adreno
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How much pectin are you guys taking? Is there any significant difference between citrus and apple pectin?
@anne_likes_red, wow, sorry to hear. Were you taking it every day? Thanks for the warning. I'm getting serious hypotension + feeling like trash globally from modified citrus pectin.
http://www.cancer.org/treatment/tre...icine/dietandnutrition/modified-citrus-pectinIn modified citrus pectin, the pectin has been chemically altered to break its molecules into smaller pieces. Pectin in its natural form cannot be absorbed by the body and is considered a type of soluble dietary fiber, whereas modified pectin can be absorbed into the bloodstream.
Anyway, I started taking 4 tablespoons PS morning and night (some days did a few extra tablespoons, up to 12/day). For those who are shocked by this I will say I deliberately set a timeframe of no more than 2 weeks to do this. I'm aware that such high doses for a protraced period of time are not good. But I wanted to see if I could get "push" stuff into to my distal colon. My poor colon has been put through the ringer with crap food, stress, abx, colonics a couple decades ago, fibroids crowding my abdomen, etc. I didn't know what it might take to get it normalized again, especially with the crowding. Aside from flora and lining problems, its likely being pinched in at least a couple places.
I also added in beta glucan caps and glucommannan caps. Then I added in 3 scoops of arabinex per day. Also inulin. Plus I was high-dosing AOR and Prescript Assist at 3 caps per day. I also rotated in and out VSL-3, Natren b.infantis and b.bifidum, plus some multi-strain high bifido stuff. I
Yeah. I know. It's a character flaw.Omg.
Yeah. I know. It's a character flaw.
Wooo, there is 'something' to this RS thing, I'm afraid. A 70 y.o. type 2 diabetic lady (insulin treated) on my blog saw her BG and HbA1c deteriorating over the past years, despite strict adherence to a very low carb diet. She is very determined, not the cheating kind of person. I suggested to try RS (potato starch), which she did. First her BG's went erratic for a while, very unpredictable. I suggested to stop the experiment, but she decided to give it some more time. Then after about 2 months, fasting and pp readings came down quite dramatically. Long story short, her HbA1c went from 8,2 in december 2013, to 5,8 a few days ago. I assure you, the only thing she changed was adding RS.
She has now embarked on the Taylor approach. I am very curious if she will accomplish unassisted normoglycaemia after 30 years of type 2. It would be quite revolutionary.
[...]
Before she started the RS intervention, she injected 55 units of Lantus (long acting insulin) once a day. Over the last half year she had to gradually decrease her bolus and is now on 43 units/day.
She tracks her ketones with a ketone meter (plasma) and has been in ketosis more or less constantly since she started very low carb some years ago. First she saw the expected (dramatic) glycaemic improvement, but, as I said, much to her frustration her blood glucoses and A1c's started creeping up after a while. Nothing worked to get a better grip on it, so she is over happy with this apparantly succesful hack.
My feeling is that she has a massively insulin resistant liver and that the ectopic fat which causes this is very stubborn. RS is converted in the colon to butyrate, acetate and propionate. These SCFA's induce enterocytic gluconeogenesis, which in some paradoxical turn puts a brake on hepatic glucose output. Don't ask me how this works, maybe Peter would like to elucidate us .
She is still making some c-peptide (0,31 fasting). Let's assume that her liver and pancreas indeed contain too much fat and that this is indeed causal to her inability to achieve unassisted normoglycaemia. Will the 600 kcal/day Taylor approach be able to get this stubborn surplus moving (and if so, why didn't her very low carb regimen accomplish this)? Will this then be enough to spark more life into the remaining beta cells, as Taylor predicts?
If she persists we will have an answer in August...
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Peter, my rudimentary 'explanation' is that RS can shift an LPS-spewing and thus diabetogenic microbiome into a non or less toxic one. It's interesting that this woman became very ill prior to the onset of glycaemic improvement. She reported all the symptoms of sepsis and I'm afraid that my 'suggestion' almost killed her. After that episode (a battle between 'good' and 'bad' bacteria?) things started to move into he right direction.
If there is some truth to my speculation, we must conclude that very low carb is sometimes not enough to starve and replace a toxic/diabetogenic microbiome.
Sorry about that @anne_likes_red@adreno I've had no problem with homemade crabapple pectin in the past - difficult to define a dose there sorry!
Citrus....same sorry...don't roll your eyes hard to define because I was eating whole organic orange. And I mean whole. LOL.
1/4 orange --> fever for 3 days. Repeated many times.
Well that's something I hadn't considered. More investigating due I think...Sorry about that @anne_likes_red
I wonder if this reaction is not due to candidiasis. It is widely agreed that citrus fruit are to be avoided when trying to reduce Candida. Maybe nothing to do with pectin itself.
I now suspect a broken microbiome is probably one of the few things that is almost completely fixable for the majority of people. The biggest barriers are probably self-education and time. That is, some may not want to or be able to make the time to self-educate or make the time commitment necessary to work through all the side effects and then to keep the gut functioning optimally. Straightening out the gut, and then keeping it straight isn't something you can work on for a month or six months or two years and then quit. It's for life.Your story reminds me a bit of another anecdote of endotoxemia followed by massive improvement in metabolic disease I read a while back in the comment section of Hyperlipid's blog. Stuff like this, as well as my own personal experiences with various prebiotics, have convinced me that the microbiome is key. How to fix it and whether it is fixable is a lot less clear, though.