Interesting article on the effects of artificial sweetners in the news today: http://todayhealth.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/05/12548199-the-strange-reason-diet-soda-makes-you-fat?lite
Please read the entire article for gut flora AND inflammation impacts. While I'm not going to tell anyone what I think completely causes CD or could cure it, I can read things like this and come to the conclusion for myself that diet definitely can (and probably does for most of us) play a role in it. I for one have had a very healthy diet for about 25 years, but there are still things like artificial sweetners that are definitely prevalent in my life. I drink a lot of coffee and diet coke and have for years and years. You can bet that after reading this, they are not going to be in my future. My risk factors for all of the medicines used to treat this are very high, so I have to take every other avenue available to get this under control and artificial sweetners happen to be something I can control.
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I've also been doing something else and wondered if anyone else does this?
There are several different studies in different areas where they are using the plasticity of the brain and behaviorial modification/imaging techniques to retrain the mind when it goes haywire. Examples of this would be high functioning autism, amputees having phantom pain and PTSD nightmares that cause sleep disruption. In all of those cases there has been just as much success using those techniques as medications that were non-specific and had a whole host of side effects.
Now that being the case, it stands to reason that if our brains can learn to overreact to certain bacteria and create inflammatory responses then they can learn not to do that. Given my risks with the medications, I decided what is the harm in trying? I'm not on medication so there is no confusion as to what is actually helping at this point. So, I decided to try it. A week ago I began actively telling my brain that my digestive system was not under attack, in no danger and that it did not need to create inflammation to defend it. I've seen what my gut looks like, so I visualize it when I do this. I did this exercise for about 15 min at a time three times a day. At first the pain and inflammation would go down after about 15 min (I'm lucky in that my inflammation is so bad you can physically see it happen within minutes of my eating anything that triggers it - my doctor confirmed this when she checked me), but it eventually returned. After the third day, the inflammation went away entirely and it hasn't been back. This is the first time in 2 years I haven't had pain or inflammation. Previously it was constant and relentless.
I go back to the doctor tomorrow so we'll see what she can confirm or not. I'm very interested to see what she says. I'm taking what I have on those other studies with me for the discussion. For me, I have to look at alternatives, but I'm wondering - have any of you tried a concerted effort at doing it?
Please read the entire article for gut flora AND inflammation impacts. While I'm not going to tell anyone what I think completely causes CD or could cure it, I can read things like this and come to the conclusion for myself that diet definitely can (and probably does for most of us) play a role in it. I for one have had a very healthy diet for about 25 years, but there are still things like artificial sweetners that are definitely prevalent in my life. I drink a lot of coffee and diet coke and have for years and years. You can bet that after reading this, they are not going to be in my future. My risk factors for all of the medicines used to treat this are very high, so I have to take every other avenue available to get this under control and artificial sweetners happen to be something I can control.
__________________________________________________________________________
I've also been doing something else and wondered if anyone else does this?
There are several different studies in different areas where they are using the plasticity of the brain and behaviorial modification/imaging techniques to retrain the mind when it goes haywire. Examples of this would be high functioning autism, amputees having phantom pain and PTSD nightmares that cause sleep disruption. In all of those cases there has been just as much success using those techniques as medications that were non-specific and had a whole host of side effects.
Now that being the case, it stands to reason that if our brains can learn to overreact to certain bacteria and create inflammatory responses then they can learn not to do that. Given my risks with the medications, I decided what is the harm in trying? I'm not on medication so there is no confusion as to what is actually helping at this point. So, I decided to try it. A week ago I began actively telling my brain that my digestive system was not under attack, in no danger and that it did not need to create inflammation to defend it. I've seen what my gut looks like, so I visualize it when I do this. I did this exercise for about 15 min at a time three times a day. At first the pain and inflammation would go down after about 15 min (I'm lucky in that my inflammation is so bad you can physically see it happen within minutes of my eating anything that triggers it - my doctor confirmed this when she checked me), but it eventually returned. After the third day, the inflammation went away entirely and it hasn't been back. This is the first time in 2 years I haven't had pain or inflammation. Previously it was constant and relentless.
I go back to the doctor tomorrow so we'll see what she can confirm or not. I'm very interested to see what she says. I'm taking what I have on those other studies with me for the discussion. For me, I have to look at alternatives, but I'm wondering - have any of you tried a concerted effort at doing it?