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NUTRITIONAL MEDICINE AND GASTROINTESTINAL PATHOLOGY Leo Galland, M.D. Foundation for Integrated Medicine www.mdheal.org Foundation for Integrated Medicine WHY SPEND A HALF DAY TALKING ABOUT THE GUT? • The small bowel is where digestion and absorption of nutrients occurs • The food we eat creates the intestinal microenvironment • The intestinal microenvironment has an important influence on the pathophysiology of many different diseases • Diets don’t treat diseases, they treat patients Foundation for Integrated Medicine BEYOND DIGESTION • The gut is a sensory organ. Protozoa know their environments by ingestion. • The gut is a neuroendocrine organ. Every neurotransmitter found in the brain is also found here. • The gut has a brain of its own, an intact and independent nervous system. • The gut is the largest organ of immune function in the body; 70% of our lymphocytes live here. Foundation for Integrated Medicine BEYOND DIGESTION • The gut contents are an inner world that is “outside” the cellular body. Its surface is a frontier with an area 100 meters square and a thickness of one cell • Gut flora are an organ that contains as many microbial cells as the cellular body has mammalian cells (100 trillion) -Over 500 species -Over 90% are anaerobic Foundation for Integrated Medicine BEYOND DIGESTION • The normal intestinal microflora constitute a huge chemical factory that alters our food and our GI secretions • The normal intestinal microflora present our immune systems with a mass of antigens that are partially absorbed Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Intestinal dysbiosis, altered permeability, food intolerance and detoxification are interconnected parts of the same puzzle Foundation for Integrated Medicine MUCOSAL BACTERIA ARE USUALLY NOT ISOLATED FROM STOOL • Colon: Anaerobic spirochetes, fusiform bacteria • Ileum: Coccobacilli • Stomach: Lactobacilli, yeasts • Oral: Anaerobes (Corynebacteria, Actinomyces, Bacteroides, Spirochaetes, Fusobacteria and Aerobes: Streptococcus and Lactobacillus) Foundation for Integrated Medicine COMPOSITION OF NORMAL STOOL FLORA Eubacterium, 26 spp Bacteroides, 20 spp Bifidobacterium, 8 spp Peptostreptoccus Fusobacterium, 5 spp Ruminoccus, 11 spp Lactobacillus, 7 spp Streptococci Clostridia Enterobacteriacae Foundation for Integrated Medicine 25.5% 22.6% 11.5% 8.9% 7.7% 4.5% 2.4% 1.6% 0.6% 0.5% BENEFITS OF NORMAL GUT FLORA • • • • • Synthesize vitamins Synthesize short chain fatty acids Metabolize xenobiotics/toxins Prevent colonization by pathogens Stimulate normal immune system maturation • Convert dietary flavonoids to active aglycones Foundation for Integrated Medicine NUTRIENTS SYNTHESIZED BY NORMAL GUT FLORA • • • • • • • • • Biotin Cobalamin Folic acid Pantothenic acid Pyridoxine Riboflavin Vitamin K Butyric acid Amino acids Foundation for Integrated Medicine GUT MICROBIAL DETOXIFICATION • Demethylate methylmercury • Degrade N-nitrosamines • Degrade polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons • Degrade aflatoxin B1 (limited) • Hydrolyze guanidinosuccinic acid Foundation for Integrated Medicine IMMUNOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF NORMAL GI MICROFLORA • Stimulate RES activity • Increase number of immunocompetent cells • Increase immunoglobulin synthesis • Increase complement levels • May stimulate dysfunctional immune responses Foundation for Integrated Medicine HOW NORMAL GI FLORA PROTECTS AGAINST GI PATHOGENS • • • • • • • Synthesis of short chain fatty acids Synthesis of antibiotics Competition for nutrients Induction of a low re-dox potential Deconjugation of bile acids Blockage of adherance receptors Degradation of bacterial toxins Foundation for Integrated Medicine POTENTIAL ADVERSE EFFECTS OF NORMAL GUT FLORA • Deactivate trypsin, chymotrypsin and intestinal disaccharidases, producing maldigestion • Produce ammonia • Consume Vitamin B12 • Deconjugate bile salts Foundation for Integrated Medicine POTENTIAL ADVERSE EFFECTS OF NORMAL GUT FLORA (continued) • Increase enterohepatic recirculation of estrogens • Activate pro-carcinogens • Stimulate dysfunctional immune responses Foundation for Integrated Medicine BACTERIAL ENZYMES OF TOXICOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE TO THE HOST ENZYME SAMPLE SUBSTRATE EFFECT B-glucosidase Cycasin amydgalin Tumor promotion B-glucuronidase Glucuronidides Recirculate estrogen, methemoglobin Nitrate reductase Nitrate Nitrite production Nitroreductase Nitrobenzene Tumor induction by nitrosamines Azo reductase Brown FK Vacuolar myopathy Urease Urea Ammonia toxicity Methylmercury demethylase Methylmercury Reduction in neurotoxicity Foundation for Integrated Medicine TOXIC METABOLITES OF GI FLORA • Ammonia from hydrolysis of urea • Amines from amino acid decarboxylation • Phenols from dietary tryptophan • Secondary bile acids • Recycled estrogens • Nitrites from nitrates • N-nitrosamines from nitrates/nitrites Foundation for Integrated Medicine AMMONIA • Produced by urease from urea in gut – Klebsiella, Proteus, Bacteroides, Bifidobacteria • Inhibits oxidative metabolism in brain • Reduced by low protein diets, by substituting dairy for meat (flora changes) • Low colonic pH reverses absorption • Rapid transit inhibits absorption Foundation for Integrated Medicine AMINES PRODUCED BY GI FLORA • Inactivated by hepatic MAO – tyramine – octopamine – histamine – cadaverine – putrespecine – Piperidine Foundation for Integrated Medicine NITROSAMINES • From nitrates/nitrites & secondary amines • lecithin, choline dimethylamine – lysine piperidine – arginine pyrrolidine • Water, vegetables, cured meats, cheese may contain nitrates, absorbed in jejunum • Hypochlorhydria increases formation Foundation for Integrated Medicine BILIARY STEROID METABOLISM BY GI MICROFLORA • chenodeoxycholate lithocholate • cholic acid deoxycholic(DCA) -DCA in feces correlates with colon cancer incidence -DCA may 20-CH3-cholanthrene • Deconjugation of bile salts Foundation for Integrated Medicine ESTROGEN METABOLISM AND GI MICROFLORA • conjugation • deconjugation biliary excretion increased entero-hepatic recirculation – increased blood and urine estrogen – Western diet: higher plasma estrogen, lower stool estrogen Foundation for Integrated Medicine TRYPTOPHAN METABOLISM BY GI MICROFLORA • tryptophanase indole, absorbed by colon mucosa, potential carcinogen • GI flora quinaldic acid, 8-OH quinaldic: bladder carcinogens • Aerobes: E. Coli, Proteus spp • Anaerobes: Bacteroides fragilis, ss. Thetaiotamicron (increased with stress) Foundation for Integrated Medicine PRODUCTS OF MICROBIAL CHO FERMENTATION IN GUT • • • • • • SCFAs Propanol Acetaldehyde Formic acid CO2 Butylene glycol • • • • • Ethanol Butanol D-lactic acid Hydrogen Acetone Foundation for Integrated Medicine EFFECTS OF SHORT CHAIN FATTY ACIDS • Butyrate: anti-neoplastic, reduces growth of human cancer cells • Propionate: inhibits gluconeogenesis • Acetate: stimulates salt and water absorption • All: anti-bacterial, anti-fungal – lower pH = reduced DCA and less NH4 absorption – stimulate growth of mucosal cells Foundation for Integrated Medicine FACTORS AFFECTING GI FLORA • GI secretions: type, volume, content – Enzymes, cells, mucus, pH, re-dox • Diet – Fiber, fat, protein, CHO • Motility and transit time • Host immunity • Emotional distress Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIETARY EFFECTS ON GI FLORA • High Fat: Bacteroides up, Lactobacilli and Enterococci down • Vegetarian: anaerobes down • Cellulose: lower yeasts, Staph, Proteus and Clostridia; also total bacterial count and levels of bacterial enzymes Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIETARY EFFECTS ON GI FLORA (continued) • Galactomannans (guar gum & locust bean gum), carboxymethylcellulose: increase bacterial bio-mass and enzyme levels • Unrefined CHO vs refined: increase bacterial content of ileostomy fluid • Wheat bran: reduces methylmercury toxicity by increasing demethylation by GI flora Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIETARY EFFECTS ON GI FLORA (continued) • D-glucaric acid inhibits Bglucuronidase; found in crucifers, citrus, cherry and human urine • Low fiber diets increase bacterial translocation • Pectins with high methoxy content: increase nitroreductase activity; may increase B-glucuronidase Foundation for Integrated Medicine SUMMARY OF DIET AND GI FLORA • High meat diets induce enzymes that may promote carcinogenesis and the formation of indoles and ammonia • High soluble fiber and complex carbohydrate increases fermentation • Insoluble fiber decreases carcinogenic enzyme concentrations • Phytochemicals may inhibit bacterial enzymes Foundation for Integrated Medicine STRESS AND GI MICROFLORA • ACTH injection increases jejunal E. coli • Cosmonauts lose Bifidobacteria and Lactobacillus before take-off • Fear and anger selectively increase Bacteroides fragilis spp, Thetaiotamicron; this increases colonic tryptophanase, which increases skatole and indole production on high meat diets Foundation for Integrated Medicine DYSBIOSIS IS ECOLOGIC IMBALANCE Disease or dysfunction produced by the interaction between the host and its “normal” flora, organisms of low intrinsic virulence. Foundation for Integrated Medicine DYSBIOSIS-ASSOCIATED DISEASES • Cancer: colon/breast • Inflammatory bowel disease • Irritable bowel syndrome • Chronic fatigue syndromes • Rheumatoid arthritis • Spondyloarthropathies • • • • Acne Psoriasis Eczema Food allergy/intolerance • Malabsorption syndromes Foundation for Integrated Medicine DYSBIOSIS CAUSES DISEASE BY TWO MECHANISMS • Microbial enzymes act upon intestinal contents to produce noxious substances • Microbial components stimulate dysfunctional immune responses Foundation for Integrated Medicine GI MICROFLORA AND COLON CANCER • Large bowel cancer is associated with high fat, high protein, low fiber diets • This effect is in part mediated by bacterial enzymes induced by the nature of the diet, the substrates supplied for these enzymes and the carcinogenic products of enzyme activation Foundation for Integrated Medicine GI MICROFLORA AND COLON CANCER • Incidence proportional to DCA excretion – inversely proportional to Lactobacillus concentration • Vegetarians have less cancer and lower bacterial enzymes in stool: Betaglucuronidase, nitro-reductase, 7-alphadehydroxylase; – Lactobacilli lower these when fed to omnivores and prevent colon cancer in rats given dimethylhydrazine Foundation for Integrated Medicine GI MICROFLORA AND COLON CANCER (continued) • High meat diets increase indole and skatole in stool: inducing bacterial tryptophanase • Human fecal mutagen (FCM), a vinyl ether of propanediol, is associated with a Western diet. Requires bile and low oxygen. Produced by 5 Bacteroides spp • High protein diets high GI ammonia and high fecal pH. This increases fecal LCFA and bile acid solubility Foundation for Integrated Medicine GI MICROFLORA AND COLON CANCER (continued) • High CHO/fiber diets high SCFA and low fecal pH. This decreases fecal LCFA and bile acid solubility Dietary Ca also renders LCFA insoluble Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIETARY PREVENTION OF COLONIC DYSBIOSIS • • • • • Plant-based, high fiber diet Fermented foods, Lactobacilli Crucifers, flavonoid-rich vegetables & fruits Vegetable cellulose, an insoluble fiber Colostrum, a source of lactoferrins -Lactoferrins bind iron, inhibiting the growth of all bacterial species except lactic acid producers Foundation for Integrated Medicine SMALL BOWEL BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH • produces a different pattern of dysbiosis, associated with carbohydrate/fiber intolerance, bloating, altered bowel habit, fatigue and maldigestion Foundation for Integrated Medicine CAUSES OF UPPER GI BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH • Achlorhydria/hypochlorhydria • Surgical resection/blind loops • Stasis from abnormal motility • Strictures • • • • Fistulas Diverticulosis Immune deficiency Intestinal giardiasis • Tropical sprue • Malnutrition Foundation for Integrated Medicine EFFECTS OF UPPER GI BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH • Vitamin B12 deficiency • Bile salt dehydroxylation – Impairs formation of micelles • Formation of hydroxy fatty acids • Bile salt deconjugation – Increase colonic water secretion – Inhibit monosacchardide transport Foundation for Integrated Medicine EFFECTS OF UPPER GI BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH (continued) • Inhibition of folate conjugases • Increased fecal nitrogen, hypoalbumenia • Bacterial degradation of CHO • Villi: blunted and broadened • Lamina propria: increased mononunuclear cells Foundation for Integrated Medicine EFFECTS OF UPPER GI BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH (continued) • Mucosal damage by bacterial enzymes – Loss of brush border • Endotoxemia/antigenemia • Liver damage • Joint disease Foundation for Integrated Medicine BREATH TESTING FOR BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH • FALSE POSITIVES – Smoking, sleeping, eating – Soluble fiber/FOS – Rapid intestinal transit • FALSE NEGATIVES – Colonic hyperacidity (low stool pH) – Absence of appropriate flora – Delayed gastric emptying – Antibiotics Foundation for Integrated Medicine BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH IS MORE COMMON THAN SUSPECTED • 202 patients with IBS underwent hydrogen breath testing • 157 (78%) had SBBO and were treated with antibiotics • 25/47 patients had normal breath tests at follow-up • Diarrhea and abdominal pain were significantly improved by treatment Foundation for Integrated Medicine SBBO AND IBS: CONCLUSIONS Elimination of SBBO eliminated IBS in 12/25 of patients: 48 % of patients with IBS and abnormal breath tests who responded to antibiotics with normal breath tests no longer met Rome criteria for IBS Pimentel M et al, AM J Gastroenterol 2000 Foundation for Integrated Medicine MANAGEMENT OF UGI BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH INVOLVES DIET, ANTIBIOTICS • Low fermentation diet -restrict sugar, starch, soluble fiber • Antimicrobials (in select cases): – Metronidazole (anaerobes) – Tetracyclines (anaerobes) – Ciprofloxacin (aerobes) – Bismuth – Bentonite Foundation for Integrated Medicine Low Fermentation Diet • Basic diet: no wheat, sucrose, lactose • Additional restrictions -no glutinous grains -no cereal grains, potatoes -restrict fruits, juices, honey -avoid legumes -cook all vegetables Foundation for Integrated Medicine IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME IS ASSOCIATED WITH SPECIFIC FOOD INTOLERANCE • Specific food intolerance, present in 48% of patients with diarrhea and pain, is associated with unstable fecal flora, high aerobe:anaerobe ratios and high stool PGE2 levels Alun Jones et al, Lancet, 1982 Foundation for Integrated Medicine The Addenbrooke’s Hospital Exclusion Diet for IBS • 1-2 meats: lamb, turkey, fish, chicken, beef • 1 fruit: pears, pineapple, banana, apple • Rice, water Commonest diet was lamb, pears, rice Foundation for Integrated Medicine Outcome of Exclusion Diet in 182 IBS Patients • No improvement after 7 days: 38 (21%) • Improved after 7 days: 144 (79%) -Provoking foods identified, established dietary control of IBS: 122 (67%) -Intolerant of one food 5% -Intolerant of 2-5 foods 28% -Intolerant of 6-10 foods 35% -Intolerant of > 10 foods 32% Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foods Provoking IBS • • • • • • • • Wheat Milk Corn Cheese Oats Coffee Rye30% Eggs 60% 44% 44% 39% 34% 33% 26% • • • • • • • • Tea Butter Yogurt Citrus Barley Chocolate Nuts Preservatives Foundation for Integrated Medicine 25% 25% 24% 24% 24% 22% 22% 20% Foods Provoking IBS • • • • • • • • Potatoes 20% Cabbage 19% Sprouts 18% Peas 17% Beef 16% Carrots 15% Lettuce 15% Rice 15% • • • • • • • • Pork Broccoli Soy Chicken Spinach Yeast Lamb Sugar Foundation for Integrated Medicine 14% 14% 13% 13% 13% 12% 11% 12% Food Intolerance in IBS Is not Associated with Atopy • Only 10% of patients were atopic • 40% could relate onset of symptoms to: -A course of antibiotics (11%) -A bout of gastroenteritis (12%) -Abdominal or pelvic surgery (15%) • Unstable fecal flora was common Hunter et al,Topics in Gastroenterology, 1985 Foundation for Integrated Medicine IBS with Food Intolerance Is Associated with Excess Fermentation, Corrected by Diet • 6 patients, 6 controls, whole body chamber • Total body hydrogen production greater with IBS, fell with exclusion diet. (No grains except rice, no dairy or beef, restrict yeast, citrus, caffeine, tap water) King et al, Lancet 352: 1187-1189 (1998) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine IMMUNE SENSITIZATION AND DYSBIOSIS • Immune responses to intestinal microorganisms may provoke inflammatory and auto-immune disorders • Specific: bacterial antigens mimic autoantigens • Non-specific: polyclonal activation, RES hyperstimulation, APC activation Foundation for Integrated Medicine MOLECULAR MIMICRY (Cross Reactivity) MECHANISM • Microbes colonize positive individuals • Cross-reactivity with bacterial antigens leads to secondary immune damage • Antibodies against microbes bind to cells carrying HLA antigens • Increased cytotoxic damage • Inflammation from complement or cytokine cascades INTESTINAL INFLAMMATION AND SPONDYLOARTHOPATHIES • sIgA is increased in AS (suggest enteritis) • Sub-clinical ileitis occurs in many pts with primary spondyloarthropathies • 10-20% of IBD patients get AS • Bowel infections often precede reactive arthritis • Silent carriage of Salmonella can precipitate reactive arthritis Foundation for Integrated Medicine KLEBSIELLA AND ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS (AS) MOLECULAR MIMICRY • Klebsiella antigens cross-react with HLA-B27 • Initiates inflammatory cascade – Leads to reactive arthritis Foundation for Integrated Medicine KLEBSIELLA AND ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS (AS) (continued) THE EBRINGER RESEARCH • 96% of AS patients have HLA-B27 gene • Many AS patients grow Klebsiella on stool culture • AS pts have higher serum IgA against Klebsiella than controls Foundation for Integrated Medicine Nutritional Therapy for Ankylosing Spondylitis • A diet free of grains and disaccharides reduced levels of Klebsiella in stool, lowered the level of anti-Klebsiella IgA and improved the symptoms of patients with AS Ebringer, Balliere’s Clin Rheumatol, 1989 Foundation for Integrated Medicine VS, 41 year old male event planner with hip, knee and back pain and fatigue • Prior history: chronic rhinitis, hypercholesterolemia, Lyme disease 1993 and 1994, hypothyroidism 1994 • Past several years: persistent tightness in back, persistent pain in calves,hips, knees, poor response to physical therapy, fluctuating fatigue, poor sleep, dizziness, alternating constipation and diarrhea. • Food: single, lives alone,eats out all the time, sweets. • Family history: Crohn’s disease, hyperlipidemia, hypertension. Mother had been ill with ASVD and breast cancer most of his life. Foundation for Integrated Medicine VS, 41 year old male event planner with hip, knee and back pain and fatigue • Physical exam: -Nodular thyroid -Decreased range of motion of hips and LS spine, diminished straight leg raising bilaterally, no joint tenderness, scattered tender points of lower extremities • Lab: - HLA B27 + -ANA + 1:40 speckled -Normal X-rays of SI joints, spine -E. histolytica in stool Foundation for Integrated Medicine VS, 41 year old male event planner with hip, knee and back pain and fatigue • Treatment: -Ebringer diet (eliminate grains, sucrose, lactose) -Doxycycline, paromomycin • Initial response: - “I can’t prepare my own food.” - Hip and knee pain markedly improved. - Lost 20 lbs. • Further response: - “My friends can’t believe that I’m cooking for myself.” - “My friends can’t believe how good I look.” - “My physical therapist can’t believe how flexible I am.” - 90% pain-free, modifies diet to his life style. Foundation for Integrated Medicine PROTEUS AND RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS (RA) • Frequency of HLA-DR4 in RA patients: 50 to 75%. Those without HLA-DR4 usually have DR-4 + mothers. – Controls: 20% HLA-DR4 positive • RA patients often have elevated serum IgG titers to Proteus spp that crossreact with HLA-DR4 Foundation for Integrated Medicine Proteus, RA and Diet • RA patients in England, Spain and Norway have higher anti-Proteus IgG than controls • Anti-Proteus IgG correlates with disease activity and C-reactive protein levels • Fasting, followed by a one year gluten-free vegan diet improves symptoms and indices of disease activity, only in patients whose Proteus antibodies decrease and who show a change in fecal bacterial fatty acid profiles. E coli antibodies are not affected Foundation for Integrated Medicine SKIN DISEASES AND THE GI FLORA • Cystic acne: endotoxemia • Atopic eczema: dramatic reduction of Lactobacilli, Bifidobacteria, Enterococci; increased Candida, Clostridia, Staph aureus, Proteus, Klebsiella, atypical coliforms • Psoriasis, scalp seborrhea: intestinal yeasts Foundation for Integrated Medicine DYSBIOSIS MAY INVOLVE YEASTS AND PROTOZOA • Yeasts are normal inhabitants of the alimentary canal and are glucose fermenters • Yeasts are powerful chemical factories • Yeasts are highly antigenic -90% of people have type 4 immunity -10% of people have type 1 immunity -type 3 immunity was found in asthmatics • Yeast polysaccharides exert immune activating (zymosan) and immune suppressing (mannan) activity Foundation for Integrated Medicine GUT FERMENTATION AND YEAST • (Hunnisett et al, J Nutr Med 1990) • 61% of chronically ill polysymptomatic patients developed measurable ethanol in blood after ingesting 6 gm glucose • Mean rise of 2.5 mg/dl, range from 1 to 7 Foundation for Integrated Medicine TREATMENT RESULTS SUGGEST YEAST AS A CAUSE OF FERMENTATION AND SYMPTOMS • Low sugar diet cleared 42% • Diet + nystatin cleared 86% – 116/149 clinically better • Diet + tetracycline cleared 21%, worsened 35% – 2/22 clinically better Foundation for Integrated Medicine AS, 31 year old woman with angioedema • Prior: Recurrent yeast vaginitis, SAR • 1999: OCP for one year, tetracycline for acne for one month edema of face, feet, fingers, hives. Oral steroids. • 2000-2001: edema, urticaria, fatigue, brain fog—50% of time. Antihistamines ineffective. Diuretics prn. Allergy evaluation: neg. • Self-started a yeast elimination diet: “less moody, a bit less swollen”. Foundation for Integrated Medicine AS, 31 year old woman with angioedema • Physical exam: mild acne with scarring, peri-orbital swelling, angioedema of left palm, distended abdomen with LLQ tenderness, normal genitalia • Intradermal C. albicans antigen: marked delayed reaction, starting after 6 hours, lasting for several days with diffuse erythema, edema and tenderness of forearm, healing with scaling of skin • Lab: impaired lymphocyte proliferative response to C. albicans (1.2, ref>3), low plasma zinc (597 mcg.dL, ref 600-1300), borderline retinol 39 mcg/dL (ref 38106) Foundation for Integrated Medicine AS, 31 year old woman with angioedema • Treatment: – – – – – Continue diet Zinc 25 mg/day Vitamin A 10,000 IU/day Lactobacillus plantarum 10 billion units/day Nystatin 3 million units p.o. tid. • Initial response was more swelling, lip edema • Raised dose to 13 million units/day diuresis, followed by clearing of edema and increased energy Foundation for Integrated Medicine NOMENCLATURE • • • • • • • • CHRONIC CANDIDIASIS CANDIDA SENSITIZATION SYNDROME POLYSYSTEMIC CHRONIC CANDIDIASIS YEAST SYNDROME YEAST PROBLEM YEAST DISEASE CANDIDA “THIS PROBLEM” CANDIDA-RELATED COMPLEX (CRC) Foundation for Integrated Medicine CRC: SYMPTOMS • • • • • • • • MUCOSAL INFECTION FATIGUE DEPRESSION PMS G.I. DISTURBANCES POOR CONCENTRATION/MEMORY ALLERGIC REACTIONS ORGAN SPECIFIC SKIN RASH, ECZEMA, URTICARIA HEADACHE OTHER Foundation for Integrated Medicine INTESTINAL YEASTS MAY CAUSE SYMPTOMS BY 3 MECHANISMS • Tissue invasion (oral, esophageal, intestinal thrush) • Fermentation of sugars (production of ethanol, arabinitol and other toxins) • Sensitization (asthma, urticaria, allergic vaginitis, IBS, Crohn’s disease, psoriasis). Cross-sensitization with food yeast may occur Foundation for Integrated Medicine CRC IS RELATED TO THE HOSTYEAST INTERACTION • Rectal cultures of patients who respond to anti-fungal drugs are less likely to grow yeasts than those of a normal population • These patients produce mucosal factors that are abnormally active at inhibiting yeast growth Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine COMPARISON STUDY 87 PATIENTS: 42 CRC+/45 CRCPOSITIVE RECTAL YEAST CULTURE (41) 10 CRC+/31CRCNEGATIVE RECTAL YEAST CULTURE (46) 32 CRC+/14 CRCPOSITIVE SMEAR (37) 32 CRC+/5 CRCNEGATIVE SMEAR (9) 0 CRC+/9CRCFoundation for Integrated Medicine CRC: RETROSPECTIVE STUDY YEAST SEEN IN RECTAL SWABS PRE-TREATMENT SMEAR (CALFLOR STAIN) 0-trace 0 + 4 ++/+++ 36 POST-TREATMENT SMEAR (CALFLOR STAIN) 0-trace 28 + 0 ++/+++ 3 Foundation for Integrated Medicine CRC: RETROSPECTIVE STUDY MICROBIOLOGY OF RECTAL SWABS PRE-TREATMENT CULTURES (BIGGY AGAR) POSITIVE 11 NEGATIVE 32 31 PATIENTS WITH CRC HAD A RECTAL SMEAR THAT WAS ++/+++ AND A SIMULTANEOUS RECTAL CULTURE THAT WAS NEGATIVE (78% OF TOTAL WITH PRETREATMENT SMEARS & CULTURES) Foundation for Integrated Medicine • Patients with CRC who had strongly positive rectal mucus smears and negative rectal cultures had something in their mucus that inhibited the growth of Candida albicans in culture Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine TREATMENT OF YEAST DYSBIOSIS INVOLVES DIET AND MEDICATION • Sugar restriction • Avoidance of dietary yeasts (fermented foods, dried fruits, fruit juices, bread) • Anti-fungal medication (may provoke a Herxheimer-type response before symptoms improve) • Restoration of normal bacterial flora with probiotic supplements Foundation for Integrated Medicine THE SPECTRUM OF DISEASE INDUCED BY INTESTINAL PARASITES • • • • • • • • • • Diarrhea, dysentery, enteritis, colitis “Non-specific” chronic GI complaints UGI bacterial overgrowth Extra-intestinal tissue invasion Malabsorption syndrome Immune supression Allergy (urticaria, atopic reactivity) Food intolerance Fatigue Rheumatologic syndromes Foundation for Integrated Medicine MECHANISM OF SYSTEMIC EFFECTS OF INTESTINAL PARASITES • Increased intestinal permeability • Immune sensitization/suppression • Malabsorption Foundation for Integrated Medicine PARASITIC RHEUMATISM • • • • • • • Inflammatory arthropathy Elevated ESR Inconsistent eosinophilia Inefficacy of anti-inflammatory drugs Demonstration of parasitic infection Prompt response to anti-parasitic treatment Immune complex formation Foundation for Integrated Medicine INTESTINAL PARASITES CAUSING PARASITIC RHEUMATISM • • • • • • • Giardia lamblia Entamoeba histolytica Endolimax nana Taenia Saginata Schiostosoma mansoni Ascaris lumbricoides Strongyloides stercoralis Foundation for Integrated Medicine A UNIQUE ROLE FOR INTESTINAL HELMINTHS • Stimulate development of TH-2 cells and down-regulate TH-1 cells • Stimulate production of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 • Lack of helminths may account for the increasing prevalence of inflammatory disorders in the developed world, both atopic and mediated by TH-1 autoimmunity Foundation for Integrated Medicine LACTOBACILLI: BENEFICIAL EFFECTS • Produce organic acids: lower bowel pH • Produce H202 • Antagonize enteropathogenic E. Coli, Salmonella, Staphylococci, Candida albicans, and Clostridia spp • Degrade N-nitrosamines • Anti-tumor glycopeptides (L. bulgaricus) • Stimulate balanced immune responses Foundation for Integrated Medicine Lactobacilli for Prevention of Food Allergy in Infants • DBPCT: Lactobaciilus GG given to high risk mothers during last 2 weeks of pregnancy and for 6 months after birth to their offspring • Atopic eczema at 2 years – Controls: 31/68 (46%) – Lactobacillus 15/64 (23%), RR=0,51 Kalliomaki et al, Lancet 357: 1076-79 (2001) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Lactobacilli for Managing Food Allergy • Infants with atopic eczema and cow’s milk allergy fed hydrolyzed whey formula with or without Lactobacillus GG -Clinical improvement associated with 95% decline in fecal TNF-alpha in the Lactobacillus group, signifying reduced GI inflammation Majamaa, Isolauri, J All Clin Immunol 1997 Foundation for Integrated Medicine BENEFITS OF BACILLUS LATERSPORUS • Laterosporamine: antibiotic –Suppress auto-antibody formation –Suppress murine lupus nephritis • Spergualin: anti-tumor, antibiotic Foundation for Integrated Medicine BENEFITS OF SACCHAROMYCES BOULARDII • Stimulates production of sIgA • Protects against antibiotic diarrhea • Helps reverse C difficile colitis Foundation for Integrated Medicine E. COLI: BENEFICIAL EFFECTS • Prevents infection of animals with Cholera, Shigella, Pseudomonas and staph aureus (no effect on Candida or Salmonella) • Degrades N-nitrosamines and polycyclic aromatic amines and Nhydroxyl aryl amines Foundation for Integrated Medicine E.COLI AND ULCERATIVE COLITIS • E. coli in colonic crypts of UC patients shows abnormal adherence Burke, Axon J Clin Path 40: 782-786 (1987) • After inducing remission with gentamycin and prednisone,Nissle 917 strain E. coli were as effective as mesalamine in maintaining remission at 12 months Rembacken et al, Lancet 354: 635-640 (1999) Foundation for Integrated Medicine EPITHELIAL PERMEABILITY REGULATES TRANSPORT OF WATER, SOLUTES AND PARTICULATE MATTER “The intestinal epithelium is the site of vectorial transport…between the intestinal lumen and the circulation. The net effect of transport is regulated by the tightness (or leakiness) of the barrier and vice versa. Both transport and barrier functions are physiologically regulated, and both can be dramatically altered under disease conditions.” Ann NY Acad Sci 915 (2000), p xi MECHANISMS WHICH SUPPORT NORMAL INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY • • • • • Intestinal mucus Secretory IgA Mucosal epithelium Intramural macrophages Intramural lymphocytes – intra-epithelial – in Peyer’s patches Foundation for Integrated Medicine TWO TYPES OF EPITHELIAL PERMEABILITY • Trans-Cellular • Para-Cellular Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine TRANS-CELLULAR PERMEABILITY • The principal route for the absorption of solutes, fluid and macromolecules Foundation for Integrated Medicine ACTIVE TRANSPORT • Monosaccharides • Amino acids, peptides • Sodium, zinc, copper, iron, calcium • Vitamins Foundation for Integrated Medicine NUTRIENT ABSORPTION BY DIFFUSION • Magnesium • Free fatty acids • Monoglycerides, lysolecithin Foundation for Integrated Medicine ENDOCYTOSIS • • • • Micelles Macromolecules Antigens Microbes Foundation for Integrated Medicine INTESTINAL ANTIGEN TRANSPORT IS A PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESS • M-Cells – Particulate/insoluble antigens – Overlie Peyer’s Patches – Response is mostly CD4 • Enterocytes – Soluble antigen – Response is mostly CD-8 Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine INCREASED TRANS-CELLULAR PERMEABILITY • Results from impairment of mucosal metabolism • Represents a breakdown in the normal activity known as “Gut Antigen Sampling” Foundation for Integrated Medicine PARA-CELLULAR PERMEABILITY IS LIMITED BY CELL ADHERANCE MOLECULES (CAMs) • Tight junctions contain claudins • Adherens junctions and desmosomes contain cadherins • Contraction of the cytoskeleton opens junctions (glucose absorption is a stimulus) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine CAUSES OF INCREASED PARA-CELLULAR PERMEABILITY • Infectious agents –Parasites –Bacteria –Viruses –Yeasts Foundation for Integrated Medicine Continued CAUSES OF INCREASED PARA-CELLULAR PERMEABILITY • Enterotoxins – Ethanol – NSAIDs – Cytotoxic drugs • Dysoxia – Ischemia – Reactive oxygen species Foundation for Integrated Medicine PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESS CAN INCREASE GUT PERMEABILITY THROUGH A CHOLINERGIC MECHANISM • Rats: cold stress increases both para-cellular permeability and endocytosis. -This effect is greater when cholinesterase activity is weak -The effect is blocked by atropine -It may depend upon vagal activation of mast cells • Similar effects occur in humans Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIET ALTERS INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY • Fasting: –Controls: Increased I.P. –R.A.: Decreases I.P. Continued Foundation for Integrated Medicine • Increased I.P. induced by: –Low-fiber diets –Carrageenan –Pectin/guar gum –Castor oil –Alcohol –Allergens Continued Foundation for Integrated Medicine • Mucosal Inflammation –Food allergy –“Idiopathic” Foundation for Integrated Medicine EFFECTS OF INCREASED PERMEABILITY • Antigen Overload –Sensitization –Immune suppression • Toxic Overload –Hepatic stress • Sepsis Foundation for Integrated Medicine INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY IS MEASURED BY PROBES ABSORBED AND EXCRETED UNCHANGED BY THE KIDNEYS • Probes used for small bowel permeability include Cr51-EDTA, PEGs and the ratio of lactulose to mannitol. • Colonic permeability can only be measured if the probe is administered by enema. Foundation for Integrated Medicine INCREASED INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY (LEAKY GUT) IS NOT A DISEASE OR SYNDROME • It contributes to the pathophysiology of many different diseases. • Improvement of the related disease usually improves the leaky gut. • Decreased intestinal permeability often improves the associated disease. Foundation for Integrated Medicine LEAKY GUT SYNDROMES • Enteritis, colitis Infectious/inflammatory • Arthritis, chronic inflammatory • Food allergic disorders • AIDS • CFIDS • MCS • Chronic pancreatic disease • Chronic noninfectious hepatitis • Acne • psoriasis Foundation for Integrated Medicine THE FOUR VICIOUS CYCLES OF THE LEAKY GUT • • • • Food Allergy Malnutrition Dysbiosis Hepatic Distress Foundation for Integrated Medicine CYCLE ONE: FOOD ALLERGY • Increased baseline permeability • Marked increase after challenge • Increase blocked by sodium cromoglycate Foundation for Integrated Medicine ABNORMAL INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY IN FOOD ALLERGY • 42% of children with eczema had reduced jejunal villus:crypt ratios (malabsorption) • Increased PEG-4K absorption (leakiness) • Increased PEG absorption blocked by cromolyn pre-treatment • Increased fasting lactulose absorption in adults with food allergy (eczema, hives); further increase with offending food blocked by cromolyn 300mg Foundation for Integrated Medicine • “Evaluation of I.P… provides an effective means of diagnosing food allergy” Barau E and Dupont C, Modifications of Intestinal Permeability during Food Provocation Procedures in Pediatric Irritable Bowel Syndrome, J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr, 11:72-77, 1990 Continued Foundation for Integrated Medicine • 17 children with IBS • 9 with with food-induced alterations of intestinal permeability • All 9 were completely cured with diet (7 diet alone, 2 diet plus oral cromolyn before meals) Foundation for Integrated Medicine • After ingesting food allergens, lactulose/mannitol (L/M) ratios rose significantly • Taking sodium cromoglycate prevented the rise in L/M ratios Continued Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine CYCLE TWO: MALNUTRITION • Most nutrients require active transport • Factors which increase I.P. may hinder active transport • Resulting malnutrition disrupts intracellular adhesion Foundation for Integrated Medicine CYCLE THREE: DYSBIOSIS • Bacterial proteases disrupt cellular adhesion molecules • Increased I.P. leads to bacterial sensitization • Bacterial sensitization causes leukocyte migration which increases permeability Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine CYCLE FOUR: HEPATIC DISTRESS Increased permeability causes: • Toxic stimulation of monooxygenases • Increased free radical generation • Damage to hepatocytes and bile ducts Foundation for Integrated Medicine • Biliary excretion of reactive oxygen species • Reflux of toxic bile into pancreatic ducts –Loss of factors –Pancreatic insufficiency • Toxic bile enteropathy Foundation for Integrated Medicine HEPATIC COST OF INCREASED PERMEABILITY • Kupffer’s Cell Paralysis • Stimulation of Mono-Oxygenases • Depletion of substrates for conjugation –GSH, Glycine Continued Foundation for Integrated Medicine HYPER-PERMEABILITY IN RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS • NSAIDs increase intestinal permeability • Increased I.P. allows sensitization to gut flora • Bacterial sensitization causes enteritis and formation of circulating immune complexes Foundation for Integrated Medicine HYPER-PERMEABILITY IN RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS (continued) • I.P. is further increased • Systemic inflammation exacerbates • Metronidazole and minocycline break the cycle Foundation for Integrated Medicine TREATMENT OF HYPER-PERMEABILITY • Avoid enterotoxins • Treat intestinal infection/bacterial overgrowth with antimicrobials • Diet: high nutrient density – non-irritating – allergen-free Foundation for Integrated Medicine HELPING TO REPAIR THE DAMAGED INTESTINE • Glutamine • Essential fatty acids • Antioxidants – Glutathione – Bioflavonoids – Vitamin E – Gamma-oryzanol • Epidermal growth factor Foundation for Integrated Medicine A.F., a 6 year old girl with fever of unknown origin • Prior history: vesicoureteric reflux and recurrent UTI; used co-trimoxazole from 12 to 36 months of age and it cleared. • Age 5 developed cycling fever with daily temperature spikes to 105 F, lasting 5 days and recurring every 10 to 21 days. • Appendectomy (normal appendix) followed by 2 months of metronidazole in September 1998. Microscopic colitis was found in transverse colon, not though to be Crohn’s or ulcerative colitis. • Fevers continued but with decreased severity and frequency Foundation for Integrated Medicine A.F., a 6 year old girl with fever of unknown origin • Parents started a diet eliminating sugar, junk food, wheat and milk products, with improvement: -Fevers occurring every 5 to 7 weeks, lasting only 3 days, spiking only to 102 F. In between fevers, patient appears very healthy. ESR 38 with fever • Seen in July 1999. ESR 16 (afebrile) intestinal permeability: low mannitol excretion (3%), high lactulose/mannitol ratio (0.313) IgG to casein in blood, not to gluten Foundation for Integrated Medicine A.F., a 6 year old girl with fever of unknown origin • Treatment: -casein-free diet -L-glutamine 3.7 gm bid -microcrystalline cellulose 3.7 gm bid -N-acetyl-glucosamine 185 mg bid - Ulmus rubra bark (slippery elm) 110 mg bid -Methylsulfonylmethane (MSM) 160 mg bid -Aloe vera extract (30% MPS) 1 tsp qd Mixed together in apple sauce Foundation for Integrated Medicine A.F., a 6 year old girl with fever of unknown origin • Initial response: -“Radiant and happy, energy better than in her whole life” - No fever until April, 2000, following Easter festivities: -Temp 102 F, lasting 2 days, recurred 3 weeks later. -Intestinal permeability: low mannitol excretion (3%), lactulose/mannitol ratio improved at 0.107 Advised to follow casein-free diet 100% for at least a month • Further response: -No fever during subsequent year -Normal intestinal permeability by 10/00. Mannitol excretion 12%, lactulose mannitol ratio 0.04. -Glutamine, NAG, MSM, slippery elm, aloe discontinued. -Able to tolerate casein when away from home. Foundation for Integrated Medicine INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY AND CROHN’S DISEASE • Patients have increased I.P. • First degree relatives have high I.P. • Patients have abnormal reactivity of mucosal lymphocytes to normal gut flora and Candida antigens Foundation for Integrated Medicine • For patients in remission, the rate of relapse correlates with I.P. measured prospectively Wyatt J et al, Intestinal Permeability and the Prediction of Relapse in Crohn’s Disease, Lancet 341:1437-1439, 1993 Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine NUTRITIONAL THERAPY FOR CROHN’S DISEASE • 20 patients, age 21 to 59, ill 6 mo to 12 yrs followed for 6 months to 8 years • symptoms scored: diarrhea, abdominal pain, fever, fatigue, blood/mucus in stool, weight • lab tests scored: hemoglobin, ESR, albumen, intestinal permeability (lactulose/mannitol fractional excretion) Foundation for Integrated Medicine THE SPECIFIC CARBOHYDRATE DIET • EAT fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, poultry, eggs, nut flours and butters, most legumes, eggs, some hard cheeses and yogurts • AVOID all grains, disaccharides (lactose and sucrose), soy, potatoes Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS STAGE I • Fish oil, delayed release, supplying 875 mg of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)/ day • vitamin E 400 mg/day • zinc 20 mg/ day • selenium 200 mcg/day • folic acid 800 mcg/day Foundation for Integrated Medicine STAGE II DIET OPTIONS • • • • complete milk avoidance yeast/mold elimination diet avoidance of nuts and nut flours addition of non-glutinous starch (e.g., rice and potatoes) • As modifications to the Specific Carbohydrate Diet Foundation for Integrated Medicine STAGE II SUPPLEMENTS • glutamine 3000 mg/day • Aloe vera mucopolysaccharide concentrate (ace mannan) 4 grams/day Foundation for Integrated Medicine CLINICAL RESPONSES • complete clinical remission • reduction in symptom scores range 90% to 40%, mean 65% • response to Stage I diet • response to yeast/mold diet • response to milk elimination diet • required elimination of nuts Foundation for Integrated Medicine 6 14 11 5 5 4 SYMPTOM SCORES 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 INITIAL FINAL Foundation for Integrated Medicine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 SEDIMENTATION RATE 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 INITIAL FINAL Foundation for Integrated Medicine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY • Lactulose/mannitol ratio, ref range is 0.01 to 0.06 • measured in 13 patients • decreased in 84% • initial mean 0.275 (range 0.024 to 0.645) • final mean 0.074 (range 0.018 to 0.186) Foundation for Integrated Medicine SERUM ALBUMEN • Mean serum albumen increased • initial: 32 G/L (range 24 to 38) • final 41 (range 28 to 46) Foundation for Integrated Medicine MEDICATION USE • ASA derivatives (16 patients), mean dose decreased 33% • prednisone (6 patients), mean dose decreased from 17 mg/day (range 10 to 40) to 5 mg/day (range 0 to 7.5) • azathioprine (3 patients), mean dose decreased from 100 mg/day to 33 mg/day (range 0 to 50) Foundation for Integrated Medicine CASE REPORT • 28 year old male, sick for 3 years, disabled • prednisone 40 mg, azathioprine 100 mg/day • fever 40 degrees C, bloody diarrhea 6 times/day, 30 pound weight loss, ESR 90, albumen 26 g/L, oxalic acid excretion 164 mg/day Foundation for Integrated Medicine CASE REPORT • Stage I diet for 3 weeks led to complete clearing of symptoms • Addition of stage I supplements and maintenance of diet led to ESR of 5, albumen of 4.2, weight gain of 15 pounds over 60 days • all medications discontinued Foundation for Integrated Medicine CASE REPORT • 1-year follow-up: maintenance of clinical remission, lactulose/mannitol ratio = 0.026, oxalic acid excretion of 32 mg/day • complete remission of all parameters for 3 years Foundation for Integrated Medicine Food Allergy Leo Galland M.D. Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine HOW PREVALENT IS FOOD ALLERGY/INTOLERANCE? • 33% of 1000 teachers (56% response rate) reported avoidance specific foods because of “unpleasant” physiological reactions. • A poll of 5000 US physicians on prevalence of food allergy (14% response rate): 0-80% (mean 10%) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Immunologic Mechanisms of Food Intolerance • Type I (IgE mediated, TH2 promoted) • Type II (IgG and complement mediated, cytotoxic, TH1 promoted) • Type III (IgG immune complex mediated, TH1 promoted) • Type IV (cell-mediated, TH1 promoted) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Non-immunologic Mechanisms of Food Intolerance • Digestive (e.g., lactase deficiency) • Pharmacologic (e.g., caffeine, ethanol) • Biochemical (histamine, tyramine, salicylates, sulphites, MSG) • Non-specific mast cell degranulation • Lectin-mediated glycoprotein agglutination Foundation for Integrated Medicine Poor Sulphoxidation and Food Allergy (Scadding 1988) • 74 adults with non-IgE food allergy diagnosed by elimination and challenge • 78% slow carbocisteine sulfoxidizers vs 33% of controls (p<0.005) • Carbon oxidation (debrisoquine): normal • Theory: altered metabolism of food chemicals toxic/immunogenic metabolites by novel pathways Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine FOOD ALLERGY/INTOLERANCE: WELL-DOCUMENTED MANIFESTATIONS • Atopic Eczema • Allergic Rhinitis, Asthma • Anaphylaxis, Angioedema, Urticaria • Oral Allergy Syndrome (Ortolani) • Aphthous Ulceration • Alveolitis, Hemosiderosis • Infantile Colic • Vomiting, Diarrhea, Abdominal Pain • Irritable Bowel Syndrome • Hematochyzia, Colitis • • • • • • • • • • • Pediatric Enteropathies Celiac Disease Protein-losing Enteropathy Failure to thrive Crohn’s Disease (exacerbation) Migraine headches Migraine-associated Epilepsy ADHD Nephrotic Syndrome Allergic Arthritis Rheumatoid Arthritis (exacerbation) Foundation for Integrated Medicine FOOD ALLERGY IN PEDIATRIC ATOPIC ECZEMA • 25-60% are food reactive • Increased gut permeability – at baseline – after food challenges – blocked by cromolyn • Histamine release • Circulating immune complexes • Multi-system reactivity in 2/3 – 49% gastrointestinal – 23% rhinitic – 17% asthmatic • Poor correlation between food responses and prick tests, RAST: milk, egg, citrus, additives, nuts, fish, wheat, tomatoes, lamb, chicken, soy Foundation for Integrated Medicine FOOD ALLERGY IN PERENNIAL RHINITIS (Ortolani et al) 210 patients over 1 year 3-week oligoantigenic diet 52 improved (24.8%) 28 IgE mediated (13.3%), based upon correlation with RAST, skin testing for Integrated Medicine 24 noFoundation correlation FOOD ALLERGY IN RECURRENT APHTHOUS STOMATITIS • • • • Cytotoxic lymphocytes/antibodies Histamine release to foods (23/60) 30% correlation of HR and ulcers Gluten, milk, food additives Foundation for Integrated Medicine FOOD ALLERGY IN HYPERKINETIC SYNDROME (Egger et al, Lancet 1985) 76 children seen on referral (60 boys, 16 girls) age 2-15 (mean 7.3) 37 from dysfunctional families 4 weeks’ oligoantigenic diet 2 meats, 2 starch sources, 2 fruits, 1 vegetable, calcium, multivitamin Foundation for Integrated Medicine RESPONSE TO OLIGOANTIGENIC DIET IN HYPERKINETIC SYNDROME Total number Hyperactivity: Normal Mild Moderate Severe Conners’ score Antisocial acts Headache Seizures Abdominal pain Limb pain Eczema, rash Aphthous ulcers Atopic (prick test) Pre-diet 76 0 6 31 39 24 32 48 14 54 33 29 Foundation for Integrated 15 Medicine 30 (39%) Diet 76 21 28 19 8 12 13 9 1 8 6 9 5 Summary of Egger’s Results • Open trial: 82% of children responded favorably to the oligoantigenic diet • DBPCT: 28 participated, with rating of response by parents, a neurologist and a psychologist • DBPCT: 51-74% of the food intolerances confirmed Foundation for Integrated Medicine FOODS PROVOKING HYPERACTIVITY IN DOUBLE-BLIND, PLACEBO-CONTROL TRIAL % REACTIVE Additives Soy Milk Chocolate Grapes Wheat Oranges Cheese Eggs Peanuts Corn Fish Oats Melon Tomato Foundation for Integrated Medicine 79 73 64 59 50 49 45 40 39 32 29 23 23 21 20 Cognitive-Emotional Symptoms and Food Allergy (King, 1981) • DBPCT: 30 adults, 28 food extracts, sub-lingual, multiple measures, 2 judges • Symptoms associated with allergen exposure: anxiety, depression, brain fog, irritability, detachment, euphoria; pruritus, cold hands, myalgia, nasal congestion, tinnitus, fatigue, headache • Occurrence p=0.001, Severity p=0.002 Foundation for Integrated Medicine FOOD ALLERGY IN PEDIATRIC MIGRAINE (Egger, 1983) 88 children, oligoantigenic diet 93% cleared by 2 weeks 90% relapsed on open challenge 40 of these, DBPC TRIAL 26 confirmed (4 reacted to placebo, 8 reacted to neither) Atopy 55%, 46% hyper, 16% seizures Milk, egg, chocolate, orange, wheat benzoate, cheese, tomato, tartrazine, rye, fish, pork, beef, corn, soy, tea Foundation for Integrated Medicine MIGRAINE-ASSOCIATED SYMPTOMS AND FOOD INTOLERANCE 88 PATIENTS Pre-diet Diet Abdominal pain, diarrhea Hyperactivity Limb pain Rhinitis RAS Vaginal discharge Asthma Eczema 61 41 41 34 15 11 7 6 27/40 provoked by DBPC food trial 10/40 provoked by placebo also Foundation for Integrated Medicine 3/40 provoked by neither 8 5 7 15 2 1 3 3 EVIDENCE FOR ALTERED IMMUNE ACTIVATION IN RESPONSE TO FOODS IN MIGRAINE (Marteletti 1991, Acta Neurologica) • • • • Increased circulating immune complexes Increased activated T cells and total T cells Increased plasma IL-2 levels Effective prophylaxis with oral sodium cromoglycate Foundation for Integrated Medicine Food Allergy in Idiopathic Nephrotic Syndrome • Basophile histamine release test + - 65% of 34 patients - 5% of 19 controls wheat, beef, milk, egg, pork • 26 patients with refractory nephrosis - 6 remitted on oligoantigenic diet Foundation for Integrated Medicine TM, a 26 old woman with massive proteinuria, anasarca • Prior: aesthetician, applying artificial nails, developed asthma, multiple inhalant allergies, provoked by allergy immunotherapy • Severe anasarca emergency hospitalization, furosemide, steroids • Proteinuria 4 gm/day, serum albumen 1.3 gm/L, marked hyperlipidemia, normal biopsy • Required prednisone 20 mg/day maintenance Foundation for Integrated Medicine TM, a 26 old woman with massive proteinuria, anasarca • Initial evaluation: Cushingoid, 3+ proteinuria • Method: modified fast, supported by a ricebased, oligoantigenic food supplement, tapering down prednisone and daily examination of urine protein by dipstick • Result: clearing of proteinuria in 7 days, return of proteinuria within 24 hours of ingesting hen’s eggs • Total remission for 7 years, avoids eggs Foundation for Integrated Medicine Food Intolerance and Rheumatoid Arthritis • 5-46% of patients in various studies have exacerbation of symptoms provoked by specific foods, mostly wheat, milk, tomatoes, various additives, some confirmed with DBPC trials • An 18-year open study of foods provoking pain in 100 patients found that certain spices and food additives were commonest agents Foundation for Integrated Medicine GLUTEN INTOLERANCE IS PREVALENT AND PROTEAN • Gliadin antibodies were found in 30/53 patients with neurological disease of unknown cause (73% had abnormal small bowel biopsies) Hadjivassiliou et al, Lancet 347: 369-371 (1996) • IgG and IgA gliadin antibodies occur in 2% of Italian school children Catassi et al, Lancet 343: 200-203 (1994) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Cow’s Milk Allergy and IDDM • Children with IDDM have IgG against a peptide fraction of bovine serum albumen that cross-react with a pancreatic beta-cell surface protein • Adults with recent-onset IDDM show excessive T-cell proliferation in response to beta-casein, compared to normal and auto-immune controls Foundation for Integrated Medicine DIAGNOSIS OF FOOD ALLERGY • History – atopic disease – multisystem complaints – fluctuations – provocations - rough skin, red ears, geographic tongue • Skin tests, IgE (total/food specific) • Dietary elimination/challenge – symptom change – gut permeability change Foundation for Integrated Medicine D-XYLOSE ABSORPTION DECREASES AFTER FOOD ALLERGEN CONSUMPTION • In children with cow’s milk protein enteropathy (diarrhea, pain), 1 hour blood d-xylose was significantly higher on a milk-free diet than 4 days after starting a milk-containing diet Morin et at, Lancet i: 1102-1104 (1979) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Elimination Diets • Elemental • Oligoantigenic • Avoid commonest allergens: milk, wheat, corn, soy, eggs, citrus, nuts, fish • Gluten and/or casein-free • Yeast and mold-free • Low-salicylate Foundation for Integrated Medicine Technique of Food Elimination • Obtain baseline measure of target symptoms or signs • Complete avoidance of all food/drink containing test components for 5-14 days • Instruct patients/parents in foods that can or should be eaten and in monitoring of symptoms Foundation for Integrated Medicine Food Challenge Techniques • If there is no change in target parameters, return to usual diet en bloc and observe for exacerbation • If improvement is observed, introduce foods singly, one every 1-2 days, 2-6 challenges for each food; delayed reactions are common • If symptoms occur, hold challenges until clear • Avoid suspected symptom provokers • Re-challenge with these after completion Foundation for Integrated Medicine TREATMENT OF FOOD ALLERGY • • • • • • • Symptomatic pharmacotherapy Dietary avoidance Pre-prandial cromolyn 800-1600 mg/day Intestinal repair Probiotics Counseling: nutritional, psychological Induction of oral tolerance Foundation for Integrated Medicine Detoxification Leo Galland M.D. Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine OUR BODIES DETOXIFY • Exogenous, foreign substances • Endogenous, internally created substances Foundation for Integrated Medicine ENDOGENOUS SUBSTANCES • Gut toxins – bacteria – parasites – yeast • Hormones • Bile acids • Metabolic intermediates Foundation for Integrated Medicine EXOGENOUS SUBSTANCES • Xenobiotics – herbicides – pesticides • Air pollutants – auto exhaust – tobacco smoke • Pharmaceuticals Foundation for Integrated Medicine DETOXIFICATION TRANSFORMS MOLECULES • Functionalization Phase I • Conjugation Phase II Foundation for Integrated Medicine MAJOR SITES OF ENZYMATIC DETOXIFICATION • Liver – most important organ • Lung, intestine, kidney & skin – demonstrable detox capability Foundation for Integrated Medicine LIVER DETOXIFICATION • PHASE ONE: OXYGENATION • PHASE TWO: CONJUGATION Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE ONE ENZYMES • Cytochrome P450 system (20-30 enzymes) • Use oxygen to alter molecules • By-products include free oxygen radicals • End products may be more dangerous than the initial chemicals Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE ONE ACTIVITY • Increased in tobacco smokers • Increased or decreased by medications • Increased by char-broiled meats and high intake of alcohol, BHT or vegetable oils • Variably influenced by phytochemicals, especially flavonoids • Decreased in vegans Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE ONE INDUCERS • cabbage, broccoli, brussel sprouts (indole-3-carbinol) • oranges and tangerines (limonene) • caraway and dill seeds (limonene) Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE ONE INHIBITORS • • • • • grapefruit (naringenin) turmeric (curcumin) capsicum (capsaicin) cloves (eugenol) onions (quercetin) Foundation for Integrated Medicine • ZINC DEFICIENCY DISRUPTS PHASE ONE ACTIVITY, SHIFTING ENZYME PATTERNS TO INCREASE THE PRODUCTION OF CANCER PROMOTERS Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE TWO:CONJUGATION • sulfate • amino acids: glycine, taurine, glutamine, ornithine, arginine • glutathione • methylation • glucuronic acid Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE TWO INHIBITION • nutritional deficiency • toxin exposures that exhaust supplies of substrates or co-factors • example: acetaminophen, alcohol and low protein intake deplete glutathione, which is needed for acetaminophen detoxification Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE TWO STIMULATION • cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, brussel sprouts, kale (glucosinolates) • garlic oil, rosemary, soy • citrus peel, dill and caraway oils (limonene) • curcumin • S-adenosyl methionine (SAM) • milk thistle (silymarins) Foundation for Integrated Medicine Glucosinolates Must Be Hydrolyzed by the Enzyme Myrosinase • Glucosinolates (>70 types) are separated from myrosinase in plants, not sprouts • Crushing the plant before cooking liberates the active phytochemical • Sulforaphane releases nuclear respiratory factor-2 (Nrf2), induces glutathione S-transferase Foundation for Integrated Medicine Glucosinolates Must Be Hydrolyzed by the Enzyme Myrosinase • Indole-3-carbinol is converted to diindolyl methane (DIM) by acid conjugation in the stomach • DIM stimulates CYPA1/1A2, which alters estrone metabolism to reduce estrogenic activity and inhibit growth of breast cancers Foundation for Integrated Medicine PHASE TWO GENETICS • Genetic variation in the activity of different Phase two enzymes in the liver, brain or intestines may account for disease susceptibility: • colon cancer • breast cancer • Parkinson’s disease Foundation for Integrated Medicine ANTIOXIDANT BENEFITS • protect DNA and cell or organelle membranes from free radical damage • elevate levels of glutathione • stimulate immune responses • increase activity of tumor suppressor genes • inhibit activity of enzymes needed for tumor growth Foundation for Integrated Medicine ANTIOXIDANT PROTECTION • • • • • • vitamins E and C carotenoids (carotene, lycopene, lutein) flavonoids selenium glutathione lipoic acid Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine PLANT FUNCTIONS OF FLAVONOIDS • Production stimulated by lack of light • Stress: microbes, heavy metals, ozone, sulfur dioxide, pH changes • Inhibit photo-oxidation and microbial growth Foundation for Integrated Medicine CLASSES OF FLAVONOIDS • Glycosides – rutin, hesperidin • Aglycones – flavonols (quercetin) – anthocyanidins (catechin) • Proanthocyanidins – dimers, trimers of anthocyanidins • Tannins – polymeric anthocyanidins Foundation for Integrated Medicine FLAVONOID EFFECTS ON MAMMALIAN CELLS • Potent anti-oxidants –quench free radicals –chelate transition metals • Inhibit oxygenases: PG synthetase –5-lipoxygenase • Alter activity of ION pumps Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine Foundation for Integrated Medicine METHYLATION • protects DNA from mutation • depends upon methionine (SAM), folic acid, vitamin B12 • enhanced by dimethylglycine (DMG), choline, betaine • CAVEAT: methylation inactivates genes; aberrant methylation may inactivate tumor suppressor genes Foundation for Integrated Medicine THE INTESTINES AND DETOXIFICATION • absorption and excretion of toxins • second largest volume of detox enzymes • intestinal toxicity stresses the liver Foundation for Integrated Medicine DETOXIFYING AGENTS • • • • • • • dietary fiber (beans, grains) antioxidants (vegetables, seeds, fruit) Phase Two inducers (crucifers) glutathione enhancers (selenium...) methylation enhancers (folic acid...) spices (turmeric, rosemary) herbs (milk thistle, Ginkgo biloba) Foundation for Integrated Medicine AB, 6 year old girl with psoriasis • Prior to age 3: infantile colic, rarely ill • Age 3: otitis media associated with guttate psoriasis, treated with steroids and dovenex • Naturopath: avoid junk food, use flax oil and primrose oil progressively worse • On a 50% fruit and vegetable diet, nightshade free dramatic improvement, leaving few tiny patches on arms Foundation for Integrated Medicine AB, 6 year old girl with psoriasis • Her psoriasis controlling diet -Breakfast: Granola, soy milk, water -Lunch: Whole wheat bread, tuna, cheese, almond butter, fruit conserves, water -Dinner: Chicken, salmon, noodles, brown rice, salad, vegetables -Snacks: fruits and vegetables Foundation for Integrated Medicine