Posts Tagged ‘scd’

What Does Healthy Poop Look Like?

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Yes, I’m going to talk about poop. Come, sit, make yourself at home. It’s unfortunate that in western society, talking about things like sex and shit is often taboo. But when you have Crohn’s disease, it’s very important to observe your poop carefully for signs of health.

Before I got my Crohn’s in remission through natural diet and supplements, my poop looked nasty. Very loose, pale brown and floating along with globs of what looked like mucous, but later I learned it was fat deposits that weren’t being absorbed by my gut. This was the sight of my stool for so long that I began to accept it as “normal” and that there wasn’t anything I could do about it.

But when I switched to a new diet, the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, within 24hrs I had my first solid stool in years. Even so, it was years before I really researched and taught myself what healthy stool looks like. It’s rather simple. First, here’s what unhealthy stool looks like,

  • Loose, no formed solids
  • Pale color
  • Floating
  • Additional deposits (blood, mucous, fat)
  • Bad smell

In contrast, here’s what healthy poop looks like

  • Solid, smooth and log like
  • Nice chocolate brown color
  • Sinks to the bottom of the toilet bowl
  • Nothing else, no blood, mucous or fat
  • No smell

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Stool_Scale

When you have an inflammatory bowel disease, you need to constantly monitor your bowels for signs of health. You could have colonoscopies, CT scans and other very expensive and harmful tests, and those are OK every few years or in an emergency. But in between, looking at your own stool for the signs above is your best option.

If you see that your stool is unhealthy, it means you are eating the wrong kinds of food. Forget about drugs. They are not the answer, in fact they tend to cause more problems than solve.

The kinds of food you should try eating are like those recommended by the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. Starting with their chicken soup recipe is safe because after making the soup with carrots, celery, chicken (w/skin and bones), parsley and onions, you only drink the broth and pureed carrots. The rest is thrown out because when you are starting the diet your gut is not strong enough to digest them. But keep up with it, and soon, it will.

A few months ago, I made the soup and ate everything, chicken (without the skin), carrot, onion, parsley and broth. It was like eating spinach, I felt superhuman amounts of energy. The nutritional concentration was fantastic. When cooled in the refrigerator the broth turned into a solid gelatin substance. I even ate it cold and it was damn good. Just like a cold pizza. In fact, this chicken soup recipe is the SCD version of pizza because it has a lot of healthy ingredients packed into one meal and can be eaten either hot or cold.

In my own experience, following the diet from “Breaking the Vicious Cycle” stopped the inflammation in my gut and returned my stool to a solid, healthy form. I highly recommend people with Crohn’s or Colitis take a long, serious look at the diet because I believe it can help keep Crohn’s in remission, but it does take a lot of hard work, patience and discipline.

© 2010, Reid Bryant Kimball. All rights reserved.

Strawberries, Bowel Obstructions and Glutamine

Monday, May 31st, 2010

That’s an odd title for a blog post, “Strawberries, Bowel Obstructions and Glutamine”, isn’t it? Not if you have Crohn’s disease, like I do. I want to share with you something awesome that has happened, but first, we need some background story to gain perspective on why it’s so awesome.

In December of 2004 I started a whole food, all natural diet called the Specific Carbohydrate Diet to help manage my Crohn’s disease flares. Within 24 hours I saw the first solid stool I had seen since winter of 1997, when it all began.

I was convinced this diet was the answer to regaining control of my health and my life. By 2007, I was medication free and in remission, confirmed with a colonoscopy. Not long after, I started having bowel obstructions so bad that I felt nauseous. I felt pain in my gut, like a 500lbs weight was concentrated on a pin-head point below my belly button. It kept me rolling in my bed for hours in the early mornings, 3 – 5am or longer on occasion.

I figured out that it was because of strawberries. The seeds of the strawberries I guessed were getting stuck in my intestines, causing blockages and a lot of pain. This wasn’t necessarily a bad thing!

What it meant was that Crohn’s was definitely in remission. When Crohn’s is in remission, there is no inflammation of the intestinal walls. Once inflammation stops, the once inflamed tissue becomes scar tissue, which narrows the passages of the intestines. Stopping the inflammation is key as it stops diarrhea and as long as future inflammation is prevented, no more strictures and therefore narrowing of the intestines should occur, or so I thought. At that point in 2007 or early 2008, I decided to stop eating strawberries and to never try them ever again.

With Crohn’s, there can be long periods, many months of no issues and then suddenly it all comes crashing down. In 2009, unfortunately, I was getting more bowel obstruction pain, this time from foods like pepper and carrots.

I told my doctor, this time a naturopath that I was becoming concerned that the strictures were limiting the range of foods I could eat without having bowel obstructions. I was worried that eventually, I would need surgery. That’s the last thing I wanted to do.

My naturopath recommended I start taking a supplement called Glutamine (aka L-Glutamine). She told me in plain English that Glutamine is the main fuel for the cells of the intestine’s walls and it promoted healthy cell growth. In other words, it may help repair damaged intestinal walls.

I gave the Glutamine a shot, had no adverse side effects, which is common and kept up with it for I’m guessing 6 months before I started adding food back in. I added carrots and found I had no gut pain! I never tried the pepper again but will soon. Instead, a few nights ago I decided to try having one single strawberry before dinner. If I had any problems, I figured I would know within 24hrs.

To my surprise, I felt completely normal. No gut pains at all and also had several solid bowel movements. I gave my gut a break the next night and on the third night I decided to have two strawberries. I woke up this morning, ecstatic because I realized I did not have any gut pain. No bowel obstructions. I also have had several solid bowel movements since waking, telling me that my bowels are moving fine through my intestines.

I believe this is evidence that Glutamine has REVERSED any narrowing of my intestines due to strictures. That is without a doubt, wicked awesome!

I know how horrible living with an IBD can be. I’ve got an intensive regimen that has kept me in remission and healing. I recommend that anyone with a Crohn’s or Colitis switch to a diet like the Specific Carbohydrate Diet or similar and Glutamine.

© 2010, Reid Bryant Kimball. All rights reserved.