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Food Allergy treatment & Crohn's ?

Question:
I am hoping to hear from anyone out there who has attempted treatment of Crohn's disease through food allergy diagnoses. Please share your thoughts and experiences. Also, if any medical people have any comments, I would love to hear from them.


Answer:
Perhaps this is not what you are looking for but I can tell you of my own experiences. I was diagnosed almost 13 years ago and received non steroid treatment for almost 5 years. I was doing well but not great. Then I decided that a lot of my trouble had to deal with what I was eating as opposed to the chronic inflammation. So, I began a careful daily record of what I ate and how I felt during the hours and sometimes days later. Within a year, I had come off my meds and was gaining weight that I thought I would never have again. Since then I have returned to my pre Crohns weight and am in remission, med free. I have learned that there are certain foods I cannot eat at all, certain foods I can eat sparingly and certain foods that I can eat in strange amounts. For example, I cannot touch roughage like cabbage or whole wheats. I can eat lettuce, small amounts but not every day, only every other day. I can eat half a grapefruit every other day. I can eat a whole orange if I remove the thin layer of tissue from each segment. I can eat grapes galore without the skin, but only tiny amounts with. I can eat Kentucky Fried extra tender and crispy but not regular. I cannot eat peanuts, only small amounts of peanut butter but all the cashews I want. I cannot eat real licorice flavoring of any kind, but synthetic licorice flavour is not a problem in any amount. Although sometimes the symptoms are similar, Crohn's Disease is not the same as a food allergy. If you have had proper diagnosis of your condition as Crohn's Disease then treatments meant to "cure" food allergies will NOT cure your Crohn's. If you are considering abandoning conventional treatment for Crohn's I strongly urge you to see a gastro Dr. first. I agree. I have UC and went to an allergist and got a food allergy test. It takes the guesswork out of what foods you are allergic to. It is done the same as any allergy test w/ "pinpricks" of about 120 common foods and food molds on your back and arms. I found that my most severe food allergy was to barley. These tests work because if you show a red mark after injection on your skin, this is what it does to your insides as well. Your musousal tissue protects you some in your intestines, but people with Crhon's and UC usually have breaks or a thinning layer. This allows food particles to enter the blood and aggrevate and/or cause food allergies. The treatment I recieve is a side-effect free drug called Gastrocrom that is not absorbed into the system. It merely coats your intestines and keeps allergies from starting. It is the same drug found in the over-the -counter drug for nasal allergies called Nasalcrom. It is in plastic vials (4 times a day before meals and at night) and is a water like liquid w/ no taste. The chemical name for it is cromylin disodium. It was tested for it's merits on UC alone (seperate for it's function as an allergy preventor) and found to be somewhat effective. You must have a prescription for this drug.



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