Btw, here is the beauty. It looks like I can eat this*Homemade pizza with yeast-only fermentation dough (minimal bacterial fermentation)

Btw, here is the beauty. It looks like I can eat this*Homemade pizza with yeast-only fermentation dough (minimal bacterial fermentation)
Interesting, because caffeine is thought to have left the bloodstream completely after 10 hours.
https://www.webmd.com/diet/how-long-caffeine-lasts
So it's probably caffeine itself, but an intracellular effect or a metabolite of caffeine or a secondary process triggered by caffeine (e.g., viral reactivation).
I am currently testing the hypothesis that this is due to meal mixing and varying ingredients of the same meal. Reactions to dairy products is very different depending mainly on the subsequent (it seems not so much the previous) meal.
banana milk --> spaghetti (only 1 fresh tomato and salt) = ok
banana milk --> plain white beans = bad
cow's milk yoghurt-tahin dip and bread --> very bad
I suspect that the same or the subsequent meals may not contain a lot of oxalate, otherwise it causes symptoms. Notably, banana milk, which appears to cause no symptoms at all, is almost oxalate free.
I am wondering if the calcium oxalate that forms from the dairy and oxalate might clog blood vessels even when it's only small amounts that are absorbed. In long covid patients, I have seen reports that some of them benefit when clotting agents are cleared from the blood stream. Might be a similar mechanism here.
Too bad that Vitamin C seems to be a double-edged sword for you. If effects were strictly beneficial, you could try intravenous administration by which one can achieve >10x higher blood levels. Vitamin C absorption from food/supplements is basically capped at a few hundred mg, no matter how much you take. With infusions, you can take over 20 grams relatively safely and it goes directly into the system. I tried it, had several infusions with very high doses. I felt no real effect, neither good nor bad.Vitamic C appears to matter a lot... The fifth dose is a fatigue miracle but it comes at a great cost it seems as my anxiety levels will be prone to shooting through the roof the next day and it will affect my deep sleep in the early morning but not the initial falling asleep phase. How strange.
Or could it be part of the condition that higher amounts of calcium oxalate are somehow absorbed and these are forming micro crystals in the tissues and capillaries? Some special kind of leaky gut?Can a tiny amount of calcium oxalate (a few mg maybe) that according to studies is absorbed if calcium and oxalate are co-administered explain the very profound symptoms these meals are causing?
Too bad that Vitamin C seems to be a double-edged sword for you. If effects were strictly beneficial, you could try intravenous administration by which one can achieve >10x higher blood levels. Vitamin C absorption from food/supplements is basically capped at a few hundred mg, no matter how much you take. With infusions, you can take over 20 grams relatively safely and it goes directly into the system. I tried it, had several infusions with very high doses. I felt no real effect, neither good nor bad.
But this is definitely not recommended for you, because you also have negative effects from vitamin C...who knows what a megadose would do.
I've considered that too, I dont think high plant oxalate food does anything much to me from what I've experienced, it could be most of it isn't even getting absorbed and only a certain handful of types of things are getting through. Not sure if such a discriminating leaky gut is possible but considering it.Or could it be part of the condition that higher amounts of calcium oxalate are somehow absorbed and these are forming micro crystals in the tissues and capillaries? Some special kind of leaky gut?
100% true. That's what makes it so incredibly complicated to figure out.It's not as simple as <food type> causes symptoms; it's specific instance of food, and maybe specific combination with another food within a certain period of time, and time of day, etc.
There is definitely a circadian element to it. When I get worse, much of it usually happens overnight. I wake up with very strong symptoms, much stronger than before going to sleep.I wonder if this has anything to do with it. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002916523274626
I am also reconsidering that hypothesis at the moment. Oxalates or especially calcium oxalate may not do anything, and especially for calcium oxalate, this is expected because as you state, it's being absorbed only in trace amount.I dont think high plant oxalate food does anything much to me from what I've experienced, it could be most of it isn't even getting absorbed.
I am of course not sure if fermentation is the problem here, but coffee is also a fermented product. Not as much as cocoa, but still. Different brands may have different fermentation times and that could conceivably have a strong effect on symptoms (if fermentation is the problem). They also differ in how finely the beans are ground, so maybe more or fewer solids may pass the filter. Also the roasting differs, some brands roast it more thoroughly than others which results in different flavor profiles.I have noticed something very interesting about coffee though. Some brands and products within them are much worse for me than others.. ... I noticed this with a cheaper brand I was drinking at first over the summer that was much darker in roast and created a more muddy mug no matter what I did.
100% true. That's what makes it so incredibly complicated to figure out.
There is definitely a circadian element to it. When I get worse, much of it usually happens overnight. I wake up with very strong symptoms, much stronger than before going to sleep.
I am also reconsidering that hypothesis at the moment. Oxalates or especially calcium oxalate may not do anything, and especially for calcium oxalate, this is expected because as you state, it's being absorbed only in trace amount.
I have a way to test this conclusively with fresh spinach. I have noticed that I sometimes didn't react much to spinach which is super-high in both soluble and insoluble (mainly calcium) oxalate. I think it was the fat and protein in the meal (e.g., spinach lasagna vs. no-fat spinach pasta), fermentation accelerators (e.g., non-pasteurized cheeses), slow vs. fast heating times, and meal sequence (subsequent and previous meals' fat and protein content) that caused the symptoms, not the calcium or the oxalate.
I will probably test this soon. If plain cooked fresh spinach (no fat added!) with a previous and subsequent low-fat, low protein meal (e.g., plain bananas, pasta with tomato) does not cause symptoms, I can probably rule out oxalate (both soluble and insoluble/bound to calcium) as a sole cause of symptoms.
If I remember correctly, for you, it's quite well-established that you don't react to insoluble oxalate, because you could tolerate larger amounts of cinnamon with no issues. Spinach could be used to check soluble oxalates. It contains a lot of both soluble and insoluble oxalates, though soluble oxalate is higher. That said, there is more one could think of that might be a trigger in spinach, e.g., chlorophyll, carotenoids, etc. So that experiment is probably worth trying.Im also going to try the spinach experiments next and see what happens.
And salmon, if I remember correctly. It's interesting that this is so different for different meats. This is certainly worth exploring further, especially if other factors play a role (minced vs. steak, age of animal, age of ripening of meat, organ vs. non-organ meat of same animal, with vs. without skin, interactions with other foods in the same meal). I myself have noticed that I can tolerate steak (up to 3 oz) quite well, but minced meat seems to cause symptoms, possible because tissues are destroyed which invites bacteria to invade the meat and cause fermentation.I am not reactive to amphibian meat either so currently its only bird and mammal meat
That is indeed strange. I have heard of allergies against seafood in general or shellfish, but not against only salmon. Tick bites can trigger meat allergies, but as far as I know only for mammal meat, not for birds:I just can't get to the bottom of this one. I'm the only person I know of with this allergy combination on the meat front.
"Without fat, vitamin C curbed the levels of two nitrosamines by a factor of between five and 1000. And it completely eliminated the production of the other two. But when 10% fat was added, vitamin C actually boosted the production of nitrosamines between 8 and 140-fold."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/09/070903204800.htm
If I remember correctly, for you, it's quite well-established that you don't react to insoluble oxalate, because you could tolerate larger amounts of cinnamon with no issues. Spinach could be used to check soluble oxalates. It contains a lot of both soluble and insoluble oxalates, though soluble oxalate is higher. That said, there is more one could think of that might be a trigger in spinach, e.g., chlorophyll, carotenoids, etc. So that experiment is probably worth trying.
And salmon, if I remember correctly. It's interesting that this is so different for different meats. This is certainly worth exploring further, especially if other factors play a role (minced vs. steak, age of animal, age of ripening of meat, organ vs. non-organ meat of same animal, with vs. without skin, interactions with other foods in the same meal). I myself have noticed that I can tolerate steak (up to 3 oz) quite well, but minced meat seems to cause symptoms, possible because tissues are destroyed which invites bacteria to invade the meat and cause fermentation.
That is indeed strange. I have heard of allergies against seafood in general or shellfish, but not against only salmon. Tick bites can trigger meat allergies, but as far as I know only for mammal meat, not for birds:
https://www.cdc.gov/alpha-gal-syndrome/about/index.html
But in general, allergies against various forms of meat are common, just the combination is strange.
I would be very interested to hear your thoughts and observation. I personally think it's not just the fat in the meat itself, but any added fat and the effects can occur when the subsequent meal contains any fat and probably even the meal after the subsequent meal. I have noticed symptoms after a low fat protein/choline-rich non-dairy dinner (minestrone - beans, tomatos, celery, carrots, potatos, garlic, onions, minor amount of oil) even with no-fat breakfast (bananas only) and the whole night in between (about 17 hours in total).I'm like your fat hypothesis now wondering if that has something to do with it. In various meats the fats are probably coupled with many different compounds depending on the meat. ... I'll try to brainstorm some things to try regarding this.
I think you mentioned a very important point here and this is what I think I also notice and, importantly, it would fit the theory:I also notice that what is consumed after matters a lot more than before