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The Resistant Starch Challenge: Is It The Key We've Been Looking For?

jepps

Senior Member
Messages
519
Location
Austria
I´m very sleepy since taking RS (3 tbsp) LAG (3 tsp) and other prebiotics (since 2 weeks). My eyes are very tired, and the dreams are vivid, and the flatulences smells not fine:confused:

I have candida and parasites (I´m treating both), an alkaline pH in stool, the stooltest show very low bifidos and candida, sIgA shows zero.

As I was in a lethargy when I ate carbs, I stopped carbs last December. I plan to eat more RS-rice and RS- potatoes, but I´m waiting, until don´t have no longer reactions to RS and fibres.

Interesting for me is my pH of the urine: it was the whole day acid. But since taking RS, my pH of the urine is in balance: acid in the morning, and alkaline or acide over the day.
 

BadBadBear

Senior Member
Messages
571
Location
Rocky Mountains
Count me in as having mild gout symptoms w/ PS. I have never had gout before, but my mom used to get it and I am all too familiar with the symptoms... At first it was pain in the arch of my foot for the last week, then last night I had shooting pains in the big toe. Earlier in the evening we had dinner out (I had steak and a margarita, I guess proverbially shoot myself in the foot there). The pain in the big toe quieted down after a bit, thankfully.

I don't know if this means my protein digestion is finally improving from PS and that is unmasking gout, or if something else is going on that is causing it. I do have a feeling it's related to the PS, though.

I am currently taking ~3 TBSP per day spread into 3 doses, plus consuming ~1 TBSP daily of Dandy Blend which has chicory and dandelion.
 

Aileen

Senior Member
Messages
615
Location
Canada
RS (months ago) seriously kickstarted my thyroid function, and at the moment I don't tolerate anything that increases it any further.
Moving this quote from the selenium thread [here]
@adreno what symptoms did you have that indicated your thyroid was functioning better?

Since starting RS I have noticed an uncomfortable sensation in my throat and neck. It is at the front across where the thyroid lies and up higher underneath my chin from ear to ear including the glands. It's not pain, more like inflammation perhaps.

Has anyone else had anything similar?
 

brenda

Senior Member
Messages
2,270
Location
UK
@Aileen
Yes. I found that my hypothyroid symptoms worsened on PS ie I felt colder and my system seemed to be slowed down which I noticed when I passed urine (it can out slower). I assumed that my immune system had been stimulated which therefore increased the autoimmune attack on my thyroid.
 

Asklipia

Senior Member
Messages
999
Since starting RS I have noticed an uncomfortable sensation in my throat and neck. It is at the front across where the thyroid lies and up higher underneath my chin from ear to ear including the glands. It's not pain, more like inflammation perhaps.
Has anyone else had anything similar?
Same here, with some hypothyroid symptoms.
At one point it was quite uncomfortable, and the neck and head were in an awkward position, painful too.
After a while this went away, coming back a few times with decreasing intensity. Every time there were pimples appearing along the carotids, under the ears, one the nape and on top of shoulders, pain in the teeth with some bleeding sometimes.
The pimples got smaller every time.
Now for the last weeks, nothing is happening, except sometimes a vague puffiness or just a strange choking feeling in the thyroid.
I think this must be some beastie living there which is being dislodged.
At the moment all is fine. The fight has moved along to the thymus and top of the lungs I feel. My head feels free on the neck and I had to change my bike helmet because it has become too big.
Be well!
Asklipia
 
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BadBadBear

Senior Member
Messages
571
Location
Rocky Mountains
Since starting RS I have noticed an uncomfortable sensation in my throat and neck. It is at the front across where the thyroid lies and up higher underneath my chin from ear to ear including the glands. It's not pain, more like inflammation perhaps.

Has anyone else had anything similar?

Yes, I often have this, too. It seems to recede at times, and then it returns. I have swollen glands at times, and it feels almost like a lump in my throat or a mildly sore throat.

I am about 6 weeks into the RS challenge. I am on T3, so I don't notice whether my thyroid seems to be up or down regulated through this.

My gouty feeling has been better, which I am thankful for. I have been drinking some black cherry juice at night hoping it will prevent uric acid buildup.
 

jepps

Senior Member
Messages
519
Location
Austria
One of the most notable things for me was methyltetrahydrofolate, its biosynthesis gets downregulated under chronic oxidative stress. Energy synthesis from glucose creates this cofactor needed to handle this conversion. MTHF biosynthesis is deliberately inhibited by our own metabolic checks and balances. You take this, it drives a big part of amino acid metabolism, it participates in DNA synthesis, it is critical in both humoral and adaptive immunity. You might, unfortunately, get a big dose of histamine from this, because this helps mitigate the effects of LPS. These endogenously created chemicals always have beneficial purposes.

I´m reading the whole long thread a second time, to understand as much as possible of the (a great thank you all for posting) interesting informations.

According to vegas post concerning LPS/MTHF and histamine: how do you handle this? Should we lower the often recommended dosage of 800 mcg daily with the double MTHFR-mutation? Or will the histamine disappear with lowering LPS (through potential gut healing with RS+fibres+probiotics or fermented foods?)

Regards, jepps
 

jepps

Senior Member
Messages
519
Location
Austria
Berberine helps treating systemic fungus and parasites:

http://www.healthline.com/natstandardcontent/berberine

There is some evidence to support its use in the treatment oftrachomas(eye infections), bacterial diarrhea, andleishmaniasis(parasitic disease). Berberine has also shown antimicrobial activity against bacteria,viruses, fungi, protozoans, helminths (worms), andchlamydia(STD). Future clinical research is warranted in these areas, as well ascardiovascular disease,skin disorders, andliver disorders.

and is acts als prebiotic

http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0042529

In conclusion, our findings suggest that marked modulation of gut microbiota by berberine, namely inhibition of a wide range of intestinal microbes and enrichment of some SCFA producers, helps to alleviate systemic inflammation, at least in part, by reducing the antigen load to the host and elevating SCFA levels in the intestine and contributes to the beneficial effects of berberine against insulin resistance, obesity, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders. Functional metagenomic studies and molecular dissection of the host-microbiome cross-talk
 

jepps

Senior Member
Messages
519
Location
Austria
Also Case Adams recommends berberin for systemic tape worm infections :

Barberry Proven to Treat Tapeworm Parasite Infections | R.E.A.L. Natural

Anti-parasitic drugs such as mebendazole and albendazole are often prescribed, with varying degrees of success. Often these anti-parasitic drugs do not kill all the cysts and the parasites return.
Sometimes the parasites adapt to the drugs – and become multi-drug resistant (MDR).

The researchers found that every dilution of Barberry killed cysts, and the strongest dilution of 4 milligrams per milliliter of solution also had the strongest cyst-killing ability – achieving a dose-dependent killing effect. But 2 mg/ml, 1 mg/ml and 0.5 mg/ml also killed cyst cells as well.
 

Sidereal

Senior Member
Messages
4,856
Conference abstract posted this morning on the Microbe Discovery Project Facebook page.

"Altered Gut Microbiome in ME/CFS Patients"

Objectives.
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is associated with a variety of gastrointestinal complaints. We looked at the gut microbiome to see if this was a possible basis for the GI problems.

Methods.
We characterized the gut bacteria of a cohort of 48 patients with ME/CFS and 36 healthy controls from New York City (via sequencing 16S rRNA genes). All patients fulfilled the Fukuda criteria for diagnosis of CFS. We also measured three markers of inflammation in blood plasma: lipopolysaccharide (LPS), soluble CD14 (sCD14) and lactoferrin (LF)

Results.
In both cases and controls, the most represented phyla were Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria. Statistical analysis revealed significant fewer members of the Bacteroidetes and significantly more members of the Firmicutes in the patient population - also reported in Crohn’s disease and acute ulcerative colitis (both are inflammatory bowel diseases). In particular, there were fewer butyrate-producer Roseburia faecis in ME/CFS patients, butyrate is a key molecule produced by some gut microbes that helps boost immune tolerance and reduce inflammation. Low levels of butyrate-producing bacteria are suspected to play a critical role in some inflammatory bowel diseases. An increase of inflammatory Ruminococcus spp. (p < 0.001, q = 0.004) The amounts of inflammatory markers LPS, sCD14 and LF in plasma fell within normal ranges in both patients and controls. Our data do not corroborate prior reports of significantly higher levels of Lactonifactor, Alistipes and Enterococci in the feces of patients.

Conclusion.
Subjects with ME/CFS in our cohort have a shift in overall microbial composition in comparison to healthy donors, a finding also characteristic of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Our analyses highlight the contrast between the distribution of anti-inflammatory species, such as Roseburia species, which are more prevalent in healthy individuals, and potentially pro-inflammatory Ruminococcaceae, which are associated with irritable bowel syndrome and found to be more frequent in ME/CFS cases. Despite the differences in gut microbiome, three inflammatory markers did not differ between patients and controls in plasma. Whether deliberate manipulation of the composition of the gut microbiome in ME/CFS patients may ameliorate symptoms in some patients remains to be investigated.
 

Sasha

Fine, thank you
Messages
17,863
Location
UK
The study is by Maureen Hanson, BTW:

A small and very interesting new microbiome study from Dr Maureen Hanson at Cornell University suggests ME/CFS patients may have gut bacteria associated with inflammation.

Dr Hornig is very interested in this and has been in contact with Dr Hanson.

The research we are trying to crowdfund will build perfectly on great work like Dr Hanson's. As the largest and most rigorous ME/CFS microbiome study to date, this crowdfunded microbiome research study will bring this all up to a new level and also analyse differently.

With a larger cohort and more specific criteria of diagnosis within a larger geographical location: Dr.s Lipkin and Hornig will be looking at a much larger range of organisms, bacteria, fungi and Viruses and be analysing the immune system activation with respect to a wide variety of cytokines. It is really exciting discovery type work and is about the immune system and possible autoimmunity just as much as pathogenic behaving bacteria and organisms.​
 

Vegas

Senior Member
Messages
577
Location
Virginia
I´m reading the whole long thread a second time, to understand as much as possible of the (a great thank you all for posting) interesting informations.

According to vegas post concerning LPS/MTHF and histamine: how do you handle this? Should we lower the often recommended dosage of 800 mcg daily with the double MTHFR-mutation? Or will the histamine disappear with lowering LPS (through potential gut healing with RS+fibres+probiotics or fermented foods?)

Regards, jepps

I would worry less about a protocol that establishes precise, but arbitrary recommendations and use your symptoms as a guide. While we know that this active form of folate can participate in reactions that degrade histamine, methyltetrahydrofolate supplementation can result in a robust immune response, one that many have variously described, including myself, as a "detox" reaction.

I would argue that in ME/CFS (and perhaps most inflammatory disease processes) this immune response and the associated histamine response will often far exceed the effects of this micronutrient in affecting those processes that would inhibit the histamine response and its metabolism. Its roles in your immune response are numerous, but the high response rate to MTHF (and GcMAF), I think strongly suggests that a bacterial pathophysiology is implicated.

There are macrophage folate receptors that can respond quite dramatically to exogenous supplementation of MTHF. When someone who has an impaired ability to synthesize (and interconvert) methyltetrahydrofolate increases cellular concentrations via oral supplementation, these receptors will sense this artificial MTHF saturation and prompt a phagocytic response. You can largely throw out the SNP's from this equation I think, although some may have relevance, because the biosynthesis of MTHF is inhibited by design. It is most certainly an evolutionary adaptation that protects humans from excessive oxidative/nitrosative stress.

The macrophage response, which is one vital component of our defenses against bacterial pathogens, is exquisitely complicated, but many are familiar with the contributions of vitamin D and the vitamin D receptor. One thing bacterial toxins and lipopolysaccharide do specifically is inhibit the VDR protein; they downregulate VDR mRNA and this similarly serves to protect us against an excessive, and life-threatening, immune response. Histamine is just one part of this inflammatory cascade.

The interplay between the receptors stimulated by vitamin D and active folate is quite fascinating, I won't bore you with the details, but, UV exposure stimulates the synthesis of water-soluble vitamin D, but at the same time it oxidizes many forms of folate in blood plasma. You can control the biosynthesis of Vitamin D by limiting your UVB exposure. For example, I find that when I travel to the subtropics in the summer, I have to limit exposure to the sun secondary to the massive increase in vitamin D synthesis, which precipitates an excessive immune response. One of the ways this is immune response is limited is by the synthesis of melanin, which of course adds pigmentation and reduces the synthesis of vitamin D. There are actually many other countermeasures that serve to inhibit an excessive immune response. One of these is actually the release of histamine as this has been found to induce the biosynthesis of melanin. We also accumulate phenolic compounds, in part because the organisms that degrade these are involved in maintaining the intestinal epithelium. A primarily product of bacterial metabolism of phenols is melanin; in effect our microbes also seemingly try to protect us from excessive immune stimulation as well as they cannot live without us.

Of course there has to be a balance, melanin decreases the synthesis of vitamin D effectively inhibiting the immune response, but at the same time it protects folate from oxidation in plasma. Your blood of course regularly and rapidly circulates so that it routinely comes in contact with the superficial capillaries that perfuse the skin and are susceptible to UVA & UVB radiation. This is where people with inflammatory diseases can be highly susceptible to sun exposure because MTHF is the primary form of folate that circulates in blood plasma. MTHF is highly resistant to UVA and UVB photodegradation, other forms of folate including folic acid, are readily oxidized in the sun. In this regard, those with impaired ability to biosynthesize MTHF and interconvert folates are likely to be influenced by excessive UV exposure. The protective response appears to involve limiting our biosynthesis of vitamin D and preserving our supply of non-methylated folates since MTHF is generally not oxidized by our exposure to the sun.

As I have discussed before, the colon is a net producer of folate and those bacterial organisms that are highly sensitive to oxygen are the best producers of MTHF. Some have asserted that this relatively small quantity of folate is a minor consequence to health, but I think the preserved folate transport system in the colon and the distinct response of different forms of folates at different receptor sites suggests otherwise. Without going into detail, it has been discovered that macrophage response varies depending upon the tissues and different forms of folate have variable effects in the lymphatic system versus the small intestine, for example.

In addition to the fact that highly-oxidizing environmental conditions limit the growth of these folate synthesizers, the conditions also serve to limit the efficiency of the microbial synthesis and the interconversion--again, as I see it, the conditions serve to limit the immune response, I think this is inescapable. Similarly, it is clear that the microbial and human relationship is far more complex and critical that previously believed.

I think MTHF is beneficial for a number of reasons including protecting other folates from oxidation and I have derived benefits from it, but obviously, in making an argument that its synthesis is purposely downregulated, there is a downside to supplementing with this. I have to be particularly careful with this in the summer when my vitamin D levels are up because it is clear that the sun exposure reduces my already diminished access to this vitamin. I don't notice a big effect at 36 degrees latitude, but 25 degrees kills me. Personally, I do much better on small, but regular doses of MTHF and not letting levels go to high or low.

I do believe you will see a response that diminishes over time as the epithelial dysfunction is restored secondary to restoration of a more optimal intestinal microbiome, but I can only speculate as I don't have an appreciable histamine response. A combination of resistant polysaccharides that stimulate those organisms that maintain the intestinal epithelium in the colon combined with properly fermented LAB has given me the best results.
 

Vegas

Senior Member
Messages
577
Location
Virginia
Conference abstract posted this morning on the Microbe Discovery Project Facebook page.


Low numbers of Roseburia faecis is in my opinion, the key finding. This organism utilizes acetate coA-transferase pathways as part of its conversion and synthesis of acetate and butyrate, which I have proposed to be a highly significant finding. In my opinion, the inflammatory/immune measures are not going to be particularly useful.
 

BadBadBear

Senior Member
Messages
571
Location
Rocky Mountains
When should one take probiotics so that they work best with RS? Should they be taken together or separately?

I am trying some acidophilus/bifidus strains, b. infantis, and some yogurt/kefir. Hoping the good stuff will colonize and knock out the baddies.
 

Sasha

Fine, thank you
Messages
17,863
Location
UK
When should one take probiotics so that they work best with RS? Should they be taken together or separately?

I am trying some acidophilus/bifidus strains, b. infantis, and some yogurt/kefir. Hoping the good stuff will colonize and knock out the baddies.

I've read that you should take them with RS because they attach to the RS and get a safe ride through the stomach.

I've also read that that means that you're essentially getting a higher dose than you would otherwise which means you might need to work up slowly.
 

jepps

Senior Member
Messages
519
Location
Austria
I think MTHF is beneficial for a number of reasons including protecting other folates from oxidation and I have derived benefits from it, but obviously, in making an argument that its synthesis is purposely downregulated, there is a downside to supplementing with this. I have to be particularly careful with this in the summer when my vitamin D levels are up because it is clear that the sun exposure reduces my already diminished access to this vitamin. I don't notice a big effect at 36 degrees latitude, but 25 degrees kills me. Personally, I do much better on small, but regular doses of MTHF and not letting levels go to high or low.

I do believe you will see a response that diminishes over time as the epithelial dysfunction is restored secondary to restoration of a more optimal intestinal microbiome, but I can only speculate as I don't have an appreciable histamine response. A combination of resistant polysaccharides that stimulate those organisms that maintain the intestinal epithelium in the colon combined with properly fermented LAB has given me the best results.

Many many thanks, Vegas,

I copied all posts of this interesting thread (and the Sulfite/ammonia-thread) in a word-document (which is also long, as many posts are so much informative, thank you all. I copied your MTHF-information also in this document, I hope, you agree, I will understand as much as possible, and so this summary is helpful. Should anybody wants to have the summary, I can send it to you via e-mail.

It takes time to understand the messages. I understand what RS and fibres do for the gut flora, and take 48 g RS, 15 g LAG and a mix of several fibres (each 1 tbsp), and I feel better. But the second message of this thread is about glycolyse, and why we need carbs and glucose for energy.

I responded to the methylation protocol (Yasko) a year ago with increased detoxification, but in December I had diarrhea (stool test showed very low bifidos, lactos and bacteroides species, and increased candida and pH),
and fatigue and pain after eating carbs, so I stopped eating them in January, and felt better.

I eat 100 g carbs (berries, starchy vegetables, chicken stock, coconut), but no rice or starchy sweet potatoes or potatoes, and I take glyconutrients and ribose.

My thought is, that I have the carb intolerance, because I have increased candida, bacterial and parasite overload of the gut because I did not support the gut during methylation, and that the infections are the reason for the carb intolerance. My plan is to build up the gut flora with RS and fibres, and to moderately supplement with Methyl-NEM´s (as Vegas suggestes), and my hope is, that after building up the flora, I can eat starches of rice and potatoes again, as they are so important.

But as the glycolyse is responsible for energy metabolism and fighting candida: is there anybody of you, who had the same problem with starches, built up gut and energy slowly, and only after rebuilding the flora was able to eat safe starches?

With best regards, jepps
 

Sasha

Fine, thank you
Messages
17,863
Location
UK
I understand what RS and fibres do for the gut flora, and take 48 g RS, 15 g LAG and a mix of several fibres (each 1 tbsp), and I feel better.

I'm curious about which fibres you're taking, if you wouldn't mind saying.

I eat 100 g carbs (berries, starchy vegetables, chicken stock, coconut), but no rice or starchy sweet potatoes or potatoes, and I take glyconutrients and ribose.

I was surprised you counted coconut as being carbs - but then looked it up and saw that it's 15% carbs while sweet potato is 20% - amazing! Chicken stock, though?
 

jepps

Senior Member
Messages
519
Location
Austria
I'm curious about which fibres you're taking, if you wouldn't mind saying.

Fructooligosaccharides (1 tsp), psyllium (2 tsp), inulin (1 tsp), pectine (1 tsp), and http://www.ringana.com/de/produkte/frische-packs/einzelangebote/pack-cleansing/ a mix of cognac root, baobaob, beet, oak bran and other 28g. I´m taking this mix for 1 month.

I was surprised you counted coconut as being carbs - but then looked it up and saw that it's 15% carbs while sweet potato is 20% - amazing! Chicken stock, though?

Sasha, Do you also try to find the right amount for carb intake?
I´m eating 50g coconuts als mush with goji berries and coconut oil, and this norishes my sweet taste.
For self made chicken stock you need 2 pds starchy vegetables (onions, parsnips, carrots, parsley root, celeriac), this is the stock I´m consuming within 3 days, these are daily 25 carbs. In my opinion the collagen from the chicken joints and tendons also must count for glycolyse, but I didn´t found any confirmation.

As far as I read (but this must not be right), the sugar from coconuts comes from disaccharides, and have very low glucose. I do not know, whether this counts for glucose metabolism. Wikipedia says, disaccharides break to glucose and fructose, so the disaccharides must count for sugar and therefore for glycolysis.
 
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Sasha

Fine, thank you
Messages
17,863
Location
UK
Fructooligosaccharides (1 tsp), psyllium (2 tsp), inulin (1 tsp), pectine (1 tsp), and http://www.ringana.com/de/produkte/frische-packs/einzelangebote/pack-cleansing/ a mix of cognac root, baobaob, beet, oak bran and other 28g. I´m taking this mix for 1 month.

Thanks - never heard of that stuff.

Sasha, Do you also try to find the right amount for carb intake?

I went on a sort of standard recommended amount when I started the paleo diet early this year but haven't systematically experimented to find the optimum for me (not much point as I can never establish a stable enough baseline to test anything like that).

For self made chicken stock you need 2 pds starchy vegetables (onions, parsnips, carrots, parsley root, celeriac), this is the stock I´m consuming within 3 days, these are daily 25 carbs. In my opinion the collagen from the chicken joints and tendons also must count for glycolyse, but I didn´t found any confirmation.

Now I get it! I have beef or lamb stock every day and hadn't thought about the collagen.