Crohn's Disease, Klebsiella, and Starch Consumption". The gist is "molecular mimicry". That bacterium (Klebsiella) has antigens that are so close in structure to some human proteins that, in some people, when your body produces antibodies to kill Klebsiella, those antibodies cross-react with normal human tissue, resulting in autoimmune disease. A low-starch diet results in a 40-fold reduction in Klebsiella in the gut. Fewer bacteria --> fewer antibodies --> reduced autoimmune symptoms. Simple as that. A low-starch diet was proven to be effective in reducing symptoms of ankylosing spondylitis (rheumatoid arthritis of the spine) in the mid 1990s. It should be absolutely no surprise that it is effective in reducing symptoms of Crohn's disease in some people. I'm not sure whether Amazon will allow the link, but this article shows 7 out of 7 pediatric cases treated with SCD achieved drug-free remission within 3 months. [EDIT: Nope. Google "Nutritional therapy in pediatric Crohn disease: the specific carbohydrate diet" to see the research.] That's a small sample and so on, but if you've got a kid with Crohn's, you have probably already figured out that nothing in mainstream health care can come even close that that level of success.

So the diet is hard, but chemo is harder. We had the choice, we chose the diet. A few things make this diet a lot easier. Gwaltney sugar-free bacon. And pure dextrose (glucose) provides an easy-to-use occasional substitute for granulated cane sugar, available on Amazon, of course: http://www.amazon.com/Now-Foods-Dextrose-Powder-10-Pound/dp/B002JNM8YM

EDIT: One paragraph about implementing the diet. We had no success with any of the "substitute" foods, e.g., bread made with nut flour. They tasted so little like the real thing that they just upset everybody. My advice is, just eat the real foods that are allowed on the diet. Fruits, vegetables, nuts, aged cheeses, homemade yogurt, meat, simple sugars. We eat lots of fruit. The legal/illegal list in the book is poor, and you are better off consulting the website with the same name as the book. A lot of the advice targets individuals with severe diarrhea and if that's not your issue you can just skip all that. There are far more "legal" packaged foods now than when that book was written, likely in response to the popularity of the Paleo diet. Every one of those helps. For example, one type of Trader Joe's mayonnaise appears legal (Trader Joe's is committed to absolutely accurate ingredient lists). Our typical day is: Breakfast: Omelet with veg and cheese, two kinds of fruit, sugar-free bacon. School lunch: Lettuce wrap, bag of pistachios, cup of fruit, homemade macaroons, fruit juice, SDC-legal Larabar (sold on Amazon). Dinner: Fish, two types of steamed vegetable, at least one fruit, custard made with coconut milk. Once you get adjusted, it's no hardship. But my wife is an outstanding cook, and that has been key. I pitch in where I can. The hard part is making the transition to the new diet. If it's too tough, cheat a little before you give up. There's a lot of evidence to suggest that there is a dose-response relationship, and low-starch diet will provide some benefit. Just not as much as the full SCD. And the book itself tells you, if you don't see results in a month (page 68, 3rd paragraph), this isn't going to work for you, and you can stop.

If you find yourself in the situation we were in, I can only urge you to try the SCD sooner rather than later. In my opinion, mainstream health care critics of the diet simply misunderstand some of the more ambiguously written parts of the book. The science behind this is good, and while it won't help everybody, it helps some people, and it definitely helped us."

Good luck, Jackson, and please let us all know how you are doing.
 
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I'm SO overwhelmed by all of these responses. Thank you all so much for taking the time to help me. I'm so glad I found this forum.
I'm going to have a serious talk with my parents about reconsidering medication and I'm looking into the SCD right now. I'll keep updating you as I go.

Again, thank you so so much for responding. It really means a lot to me. :ghug:
 
Hey Jackson,

I think a lot of us (me included) start at as you have. We are afraid of the hardcore meds and try to control Crohn's w/ diet, low strength meds and alternative treatments. They do work for some, but I think most(?) do end up on strong meds at some point.

I can tell you that I did NOT want to start Humira, despite some of the best GIs in the country telling me they were very worried about me and really wanted me to. I went my own way and tried different treatments (various diets, pentasa, marijuana, LDN) and nothing worked well enough to keep serious flare ups (and hospitalization) away.

A doctor I saw finally put it to me this way: if you don't get on a very strong medication that controls your Crohn's well, then fistulas are on they way in the near term and surgeries are on the way in the longer term. You can't afford to mess around anymore. That's when I finally started Humira (this was about 10mo after my diagnosis).

You are on a pretty high dose of Pred and if your symptoms are still that bad, then you have some serious inflammation going on. I think you should feel free to try different treatments you are comfortable with and see if they work for you. But if they aren't working be real w/ yourself and move on to stronger meds to get that inflammation and damage under control.
 
When it looked like our daughter was going to be "steroid-refractory" Crohn's case, my husband looked systematically at all the options, including those that are not mainstream medicine. I discussed this with him, and here are his recommendations in order.

0) You need to think about whether the dietary recommendations that you got from your doctor date to the period before you were diagnosed with Crohn's. If so, they may not apply now -- the doc may have been thinking that this was some type of common food allergy or food intolerance. If so, I don't think you need to follow those restrictions unless you have clear evidence that it helps your Crohn's. In effect, that was a prescription for a different disease.

00) I assume your doctor tested you for nutritional and vitamin deficiencies that are common in Crohn's, and that, if indicated, you are taking Vitamin D, iron pills, probably vitamin B (particularly B12 if you are anemic), and so on. if not - and particularly if you were not tested for these deficiencies -- you ought to take some just for anyway. A lot of those are absorbed in the ileum and inflammation of the small intestine greatly reduces your ability to absorb those out of your food. Further, if you are taking antacids with the steroids, that literally prevents the absorption of vitamin B, and you should take a balanced B vitamin in any case. (Stomach acid is necessary for absorbing vitamin B out of your food). Normally you have enough B stored in your liver to last a couple of years -- that's why docs don't automatically prescribe B with antacids -- but you need all the help you can get just now, and, as noted, you need B12 to make blood cells.

1) Remicade is obviously the first choice. If they're recommending Remicade, you should explore every avenue for getting that. But even that is not a sure cure. I believe that, of steroid-refractory Crohn's cases in adults, Remicade achieves remission in about 60% of cases. So even if you focus on getting access to that, start lining up other therapies in case it doesn't work for you.

2) If not Remicade, the obvious first thing to try is exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN). You can do this right now, and you'll know in a few days if it is helpful. All this means is, you drink Ensure (or Boost) as your sole source of nutrition. Even if you can't stand to stay on it long enough to put your Crohn's into remission, a) it will do you no harm, and b) even just a few days might get some short-term relief from symptoms, and could stabilize your weight.

Here's a description so that you can see this is for real. I can get more references if you need them.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23557272

So, did your doctor mention EEN as a possible therapy? Ours never did, we had to find out about it on our own. Exclusive enteral nutrition is rarely used in the US, but it is in fact the preferred, first-line therapy for pediatric Crohn's in Europe and Australia. It is as effective as steroids, or nearly, for inducing remission in pediatric Crohn's. The drawback is that it is almost impossible to stay on long-term as a "sip feed", that is, just by drinking the stuff during the day. (For little kids, they'll usually set them up with a nasogastric tube and a pump, and feed them through the tube at night.) It takes an iron will, for reasons that I can explain.

At one point, our daughter had almost complete malabsorption -- absorbing nothing out of her food -- and we didn't know what to do. We were feeding her 1600 calories a day, her weight was dropping like a stone, her poo smelled like vomit. Just absorbing nothing. Out of desperation, I sat down with her, and she did EEN for three straight days. It was incredibly effective. Her fevers stair-stepped down from >103 to <100 over three days, the gross malabsorption stopped, her stools became normal, and her weight stabilized. And by the third day I practically had to beat her to get her to drink the Ensure shakes. Even now, she will not drink anything chocolate, from that episode. She explained what the problem was. Your body thinks you've had enough calories, your brain thinks you are starving, and that disconnect, all day long, was apparently just really incredibly unpleasant. We could not stay on that long-term.

So, it takes a will of iron. Also will probably cost you $10/day for the Ensure shakes. Possibly less if you can get them on sale. But you can also use Carnation Instant Breakfast -- that is advertised as complete nutrition, and I think they can't say that if it isn't in the same class as Ensure/Boost -- things that have been shown to provide complete nutrition. Just make sure you drink enough, of whatever it is, to give you the daily calorie count that your doctor recommends. You can also drink water (of course), and I think that some regimens allow some limited fruit juice. But that's it.

Finally, you will read that you need to stay on this for weeks -- typically 8 weeks -- to achieve remission of the Crohn's. But what is almost never said is that, in many cases, you actually get pretty good relief of symptoms in a much shorter time period. It's just that if you go back to a regular diet after just a few days, your symptoms will return. But it can buy you some time. And you'll pretty much know in a few days whether this helps or not. And, as stated, unless you literally can't tolerate it, it's harmless.

In our case, we were clearly seeing results in 3 days. But as it turns out, it is fairly clear that intestinal bacteria were playing a major role in our daughters's Crohn's. So this may or may not apply to you.

Why is that relevant? The bacteria, I mean. Docs aren't completely sure why EEN works, but the most likely mechanism of action of this is that it suppresses bacteria in the gut. It's so easily absorbed in the upper small intestine that little is left to feed the bacteria in the rest of the gut. And for some people, the Crohn's symptoms appear to be driven by "molecular mimicry" (Google it), where antigens on certain gut bacteria are so close in structure to proteins in their body that their antibodies to those bacteria cross-react with their own tissues. It does not explain all cases but plausibly it explains some. I found this article to be a good introduction, and to highlight why a low starch diet can be incredibly helpful to some people (e.g., why the SCD works):
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/jir/2013/872632/

3) The Specific Carbohydrate Diet. That's what did the trick for us. Different foods, but the same mechanism of action as EEN. The entire point is to suppress the bacteria in the gut. This website (http://www.breakingtheviciouscycle.info/) is pretty much all you need. And the diet is straightforward. No starch, no disaccharide sugar. So, no wheat, corn, rice, barley, ... potatoes, cane sugar, or milk (due to the lactose or milk sugar). It's just tough to do, because taking the starches out of the diet leaves a big calorie hole.

Even if you don't do this, I urge you to stop your current diet. If your problem is along the "molecular mimicry" lines outlined above, a high-starch grain-based diet is absolutely the worst thing. It greatly expands the pool of bacteria in your gut that you are trying to avoid. So -- listen up now -- if you got a lot worse after going on the Maker's Diet, you now have a good idea why. And you now should realize that you want to do the direct opposite, in terms of where you calories come from. The Maker's Diet has a lot going for it, in terms of getting a person to eat pure and wholesome food. I'm not knocking it. But ultimately, the diet is the creation of man, and it's not the least bit irreligious to say that, in this case, it's not the right thing.

The SCD says that if you get no relief of symptoms within a month, it's not working for you, and you can probably stop. So you know the timeframe on that one, too. We got relief of symptoms in four days, in a child not as sick as you, who clearly responded to dietary changes (via the EEN). But if might take a month to see improvement. But no more than that.

We can give you some help on how to do this if you need it. You sound ill enough that you might want to take the "induction" part of that diet seriously. Basically, that's eating soft foods that are allowed on the SCD. Otherwise, it allows a lot of things that might irritate your gut (e.g., raw vegetables) if you just jump right into it. The key parts are no starch and no disaccharide sugars. How you go about doing this is up to you. We ended up eating a lot of fruit, a lot of steamed vegetables, and meat and cheese. And I'm still hungry about half the time. Small price to pay.

4) Artemesia Absynthium (SedaCrohn). This showed extremely good results in two small double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trials in Germany. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17240130 The research article tells you exactly what they used (SedaCrohn, available on Amazon), and how much (six capsules a day). If you read the research article, they were seeing results after the first week, and that's how the SedaCrohn maker bills it -- one to three weeks. And yes, I gave this supplement (in reduced dose) to my daughter, and yes, I took it myself to test it. We started about a week before we did the SCD, and possibly, it was a reason that we got such an immediate response with the SCD. Anyway, a month's supply is about $30. The research looks sound. It appears to be very close to completely harmless, in the dose and time period specified in the research. (What I'm saying is that you could plausibly add this to any treatment mentioned so far other than Remicade).

The mechanism of action is completely unknown. If you take it, it's because those two trials say it worked, period. The authors attribute it to possible antiviral action, but that's not a mainstream explanation of Crohn's.

5) Low-dose naltrexone. Again, good but limited research suggesting a modest effect, and good self-reports. But it's all about finding whatever will work for you, so do not dismiss it due to low average impact. Apparently entirely harmless, except possibly for "vivid dreams". But you'd like your doctor's cooperation on this. Mechanism of action is via opioid recepters on immune cells in the body, but beyond that, I'm not clear on how it works. Just that there is a completely plausible mechanism. We did not try this for my daughter, but I bought some from an internet pharmacy, with the idea of grinding up the pills and make the "low dose" capsules myself if required. It comes in 50 mg tablets, you need about 5 mg for the "low dose". I bought what would be about a year's supply at the low dose for maybe $120. Here's a bit of research, again so you can see that this is for real.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24558033


6) All the usual TNF-alpha inhibitors. So, you've probably already learned that TNF-alpha is a key chemical to maintaining the inflammation in Crohn's, and that Remicade binds with that to "break the cycle" of inflammation. There are a lot of natural TNF-alpha inhibitors, and we tried them all, and as far as I can tell, they are harmless, but not nearly strong enough to do the job. A partial list would be: Bosewellia (frankincense), cucurmin, tart cherry juice. I'm sure folks here could add more.

Of those I looked at, the only one that looked like it had a ghost of a chance of being strong enough was Cat's Claw. Only because an extract of that did, in fact, improve arthritis pain in a controlled clinical trial. And because, in Peru, they use Cat's Claw tea for digestive illnesses. And in vitro, it was shown to be a potent inhibitor of TNF-alpha. But Cat's Claw contains a lot of compounds, some of which are likely pro-inflammatory. I ended up buying and using the extract what was used in the arthritis research, called Vinicol. I use it because I have sore knees, and it definitely and immediately works for me, for that, just as the research suggests. The only evidence that it might be effective in Crohn's is the fact that it's used for digestive issues by the natives where it grows. That one, you can get from any mainstream on-line pharmacy (e.g., drugstore.com) and it's cheap, like $12 for a month's supply.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11603848

7) Conclusion. And a couple of further recommendations.

I do research for a living. At this point, I should return to my comment above about " start lining up other therapies in case it doesn't work for you". As you can see, that's pretty much what I have been doing for the past couple of months, for my daughter. If steroids alone would work, great. But we kind of got caught short on the entire treatment path a couple of times, and I just didn't want to be cornered again. I wanted options. Because I thought that the options under mainstream health care were pretty poor. So I set about gathering the materials for every option that a) had some evidence basis, b) seemed low-risk, and c) I could get the materials for. This is what I came up with. I'm sure there are others out there. In fact, I found others, but mostly they either required a doctor's cooperation or looked too dangerous. I can list them if you get sufficiently desperate.

My point is, line up a bunch of options to try. And anything that's not dangerous is fair game, and don't let anybody persuade you otherwise. Mainstream medicine doesn't know jack about Crohn's -- not what causes it, certainly not how to cure it. Shoot, our doctor has our daughter on a medication that I can see in the scholarly literature is completely ineffective on Crohn's patient -- just on the off chance it might be helpful. In the end, all that mainstream health care can do for you, at best, is control your symptoms. So any way you can achieve that is good. Don't think for a minute that you are out of potentially effective options. You have not tried enough of them yet. And realize that all it takes is one -- just one thing that works for you. You just have to find it. Which is why you want to have a bunch lined up, ready to go.

In my opinion, you should be keeping a simple journal of your symptoms, and if you can be systematic about it, your food intake. Just temperature a couple of times a day, rate how you feel on a 1 - 10 scale, abdominal pain on a scale of 1 to 10, number of times you've pooed, number of times you've vomited. Just so you can have a hard record of what happened when, because you will forget, and this may be a long process. And so that when these options help, you'll have hard evidence. If you want to see how the pros do it, Google CDAI (Crohn's disease activity index). To see what self-reported symptoms doctors find most relevant.

That said, your doc is right. Remicade is certainly the best mainstream treatment you can get. If not that, I would at least go to a low-starch diet, immediately. The SCD worked for us, and just reading the rating of "Breaking the Vicious Cycle" on Amazon, we are clearly not the only ones. Whatever you do, good luck with it.

P.S. You might mention to your doctor the article in the January 2014 Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition about the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. The author followed the cases of seven children with Crohn's who were on SCD and noted they all had considerable improvement.
 
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