@Learner1 Thank you this is helpful. The six foods I can eat are 1) Chicken, 2) Zucchini, 3) Kale, 4) Green Beans. 5 and 6 are more questionable... I can eat a SMALL amount of pecans to prevent myself from going into ketosis and I can occasionally eat some other lean forms of protein like pork.
Those don't sound too calorie dense. What happens when you eat 5, 6, or anything else?
I'm not sure what you mean by "what is the exact composition of my microbiome?" - Every time I have a stool analysis I receive different results. Anaerobic bacteria appears to be a consistent problem.
So, the last time you did a stool test, did you get a list of what you do have? Is there a way you can post it or PM me with the list? It sounds like you might be missing some useful ones and you have too many that are going rogue on you.
I've tried Xifaxan, Amoxicillin, Erthromycin, Flagyl, Clindamycin, Nystatin, Diflucan, and herbals like berberine, neem, allicin, FC Cidal, Dysbiocide, uva ursi, grape fruit seed extract, plant tannins, artesiminin, black walnut hull, clove and wormwood. Most of those just made things worse or didn't help at all.
Wow! Those will all kill things. Sometimes that's good. But perhaps you killed a few too many that you need?
And any prebiotic just makes things 100 times worse. I can only tolerate bifido probiotics, no lacto strains. I've found that a supplement called Candibactin AR is helpful - it has thyme, oregano oil and lemonbalm.
Lemon balm, thyme oil and oregano oil are all natural anti-bacterial agents. They can act against bad bacteria and somewhat against parasites and have other good characteristics, like antioxidant properties. However, my guess would be you're still killing things that perhaps you need.
I've tried many fecal transplants and it doesn't help.
Our local hospital does these. Did you do it under the care of a gastroenterologist at a hospital? If so, what what was his/her story about why the fecal transplants failed? It seems like something must be killing off the bacteria.
Glutamine doesn't help either. Pepto bismol is helpful.
Glutamine helps to rebuild a damaged intestinal lining, which might or might not be helpful in your case. Pepto bismol's active ingredient, bismuth subsalicylate has
anti-inflammatory and
bactericidal action.
So, you may still be killing bacteria, whether you intend to or not.
I have low butyrate, low SCFA, and my propionate doesn't even register. Its like I'm only creating acetate! I get these acetate smells right before a worsening of my symptoms.
That sounds right. I'm not a doctor, but it certainly sounds like your microbiome composition is an issue. Figuring out how to repopulate your gut with happy bacteria that make butyrate, SCFA, and proprionate, without killing anything off. These might be worth reading:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4939913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4923077/
Do you know what bacteria are the primary acetate forming?
Several kinds can form them.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15182395
I agree that changing the bacteria seems to be the way to fix it but i don't seem to tolerate anything that would modify that bacteria so I'm starting to think there must be some other cause.
It sounds like you have a serious problem which you do need to address - repopulating your gut. Is there a gastroenterologist or functional medicine doctor you could consult, which seems like a really good idea?
The Internet resources I know of that may be able to help you might be Andrea Nakayama, Jini Patel Thompson, or Ken Lassessen.
From dealing with 10 years of intestinal issues with multiple family members, I've learned that some interventions might rile things up even though they're positive steps to be taking.
But, failing a doctor supervised fecal transplant from a healthy person, the basic steps of what you'd need to do would be to feed the gut lining, then add some lacto and bifidobacteria, then some insoluble fiber (prebiotics) to feed whatever you put into your gut, then more probiotics, lacto and bifido, then start rotating probiotics (over 2-4 months), adding prebiotics appropriate to the strains of probiotics so that they are nurtured. This article might be helpful:
https://www.naturalmedicinejournal....t-intestinal-permeability-defects-and-related
In the meantime, you might want to think about how nutrition is getting into you as if you don't have bacteria to process nutrients and convert them to nutrient forms. There are IV nutrients and elemental diets that might be possibilities if you can't get this solved quickly.
Sorry I can't help more, but it sounds like you have your work cut out for you. (And I hope I'm wrong.. I'm not a doctor, just another patient...)
Hang in there!