Did you know that my Fowl feathered friends helped many families put food on the table during the great depression? If you did, then it is no surprise to see me here now, saving the day, one egg at a time. Now, don’t get me wrong, I know it takes two to tango and my owner has come up with some interesting ways of her own to make ends meet. My name is Martha and I’m here to tell you about my wonderful family: A loving stay-at-home mother, an unemployed father who is in the process of reinventing himself, and 3 amazing children and their incredible journey through Autism. Join me and I will tell you some interesting stories about weathering tough times, putting healthy food on the table and finding ways to continue biomedical Autism treatments while on food stamps.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Santa Claus knows if you've been bad or good...

The best thing about the holiday season, for mother, is having the right motivation to keep children from getting into trouble.  Santa's "Naughty List" is always a great motivator for good behavior but it is amazing how easy it can be to forget and end up on the Naughty List!  Luckily, you can redeem yourself by completing three tasks:

1.  Do something nice - this could be as simple as picking up litter, drawing a picture for someone, making a gift, or going through your toys and giving something to charity.

2.  Say something nice - saying your sorry is a good place to start but sometimes this becomes so automatic that it loses sincerity.  Giving a complement to someone is a nice alternative.

3.  Help someone - holding the door for someone, help a person carry something, or ask someone if you can help them.

In essence, it is nothing more than good manners and just like they say on Blues Clues, "Manners show people you care" and isn't that a great theme for the holiday season?

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Holy Basil and Fevers

A year ago, Papa had his tonsils removed but before he did, he was often sick.  It was common for Papa to run fevers that would reach 102 to 104 degrees, which is pretty serious for an adult.  In an attempt to find ways to bring down the fever but still allow the fever to do its important work, Mama started to research alternative treatments on the internet. 

Mama had some Holy Basil (Tulsi)  in the cupboard that she was told would reduce fevers but she didn't know how.  After searching the internet, it turns out that it is used in Ayurvedic medicine.  Finding an exact recipe was a challenge because most sights would generically say "In case of acute fevers, a decoction of the leaves boiled with powdered cardamom in half a liter of water and mixed with sugar and milk brings down the temperature."

It turns out that this concoction was able to reduce the fever by 1 to 2 degrees.  I know this seems insignificant but it kept Papa out of the emergency room and allowed the fever to do its job.  It tastes pretty good, too.

We do not recommend this as a treatment or cure.  You should always consult a health care provider before trying alternative treatments.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Chlorella and Autism

One of mother's favorite biomedical treatments for her son was Chlorella.  She first read about it on Dr. Mercola's website.  They had a testimonial about the benefits of Chlorella on an Autistic boy.  It claimed that Chlorella could remove heavy metals after about 3 months of use and it would improve healing time of wounds and bruises after using for a year.  Further research of Chlorella convinced mother that it was a pretty benign product that could potentially produce results.  

Mother started giving Chlorella to her daughter and son.  After 3 months, her son went from a vocabulary of 3 words to 85 words.  The time line coincided with the data from Mercola's website.  She was excited to share this information with her child's teachers and their response was, "it is not unusual for a child to have a verbal growth spurt, such as this".  So, was it the Chlorella or was it a growth spurt?  I guess we will never know but mother has her own opinion on that one.

Mother's son was 2 years old at the time.  He was given a combination of Chlorella and powdered probiotics for 2 years.  Today, he is 9 years old.  He has had the flu once in 7 years and a cold twice.  He rarely bruises.


Where the chlorella worked so well for her son, it showed no results for her daughter.  As with all biomedical treatments, results vary for every child, even siblings.  Consult your health care provider when considering an alternative therapy or biomedical treatment.

Note:  For best results, supplements in powder or tablet form are best.  Any supplement that comes in a capsule will be most effective when broken open and mixed in food or drink.  To make sure you aren't wasting your money, drop one pill into a glass of water and see if it breaks down or breaks open in 20 minutes.  Don't waste your money on supplements that will pass through your system unopened.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Equine Therapy for Autism

One of the therapies that Mother used for Autism was horseback riding.  The children loved it and it made Mother feel good to give the children a taste of her own upbringing, having been raised on a farm with Shetland ponies.  


The benefits of Equine therapy is best explained by an article Mother found on the Aspen Education website:

"Hippotherapy and Therapeutic Riding

Hippotherapy, which derives from the Greek word "hippo" for horse, is a physical therapy that is provided under a physician's supervision. It is usually used as part of a comprehensive therapeutic package. This type of program has benefits for children, youth, and adults that have physical and/or developmental disabilities. Therapeutic Riding has many of the same benefits, but it is more of a recreational riding program for the disabled and does not usually involve a physician's supervision.

Hippotherapy and Therapeutic Riding use the horse's multidimensional rhythmic movement, which resembles the natural walking gait of human's, to achieve specific therapeutic outcomes. Therapists help patients ride the horse in different positions, including sitting or laying forward, backward, or sideways; standing up in the stirrups; and riding on the horse without holding on. Specially trained physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech-language therapists use this therapy with autistic children and teenagers and kids with a wide range of other types of disabilities.

Hippotherapy is useful for:
  • relaxing tight muscles
  • increasing balance
  • building muscle strength
  • sharpening hand/eye coordination
  • gaining a sense of body-awareness
  • gaining a sense of self-control
  • gaining a sense of self-confidence
  • improving communication
  • improving concentration
  • improving socialization
  • improving patience
  • improving fine motor coordination
  • improving sensory integration
The movement of the horse moves the rider's pelvis in the correct way, while also stimulating other bones, ligaments, and joints. A horse moves a person in more than one way, by tilting, rotating, and moving the rider, which would take a whole session of difficult physical therapy exercises to achieve. Sitting on a horse improves core muscle strength, muscle symmetry, balance, posture, flexibility, circulation, coordination, and breathing (which also makes it easier to speak). The autistic are unable to integrate their senses and understanding of how their bodies relate to external forces and surfaces; hippotherapy can greatly improve an autistic child's sense of their own bodies in space. Hippotherapy frequently does not use a saddle, allowing the child to receive sensations from the horse's movements, which makes a child aware of where parts of his or her body are in relation to the horse.

The excitement of riding encourages speech when the rider wants to communicate with the therapist and the horse. Non-verbal autistic children have suddenly started talking when they use the horse's name or ask the horse to get moving! The therapy provides a solid yet enjoyable period of time for stimulation and exercise.
The benefits experienced by kids with mental and emotional disabilities are also due to the special relationship they develop with the horse. The horses are specifically chosen and trained to be gentle, patient, and calm. The unconditional, non-judgmental aspect of the bond between the horse and the patient encourages the child to form an attachment and interaction with another living being, which is especially difficult for autistic kids to achieve. One of the greatest benefits of this type of therapy is the enjoyment kids get out of it. They don't even realize that they are participating in a therapeutic activity - it's just a lot of fun!

It should be noted, however, that the first time autistic children are introduced to hippotherapy, they often exhibit the type of behavior that often accompanies changes in their physical environment. This can include crying, screaming, having tantrums, and avoidance behaviors such as flopping down and becoming limp. The behavior almost always stops as soon as the child is on the horse and the horse starts moving, and the initial behavior is usually gone by the second time the child comes for therapy. The tantrums may be repeated every time there is some change, such as when the horse stops walking, but when the child is taught the noise or motion to get the horse to move again, the behavior stops.

Equine therapy gives autistic children a sense of themselves, their bodies, and increased contact and interaction with the surrounding world. The kids' self-confidence is greatly increased and they form a sense of competence by learning how to interact and work with their horse. These children quickly form attachments and relationships with the horse they ride, and this behavior is then expanded to include teachers, trainers, therapists, and family members". 

Friday, November 5, 2010

In Lieu of the Flu Shot

Boiron - Oscillococcinum 6 Dose, 6 dosesThe company Boiron makes homeopathic flu prevention and relief products.  You are probably most familiar with OSCILLOCOCCINUM®, which is used when you already have the flu.  
Did you know that Dolisos/Boiron makes a preventative flu product that is called Influenzinum 9CH  and is commonly sold in Canadian pharmacies?  Thanks to the internet, those of us here in America can purchase it from the comfort of our home.  

Note: The Boiron Influenzinum 9C, sold commonly in America, are not the same as the Dolisos/Boiron Influenzinum 9CH.

The formula of Influenzinum 9CH changes each year according to the antegenic variations detected by the World Health Organization surveillance network.  The complimentary product that can be taken with Influenzinum 9CH is Thymulin 9CH.  Thymulin 9CH is made from oligopeptides that protects and supports the immune system from flu.

Dosage:
Take a 1 single dose tube of INFLUENZINUM 9CH per week for 5 consecutive weeks. This treatment may be administered to people of any age. For young children, dissolve the content of one tube in some water. On a different day, take a 1 single dose tube of THYMULIN 9CH per week for 5 consecutive weeks.
A much smaller amount of INFLUENZINUM 9CH and/or THYMULIN 9CH, such as a few granules, can be taken weekly throughout the winter months for those who want to further enhance protection.

Clinical Evaluation In Influenzal Infection:
A clinical study done on 100 patients followed during 2 winters tested the preventive effect of INFLUENZINUM 9 CH. The treatment was given in the fall with one single dose tube administered per week for 4 weeks, and one dose one month later.
Results: Before the treatment, 82% of the people involved had one episode of influenza each winter, or a similar infection.
1st winter: 78% had neither influenza nor a cold, 11 % had a slight winter rhinitis with no influenza and 11 % had influenza or a cold.
2nd winter: 85% had neither influenza nor a cold, 9 % had a slight winter rhinitis with no influenza and 6% had influenza or cold.
Excerpt from FLU: Alternative Treatments and Prevention
by Randall Neustaedter OMD, North Atlantic Books, 2005


In 1998 the French Society of Homeopathy conducted a survey of 23 homeopathic doctors concerning their use of Influenzinum as a flu preventive (Coulamy, 1998). The survey included use of Influenzinum over a 10 year period (1987-1998) in 453 patients. The protocol for the frequency of doses varied considerably among these doctors. Weekly doses were used by 26 percent of participants and monthly dosage by 23 percent. Another 16 percent used a weekly then monthly dosage plan, and 35 percent applied some other dosage protocol. 80 percent of respondents began treatment in the fall (September through November) and ended between February and April. In this French survey 70 percent of participants used a 9C strength of Influenzinum. (In the US one would assume a higher proportion of practitioners use a higher strength because of the different prescribing preferences between the two countries.)

Results of the survey were remarkable. In approximately 90 percent of the cases no instances of the flu occurred when Influenzinum was used preventively no matter what the dosage protocol. Among the physicians the effectiveness was deemed good to very good in 90 percent of the cases. In 5 percent there was no protective effect. Of the patients, 98 percent expressed a desire to take the same preventive treatment the following year. Certainly this confidence in homeopathic prevention among physicians with many years of experience and their patients speaks to the effectiveness of Influenzinum as a flu preventive. It should be noted that a clinical study that approaches statistical significance evaluating the preventive effects of any homeopathic preparation would probably be prohibitively expensive. 


Monday, November 1, 2010

Autumn Soup - Good for the Immune System

During the cold weather season, it is important to eat lots of orange vegetables.  They are rich in Vitamin A and boost the immune system.  When you make homemade soup, be sure to add sweet potato, carrots, orange bell peppers, and squash.  Throw in beans for protein.  Yummy!

mmmmMmmm, good!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Washing Laundry on a Limited Budget

Mother once said that there is nothing more alarming than running out of laundry detergent and having no money to buy more.  Well, lucky for her, she was able to purchase vinegar and baking soda with food stamps until she could save enough to buy the essentials.  She quickly learned that she could get her laundry just as clean and save money with the following recipe:

Supplies:
1 Gallon cheap white vinegar
1 Box of your favorite powder detergent (Mother uses powder because liquid removes the waterproof coating on rain pants and coats)
1 Box Borax (or Oxyclean)

Large to Extra Large Load:
1/2 to 1 cup Vinegar
1/8 to 1/4 cup Powder Detergent
Mother uses a separate container to mix the two; they foam and dissolve, then she adds:
1/4 to 1/2 cup of Borax (or OxyClean)
Clothes come out cleaner and the supplies last much longer.  You can make a box of detergent last 4 to 8 times longer than normal.  Mother has to wash laundry for 5 people, so her loads are nice and full but not too full.  If you are using a top loading machine, you should see the top holes of the barrel after it is filled.  This gives the clothes enough room to clean well.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Whole Grains: Yes, but...

Ah, man...just when you think you're onto something healthy, there's always some kind of glitch.  The whole grain craze is great in theory but one vital piece of information was left out.  Whole grains contain phytic acid that is explained best in the following quote from mother's favorite cookbook, Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon (page 452-453).

     "All grains contain phtyic acid (an organic acid in which phosphorus is bound) in the outer layer or bran.  Untreated phytic acid can combine with calcium, magnesium, copper, iron and especially zinc in the intestinal track and block their absorption.  This is why a diet high in unfermented whole grains may lead to serious mineral deficiencies and bone loss.  The modern misguided practice of consuming large amounts of unprocessed bran often improves colon transit time at first but may lead to irritable bowel syndrome and, in the long term, many other adverse effects.  Soaking allows enzymes, lactobacilli and other helpful organisms to break down and neutralize phytic acid.  As little as seven hours of soaking in warm acidulated water will neutralize a large portion of phytic acid in grains.  The simple practice of soaking cracked or rolled cereal grains overnight will vastly improve their nutritional benefits.
     Soaking in warm water also neutralizes enzyme inhibitors, present in all seeds and encourages the production of numerous beneficial enzymes.  The action of these enzymes also increases the amounts of many vitamins, especially B vitamins.
     Scientists have learned that the proteins in grains, especially gluten, are very difficult to digest.  A diet high in unfermented whole grains, particularly high-gluten grains like wheat, puts an enormous strain on the whole digestive mechanism.  When this mechanism breaks down with age or overuse, the results take the form of allergies, celiac disease, mental illness, chronic indigestion and candida albicans overgrowth.  Recent research links gluten intolerance with multiple sclerosis.  During the process of soaking and fermenting, gluten and other difficult-to-digest proteins are partially broken down into simpler components that are more readily available for absorption.
     Grains fall into two general categories.  Those containing gluten, such as rye, barley and especially wheat, should not be consumed unless they have been soaked or fermented; buckwheat rice and millet do not contain gluten and are, on the whole more easily digested.  Whole rice and whole millet contain lower amounts of phytates than other grains so it is not absolutely necessary to soak them."

When buying bread, mother chooses sour dough because of the fermented culture that it is made with and she also looks for cracked wheat bread.  When making bread or serving grains at home, mother will soak grains or sprout grains to break down the phtyic acid.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Early Signs of Autism

"Looking back, I should have known something was amiss when she wouldn't sit still to have a book read to her.  It wouldn't be until the age of 3 when she would allow a book to be read just before she fell asleep.  Even then she wasn't interested, she just "allowed" it to happen"

  
Mother first found out that her children had Autism when her pediatrician expressed concern about her daughter's lack of speech at the age of 2 years.  It would be another year before he would refer her for a speech evaluation.  At the age of 3 years, her daughter was diagnosed with Autism.  Her son was 2 years old, at the time, and he also showed all signs of Autism.  

After much research, experimenting with diet & supplements, and educational intervention, it would be the 2 year old that would make the greatest and fastest leaps in recovery.  Her daughter would also recover but at a much slower pace and with some residual symptoms.

  
Wearing a weighted vest and completely oblivious of the other children.

Early diagnosis made the difference.  As mother researched Autism, all experimental treatments that she considered came with the same advisory, "a child under the age of 3 can reverse the diagnosis and a child over the age of 3 will see great improvements."  The advisory proved true and that is why it is essential to get an early diagnosis and start working with a child right away.


Here is mother's 3 year old and 2 year old "playing" with toys.  They would pull all the books off the bookshelf and throw them in the center of the room.  Then they would pile all of their toys on the floor and strip the bedding off and throw it over the toys and then jump from the bed onto the pile.  No imaginary play.  No talking.  Just destruction and jumping.  All day.  Every day.


There are several signs to look for in babies and young children that include the way they play with toys and interact with others but speech is very important and can be a sign of other problems aside from Autism.  With this being said, the following article comes from the Revolution Health website:

Although speech and language continue to develop through adolescence, children usually reach major milestones in predictable stages by 6 years of age. The exact pace at which speech and language develop varies among children, especially the age at which they begin to talk. 

Communication skills are often categorized as receptive language and expressive language. Receptive language is the understanding of words and sounds. Expressive language is the use of speech (sounds and words) and gestures to communicate meaning.

Details of the developmental milestones can be evaluated according to age.
  • Birth to age 1:

    • Babies begin to process the communication signals they receive and learn to vary their cry to communicate their needs. During the first months of life, they are usually able to recognize their mother's voice and actively listen to language rhythms. By 6 months of age, most babies express themselves through cooing with vowels and one or two consonants. This progresses to babbling and repeating sounds.
    • By their first birthday, babies understand and can identify each parent, often by name ("mama," "dada"). They repeat sounds they hear and may know a few words.
  • Ages 1 to 3:

    • After the first birthday through age 2, a toddler's speech and language foundation grows rapidly. During that time, 1-year-olds learn that words have meaning. They point to things they want, and often use one- or two-syllable sounds, such as "baba" for "bottle." By age 2, children usually can say at least 50 words and recognize the names of many objects, including those in pictures. They also understand simple requests and statements, such as "all gone."
    • Many 2-year-olds talk a lot. They usually can name some body parts (such as arms and legs) and objects (such as a book). Not all their words are intelligible; some are made-up and combined with real words. In addition to understanding simple requests, they can also follow them (such as "put the book on the table"). They should be able to say at least 50 words. They usually can say between 150 to 200 words, some of which are simple phrases, such as "want cookie." Pronouns (such as "me" or "she") are used, but often incorrectly.
    • Some children are naturally quieter than others. However, a child who consistently uses gestures and facial expressions to communicate should be evaluated by a doctor. These children are at increased risk for having speech problems.
  • Age 3 through 5:

    • More sophisticated speech and language develops from ages 3 through 5. By age 3, most children learn new words quickly and can follow two-part directions (such as "wash your face and put your shoes away"). They start to use plurals and form short complete sentences. And most of the time their speech can be understood by others outside of their family. "Why" and "what" become popular questions.
    • Most 4-year-olds use longer sentences and can describe an event. They understand how things are different, such as the distinction between children and grown-ups. Most 5-year-olds can carry on a conversation with another person.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Free Food!

Nothing tastes better, when you are on a tight budget, than free!  We are lucky enough to live in a college town with many alleys that have an abundance of fruit growing over fences.  Mother was lucky enough to find concord grapes, pears and apples.  With the economy the way it is, many homes are sitting empty with yards full of ripe fruit begging for someone to harvest them.  Many neighbors would be glad to have people harvest what is left before it turns their yards into carpets of mush.

 
Mother spent the day canning grape juice and applesauce.  Never canned before?  Well, this is a good place to start.  Let's start with super easy grape juice:

Grape Juice



Use a pot large enough to cover your canning jars with 2 inches of water.  It takes a long time to bring a huge pot of water to a boil, so I put my empty jars and lids in the pot while it is heating up.  By the time you rinse the grapes and pull them off the vines, the jars are ready to be filled.  In a separate pan, bring water and raw honey to a boil.  Remove jars and lids from pot.  Put enough grapes in the jars to fill them 3/4 full.  Pour hot water and honey mixture into jars, leaving 2 inches of headroom.  Wipe rim of jars with clean towel.  Center lids on each jar and apply rings.  Put jars in boiling water for 10 minutes.  Remove and set aside.  You will hear the lids start popping as they seal.  Let jars sit undisturbed until cool.  When you are ready to use your juice, just strain the fruit before serving.

Applesauce

If you have a food mill, you can chop up and use all of the apple.  Mother does not have a food mill, so she removes cores and stems.  Once the apples are cut up, you can throw them in a large pot with about a half cup of water and cook over medium heat until they get soft.  As the apples soften, stir, cover and simmer for a couple of hours until completely soft and broken down.  You can blend or mash the apples and put them in hot jars, leaving about a half inch of headroom, apply seals, rings, and boil for 5 minutes.  Having cooked the applesauce, and having it piping hot when added to jars, cuts the processing time down.

One bucket of apples yielded about 11 pints of applesauce. 

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Eating Nutritious on a Budget: Beans

Not only are beans cheap but they can be very nutritious when properly prepared. Canned beans are prepared in high temperatures and pressures that reduce the amount of proteins and other nutrients.   Homemade beans taste better than canned and they are rich in minerals and B vitamins.  Beans have phytates that are hard for the body to digest.  Soaking beans in whey reduces phytate content.  For people on a casein (dairy) free diet, you can substitute whey for apple cider vinegar and achieve the same results.  

This is another recipe from the Nourishing Traditions cookbook by Sally Fallon.  In the cookbook, the author talks about the reasoning behind careful preparation of beans, "Traditional societies whose cuisines are based on legumes prepare them with great care.  Beans are soaked for long periods before they are cooked.  The soaking water is poured off, the beans are rinsed and the skins picked off.  As the legumes cook, all foam that rises to the top of the cooking water is carefully skimmed off.  Sometimes water is replaced midway during the cooking process.  Such care in preparation ensures that legumes will be thoroughly digestible, and all the nutrients they provide well assimilated because such careful preparation neutralizes phytic acid and enzyme inhibitors and breaks down difficult-to-digest complex sugars."

Mother makes a large batch on "cooking day" (Sunday).  They can be frozen and taken out the night before needed.  Eat them with celtic sea salt and cheese, use them for tacos or burritos, or mash them up for refried beans.   

Basic Beans
2 Cups Beans (kidney, pinto, black, or white)
2 Tbl Whey (or apple cider vinegar)
4 cloves garlic, peeled and mashed (optional)
Celtic sea salt and pepper

Cover beans with warm water.  Stir in whey (or apple cider vinegar) and leave in a warm place for 12-24 hours depending on the size of the bean.  Drain, rinse, place in a large pot and add water to cover beans.  Bring to a boil and skim off foam.  Reduce heat and add optional garlic.  Simmer, covered, for 4-8 hours.  Check occasionally and add more water as necessary.  Season with salt and pepper.  Note: do not add salt during cooking process as it will make the skins tough.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Shelf Life of Eggs

Mother Earth News had an article in 1977 where they conducted research to find which preservation method produced the longest shelf life of eggs.  Enjoy!

Mother Earth News
November/December 1977

We went out and bought ourselves 30 dozen guaranteed fresh, washed, uniform-sized, agribiz-type, unfertile, supermarket eggs from a wholesaler ... and we also rounded up another 30 dozen fresh, unwashed, nonuniform, homestead-type, fertile, non-supermarket eggs.

20 CONTROLLED BATCHES OF 36 EGGS EACH

We suspected from the beginning that there might be a difference in the keeping qualities of fertile versus unfertile eggs. (Our tests have since shown that there is ... and that difference is weighed heavily in favor of the fertile eggs, but perhaps not for the reasons you might have thought.) So we started right off by dividing our 60 dozen hen fruit right down the middle, with 30 dozen fertile eggs on one side and 30 dozen unfertile eggs on the other.

 Each set of 360 eggs was then further divided into 10 separate batches of three dozen each: [1] a control group that was left sitting out at room temperature, [2] a batch that was kept under "controlled refrigeration" . . . that is, 36 eggs which were put into an airtight container and stored at a constant 35° to 40°F, [3] a group that was completely covered by a solution of 9 parts water and 1 part sodium silicate, also known as "waterglass", [4] a group that was submerged in a 16 parts water/2 parts lime/1 part salt solution, [5] a batch that was packed in lard, [6] a group that was merely coated with lard, [7] three dozen that were coated with vaseline, [8] 36 eggs that were packed in dry sand, [9] three dozen that were packed in wet sand, and [10] 36 eggs that were packed in dry sawdust. Except for the refrigerated batch, all the groups of eggs were stored at a room temperature which varied from 65° to 70° F.

AND ONCE A MONTH ...

Our experiment was set up on February 4, 1977 and was designed to run for a full year of regular monthly "look, sniff, taste, and texture" tests. It very quickly became apparent, however, that some of the "preservation" methods we were trying were worse than no attempts at preservation at all. The eggs (both fertile and unfertile) buried in both the wet sand and sawdust looked bad, smelled bad, had lost their taste, and had runny textures just one month after being "preserved". Even the control groups-eggs which were just allowed to lay out at room temperature with nothing done to them—were better than that. Conclusion after only four weeks: Trying to store eggs in either wet sand or dry sawdust is counterproductive. Forget it. Anything else—even nothing at all works better.
Surprisingly enough, the control eggs—although slightly mushy and musty—were still edible a full eight weeks after our tests began. Except for one El Stinko waterglassed egg (which must have had an unnoticed crack in its shell at the beginning of the experiment), however, the other seven batches still in the running were all much better. Which meant that the "preservation" methods they represented really were preserving the hen fruit to one extent or another.
Believe it or not, our controls (both fertile and unfertile) were hanging in there yet after another full four weeks had passed. If we'd had our druthers, understand, we'd have eaten something else ... but, under survival conditions, we could have lived on the completely unprotected 90-day-old eggs if we'd have had to. Some of the other groups, on the other hand, were becoming a little disappointing. Most of them (even the refrigerated ones) had more or less runny whites, one of the refrigerated store-boughts smelled bad, all the vaseline-coated eggs were marginal, one of the fertilized eggs packed in dry sand had a bad sulphur taste, and a store-bought kept in waterglass was very definitely bad.

By June (120 days after the experiment was begun) all the supermarket and all the homestead control eggs had gone completely rotten. The dry sand groups (both fertile and unfertile) were also terminated at that time ... as were the store-boughts that had been coated with vaseline (the vaseline-coated homestead eggs were only marginally better). The fertile and unfertile eggs packed in lard were getting pretty "iffy", the ones coated with lard were doing a lot better, the lime water groups were still edible (although, in the case of the supermarket eggs, barely edible), the refrigerated eggs seemed to have firmed up and were nearly as good as fresh, and-while the waterglassed groups were, in general, doing far better than average-one of the fertile eggs covered with waterglass was very definitely bad.

The ranks of the still-good eggs began to thin considerably 150 days into our test. By July, the supermarket eggs packed in lard weren't making it anymore (while the fertile eggs packed in lard were runny but edible). Likewise the waterglassed eggs. The lime water store-boughts, on the other hand, were still "good" (except for the one we didn't even open, since it floated), while the lime water homestead hen fruit was only "edible". Both the agribiz and the down-home eggs coated with lard were "good enough to eat for breakfast". While-maybe just by contrast-the store-bought refrigerated cackleberries were "good, like fresh" and the homestead refrigerated hen fruit was "excellent".
August, of course, was more of the same. The lard-packed fertile eggs were still "OK", the waterglassed fertiles were still "OK", the lime water homestead eggs were barely edible and the lime water store-boughts were rotten. The lard-coated hen fruit (both fertile and unfertile) all looked weird ... but could be eaten. Which really only left the refrigerated supermarket and refrigerated homestead eggs as "good" and "looks almost fresh".
The fertile eggs packed in lard, coated with lard, preserved in waterglass, and covered by lime water were still all "OK" in September. The store-boughts coated with lard were not. Leaving, again, as the Big Winners the refrigerated fertile eggs ("good") and the refrigerated unfertile eggs ("good, almost fresh").

CONCLUSIONS

At the end of seven months (all of our experiment that was finished and processed at the time this issue went to press), then, we had drawn these conclusions about our egg preservation experiment:
[1] Unwashed, fertile homestead eggs seem to store much better than washed, unfertile agribiz eggs. Why? Probably for the simple reason that they're unwashed ... and not because they're fertile. Hen fruit, as it comes from the chicken, is coated with a light layer of a natural sealing agent called "bloom". And, while a good wash may make a batch of eggs look more attractive, it also removes this natural protective coating ... leaving the eggs more subject to aging and attack by the air and bacteria in the air.

[2] The very best way we've found to stash eggs away for long-term storage is in a sealed container at a temperature of 35° to 40°F. Their whites may become somewhat runny looking over a period of time, but even after seven months—the cackleberries stored in this manner smell good, taste good, have a good texture, and—in short—seem "almost fresh".

[3] The widely touted idea of covering eggs with a solution of one part waterglass (sodium silicate) mixed with nine parts of boiled and cooled water does indeed seem to work better than any other "room temperature" preservation method we tried. If our experiences are any indication, though, it's really good for only about five months and is a distant second to controlled refrigeration.
Another point: As good as some eggs kept in waterglass were, almost every batch we opened seemed to contain one real stinker. Which makes it a superior idea to open any waterglassed egg (or any egg, for that matter) separately into a cup ... where it may be inspected before pouring it into a skillet, pan, or dish with other food.
[4] Unwashed, fertile eggs submerged in a solution of 16 parts water/2 parts lime/1 part salt, packed in lard, and coated with lard seem to keep at room temperature almost as well as unwashed fertile eggs that have been given the waterglass treatment. Washed, unfertile eggs do not.
[5] Unwashed, fertile eggs packed in dry sand or coated with vaseline and stored at room temperature keep a little longer-but not much-than unwashed fertile eggs that are just left lying out at room temperature. Washed, unfertile eggs exhibit the same characteristics ... with all storage times running a few days less across the board.
[6] Forget packing any kind of eggs in wet sand or sawdust! Our tests show that such methods of "preservation" can turn eggs rotten within a month and are worse than doing nothing at all to the hen fruit.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Martha's List of Toxic Plants

Mother found a website that provides a list of toxic plants for chickens.  She was surprised to find onions on the list.  This is good information for mother to have on hand before she gives us the garden compost at the end of the growing season.

Here is the link to the article:

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Beet Kvass: Liver Tonic

Once a week, mother gives us left over beets that she uses to make Beet kvass.  What is Beet kvass?   It is a slightly effervescent lactic acid fermented drink.  It is another cheap way to make your own probiotics with the addition of medicinal properties.  Beets are rich in vitamins and minerals.  Beet Kvass is an excellent liver tonic.  Grandmother drinks 4 oz everyday to improve the residual side effects of the chemotherapy and radiation she underwent for breast cancer.  She also drinks it to keep kidney stones at bay.  This recipe comes from the Nourishing Traditions cookbook by Sally Fallon.
Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats
Beet kvass
3 medium or 2 large organic beets,
peeled and chopped coarsley
1/4 Cup Whey (refer to Making Whey post)
1 Tbl sea salt
filtered water


Place beets, whey and salt in a 2 quart glass container.  Add filtered water to fill the containter.  Stir and cover securely.  Keep at room temperature 2 days before transferring to refrigerator.
Chopped beats, whey and salt

Note:  Do not use grated beets in this recipe.  They exude too much juice resulting in a too rapid fermentation that favors the production of alcohol rather than lactic acid.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Muesli (aka Yummy Oatmeal with Stuff in it)

This tasty treat doesn't come our way often but mother makes a really yummy muesli for breakfast.  Growing up, mother couldn't stand oatmeal and its weird texture but when times are tough it is very economical and (when prepared properly) extremely nutritious meal.

Muesli
  • 1  Cup Rolled Oats (See note below for GF/CF)
  • 1/4  Cup Almond Slivers (Optional)
  • 1/4  Cup Dried Unsweetened Coconut (Optional - see note below)
  • 2 Tbl  Fresh Whey  (GF/CF can substitute 2 Tbl Apple Cider Vinegar or Lemon - see note below) 
  • 1 1/2  Cups Filtered Water
Combine all ingredients, cover and let soak for 7 to 24 hours (I make mine before I go to bed).  

  • 1 Can Coconut Milk (or your favorite milk/milk substitute - see note below)
  • Strainer or Large Sieve
The next morning, take a strainer lined with cheesecloth (or a large sieve) and rinse the oatmeal mixture.  Put the ingredients back in the pan, add coconut milk and bring to a boil.  Once it starts to bubble, cover and turn the burner off.  Let sit 3 minutes while preparing toppings:
  • Coconut (see note below)
  • Chopped pecans
  • Chocolate chips (Look for GF/CF)
  • Pure Maple Syrup
Have fun with the toppings.  Papa is the one who came up with the toppings listed here and it tastes just like a cookie.  It was the only way to get mother to eat it!

Mother used to practice the GF/CF diet and, back in those days, oatmeal was on the "cannot have" list.  Today, oats have been approved for the GF/CF diet, so long as the oats are guaranteed by the manufacturer not to be cross contaminated by gluten.








 The following recipe uses whey.  For people on a strict Casein Free (Milk Proteins) diet, this recipe can be used with apple cider vinegar or lemon as noted in recipe (Apple cider vinegar is mothers favorite.  If you haven't read it yet, check out my post "An Apple A Day..."). 






This recipe includes coconut and coconut milk.  Coconut has saturated fat but being a medium chain fatty acid, the body utilizes it right away vs. storing it in fat cells.  

It took mother a while to find unsweetened natural coconut but it can be done.  Mother stores it in the fridge to extend the shelf life.  

note:  Mother's son hates shredded coconut, so she doesn't put it in unless he is at grandma's; however, she does still use the coconut milk and he doesn't even know it!  If you or your child hates shredded coconut, try omitting it and try using the coconut milk.  If it doesn't work, you can use your favorite milk substitute.

 

Trying to find coconut milk with simple ingredients was a challenge but it can be done.  The ingredients in "A Taste of Thai" are:  coconut, water, and guar gum. 






If you are wondering why the oats are soaked overnight, there are two reasons for this.  The first, is that the oatmeal cooks faster and the second is best explained in a direct quote from Sally Fallon's book "Nourishing Traditions":
      "Soaking allows enzymes, lactobacilli and other helpful organisms to break down and neutralize phtyic acid.  As little as seven hours of soaking in warm acidulated water will neutralize a large portion of phytic acid in grains.  The simple practice of soaking cracked or rolled cereal grains overnight will vastly improve their nutritional benefits.
     Soaking in warm water also neutralizes enzyme inhibitors, present in all seeds, and encourages the production of numerous beneficial enzymes.  The action of these enzymes also increases the amounts of many vitamins, especially B vitamins".

Thursday, September 9, 2010

An Apple a Day...

Mother once heard from a friend that if you wait until the first frost to harvest apples, they will taste even better.  Fall is fast approaching and along with it apple harvesting will begin.  I can almost smell the warm apple cider right now!  

When mother was researching biomedical treatments for her children, she came across the benefits of Apple Cider Vinegar.  She used to prepare a glass of water with one teaspoon of Apple Cider Vinegar and a teaspoon of raw honey and serve it to the children twice a day.  

Wanting to know more about the benefits of Apple Cider Vinegar, mother read the book "Apple Cider Vinegar:  Miracle Health System" by Patricia Bragg.  It provided a lot of useful information and mother recommends it to anyone wanting to learn more. 




Below is an article that mother found on the internet that highlites the benefits that can be found in Apple Cider Vinegar:

Apple Cider Vinegar  - Linda Paul

"I am sure we have all heard the old saying , “An apple a day keeps the doctor away.” This could well have a lot of merit. Apples are among the most health-giving fruits available to us. They contain a host of beneficial vitamins and minerals, such as phosphorous, potassium, magnesium, calcium, iron, and many trace elements as well. And, they are the central ingredient in apple cider vinegar.

Cider vinegar is a powerful detoxifying and purifying agent. It breaks down fatty, mucous and phlegm deposits within the body. By breaking down these substances it improves the health and function of the vital organs of the body, such as the kidneys, bladder and liver, by preventing excessively alkaline urine. It also oxidizes and thins the blood, which is important in preventing high blood pressure. This powerful potion also promotes digestion, assimilation and elimination, all the while neutralizing any toxic substances that enter the body. Cider vinegar has been found to neutralize any harmful bacteria that may be found in certain foods. When a mixture of cider vinegar and water is taken before a meal (particularly food served in restaurants or at picnics where the preparation or duration of food left uncovered and not refrigerated is questionable), it seems to prevent diarrhea or digestive upsets.


Apple cider vinegar contains a potent supply of potassium which researchers feel is helpful in easing the effects of common colds and allergies, including mucous formation, watery eyes, sinus and catarrhal problems. Cider vinegar can also be beneficial for symptoms such as tooth decay and splitting of the fingernails, which are symptoms of potassium deficiency. Potassium is essential for the replacement of worn-out tissues within the body. This mineral is also important to soft tissue repair, as calcium is to the bones and teeth. A deficiency of potassium within the body can produce callous formations on the souls of the feet, insufficient replacement of worn tissue, and hair loss.


Tests have proven that soil deficient in potassium will produce anemic and undersized plants, but when potassium is introduced into the soil, the plant becomes healthier and increases in size. When potassium, in the form of cider vinegar is fed to livestock their appearance improves and their stamina increases. This can also prove true on a human level for those who have potassium deficiency. A few teaspoons of cider vinegar taken with water each day has been known to produce amazing results. Cider vinegar can be taken alone or used in cooking. It can be used as a salad dressing, for pickling, in making mayonnaise or sprinkled on potato chips or French fries. It can used as a hot or cold beverage sweetened with honey. The best method of using apple cider vinegar is in its natural liquid form.


When the body is lacking certain minerals or salts, ill health can be the result. Toxic build-ups with the body can cause boils, blisters, acne, etc. Cider vinegar detoxifies and helps with the cleansing and clotting processes of the blood, by helping along the blood oxidation process.


Cider vinegar is thought to be beneficial in the treatment of arthritis, as a beverage or with compresses soaked in hot vinegar applied directly to the joints. It is also thought to be helpful when used to treat asthma, nose bleeds, osteoporosis, cancer, candida, high cholesterol, colds, constipation, muscle cramps, colitis, diabetes, diarrhea, depression, dizziness, ear discharge, eczema, fatigue, gallstones, kidney stones, hay fever, headaches, heartburn, hiccups, indigestion, insomnia, kidney and bladder problems, metabolism, nasal congestion, sore throats, stiff joints, ulcers and weight loss.


Please check with your physician before starting any new treatments, including dietary changes. Alternative or holistic health procedures are meant to be complimentary process to traditional medical practices, and not used in place of them".

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Curds & Whey

My mother loves to give my sisters and I leftover curds and whey.  Fresh whey, when properly prepared, is a great natural probiotic.  Whey is good for chickens and humans.  Whey is the most beneficial when prepared from raw milk but I realize that not everyone has access to good quality raw milk.  Luckily, it can be made from good quality, unsweetened, plain yogurt.  The following recipes for yogurt whey and raw milk whey are from mother's favorite cookbook, "Nourishing Traditions" by Sally Fallon

Homemade Yogurt Whey
 Unsweetened, unflavored (preferably organic) plain yogurt
Strainer
Cheesecloth
Bowl

Put a strainer in a large bowl and line the strainer with cheesecloth.  Pour yogurt into cheesecloth and allow fluid to drip into bowl (This fluid will look like lemonade and may have some white cloudiness to it).  Allow to drip for several hours then gather the cheese cloth and (Don't squeeze!) hang above bowl until the bag no longer drips.  The entire process can take around 7 hours.  The remaining yogurt is now called curds or kefir cheese or farmer cheese.  The flavor is a bit pungent for my mother's tastes but when mixed with Ranch Dressing mix people gobble it up!  The curds and whey can then be stored in the refrigerator for up to 6 months.  Yes, that's right...when properly prepared it has a crazy shelf life!


Homemade Raw Milk Whey
Good Quality Fresh Raw Milk (1 Gallon)
Yogurt Starter Culture (1 Packet)
Strainer
Cheesecloth
Bowl

Pour yogurt starter into raw milk, mix well, and set out at room temperature for 1 to 4 days until the milk separates.  When the milk separates, put a strainer in a large bowl and line with cheesecloth, pour milk into cheesecloth and allow fluids to drip into bowl.  After a few hours, gather the ends of the cheesecloth and hang above bowl until dripping stops.  This can take 7 to 14 hours.  Refrigerate when complete.  Shelf life of 6 months.


Monday, September 6, 2010

Martha's Favorite Video...

I really know how to lay a quality egg!

If you read the headlines last month about the egg recall, then I can’t blame you for being concerned about the quality of eggs sold in stores. Lucky for me, mother feeds us good quality chicken feed, fresh food scraps, oyster shell, and whey.  She also started hanging our food above ground because someone kept pooping in the food and knocking the feeder over.  They say that chickens aren't the brightest pennies in the pond but I think we found a pretty successful way to have our food raised up so we wouldn't have to bend over to eat it.

You can tell a good quality egg by the hard shell, the bright yellow yolk stands up in the center of the whites and the yolk is hard to rupture. It also says a lot that my eggs can sit out on the counter for a month before they need refrigeration.

Having access to clean water throughout the day and having our home lined with a deep layer of pine pellets keeps us clean, healthy and smelling good. Now, if I can just keep that neighbor cat from staring at me through the fence in the morning, I’ll be a-okay.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Probiotics: Healing the Mind

You'd probably be surprised to find that chickens benefit from probiotics just as much as humans.  When Mother first started biomedical treatments for Autism, she used to buy expensive probiotics for her children when times were good.  Now, she makes her own (which I'll ask her to share later).  For now, Mother explains why probiotics are helpful by sharing with us the following article from her Autism file:

Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride knows about children's health from personal experience. Her son was diagnosed autistic when he was three. At three and a half, he started a programme of treatment. Now 15, he attends a mainstream school.

“I remember that traumatic moment of the diagnosis ‘Autism’, being announced to us by our doctor followed by a statement 'There is nothing that can be done', says Natasha. “Well, being a doctor myself, I have to say ‘Your doctor is wrong! There is a lot that can be done’.”

Natasha and her partner Peter were founding members of PEACH (Parents for the Early intervention of Autism in Children). PEACH is a parent-led group helping parents of children with autism Intensive Behavioural Intervention Programmes. Also known as ABA, this approach is based on highly personalised, one-to-one coaching that teaches children language, play, academic, intellectual, self-help and social skills. An ABA programme can sometimes achieve miracles, but Natasha’s research and experience has shown her that it is still not enough.

“Looking back now, nobody could predict that a little boy without any language, constantly self stimulating, eating very little apart from milk from a baby bottle could undergo such a transformation. On the whole what happened to him can only be described as a miracle. However, his achievements are not due solely to the ABA programme“, says Natasha.


“A huge part of his transformation was in his nutritional management. Being trained as a medical doctor I knew that conventional medicine has nothing to offer children like my son. So I went back to university and trained as a nutritionist. We have changed his diet and after trying various nutritional supplements we have found the ones that work. An autistic child needs a very special nutritional management, a major part of it being – putting his gut flora right! Gut flora is a living organism very sensitive to the diet, antibiotics, steroids and stress.

“Diet on its own is a very powerful tool in helping an autistic child. But it cannot solve all the problems without nutritional supplements. In order to rebalance the gut flora it is essential to use a strong multi-strain probiotic.

“He showed an excellent response to probiotics. From about two to three months after starting it we saw dramatic improvements in our son – his eye contact became normal and stable, the self-stimulation had almost disappeared, he generally became more aware and with us. Everybody comments on how healthy he looks. He used to be on a milk-free diet. We introduced some milk products back into his diet and found that he tolerates it now without any symptoms.“

As a result of their experience, Peter heads up Cambridge Bioceuticals, a UK company founded by a team of doctors, nutritionists and scientists dedicated to advancing the research and use of probiotics. And he has become one of many children able to be helped by a combination of treatments with one thing in common – the use of powerful, multi-strain therapeutic probiotics.

“More than 400 children have gone through my clinic“, says Natasha. “Hyperactive children, children with dyslexia and asthma and eczema and ADHD and other disabilities, and what I see is that what we have in our society is an epidemic of compromised gut flora.“

As a result, she says, we also have an epidemic of poor health in children. “We hardly have any healthy children nowadays. One survey showed that only 10% of school children did not have a diagnosed condition. If you look at a typical school, you hardly see any healthy children. Some are obese, some look malnourished, a lot of them are very pale, a lot of them have eczema, a lot of them have asthma. About 30% of them are on inhalers. The situation is very sad.“

Recent international studies have suggested a relatively strong causal relationship between increased risk of childhood asthma and exposure to antibiotics during childhood, especially during the first year of life.

Prof Julian Crane of Otago University has commented: “Our paper, together with a study published …in Thorax (Farooqi IS, et al. Thorax 1998;53:927-32), raises the possibility that broad-spectrum antibiotics, particularly in the first year of life, may be associated with an increased risk of atopy and asthma. For reasons that have been pointed out in both papers, these results cannot be taken as definitive, but rather as hypothesis-raising.

“On the other hand, the results are plausible. Broad-spectrum antibiotics came into clinical usage in the 1960s, and their increased use coincides with the time trends for the increasing prevalence of asthma. There is a plausible mechanism, namely that broad-spectrum antibiotics may alter and reduce bowel flora and thus switch off the immunological signals that these gut bacteria send to the developing immune system.“ (1) Crane has also showed, with a study of 450 children at six Steiner schools in New Zealand, that even with• parents opposed to the routine use of antibiotics, a staggering 75% of the children had used antibiotics, 36% in the first year of life!

Autism is also exploding. “In this country one child in 250 is diagnosed as autistic, when 10 years ago we had one child in 10,000“, says Natasha. This is nothing to do with improvements or changes in diagnosis, she says. “The medical establishment and the government are trying to present it that way. But what that would mean is that 10 years ago doctors were so bad at diagnosing our children that they were missing one child in 250. But autism is not a disability that goes away as the child grows up. If they had missed one child in 250 10 years ago, then we would still only have one in 250 teenagers with autism now, which we don’t. Everybody who knows and works with autism is convinced that there is an epidemic going on.“

Although various causative factors have been promoted, Natasha is convinced that disturbed gut flora is at the root of it. She has a well-worked out chain of events that even explains how a compromised flora – and all that goes with it – has been passed on through the generations. Unless it is corrected, future generations are doomed to an ever-increasing level of ill-health, with potentially no one safe from a cycle of infections, allergies, arthritis, digestive disorders, atopy and, for some, hyperactivity, ADHD and autism. I asked her to explain this devastating theory; she started with the basics.

“We really started prescribing antibiotics for everything and anything in the ‘70s and ‘80s“, she says. “That’s when we started to get generations of people with compromised gut flora. Antibiotics wipe out the beneficial bacteria as well as the pathogenic bacteria. Remember, our beneficial bacteria are very vulnerable to antibiotics and get wiped out very quickly. If the course of antibiotics is short and the person has a fairly solid gut flora, then it usually recovers. But if antibiotics are repeated quite often, and particularly when people are prescribed long courses – such as when people with acne are put on tetracycline for 2 years or so – they invariably finish up with digestive disorders like IBS, because their gut flora gets wiped up. When the beneficial bacteria are not there, then all sorts of pathogens and opportunists get a chance to grow to occupy the gut and to populate it. They start digesting food in their own way, breaking it down into inappropriate substances. And they also damage the gut lining, making the gut leaky and allowing this maldigested food to get absorbed. The immune system reacts to this maldigested food as foreign substances and hence you get allergies.“

Now maybe it’s just the fashion, but everybody you meet these days says they have some sort of allergy. It’s either hayfever or permanently runny nose or skin rashes or food intolerances. Practitioners may distinguish between true allergies and “mere“ intolerances or sensitivities, but the public doesn’t. To them, there’s not doubt whatsoever that there’s an epidemic of allergies too.

“Allergies usually happen when the immune system gets out of balance“, says Natasha. “The major balancing agent of the immune system in the body is the gut with its gut flora. The flora can literally be described as the right hand of our immune system. But when the beneficial gut flora is not there, the two major arms of immunity, TH1 immunity and TH2, get out of balance. [*types of helper cells: current wisdom is that TH2 cells stimulate production of IgE, the master of allergic reactions, while Tl cells inhibit].

The end result of abnormal gut flora is a weakening of the TH1 arm; the TH2 gets over-active, and that’s the arm of the immunity that’s responsible for allergic type reactions, atopic type reactions. So instead of reacting to the environment stimuli in a normal, natural way, people start reacting in an allergic type of way.

“The gut flora’s really a huge, huge agent. On average everyone carries two kilograms of bacteria in their gut. There are more cells there than there are in an entire human body. We can’t live without this mass of bacteria and it’s a highly organised microbial world, dominated by beneficial bacteria.

“What I am seeing now are generations of people in this country with compromised gut flora – because I don’t just examine the child, I get a full medical history of the parents and the grandparents.

“A grandmother, for example, perhaps has arthritis, which is another sign of toxicity in the body. When opportunists and pathogenic bacteria occupy the gut, they produce a lot of toxic substances. These toxic substances seep through into the bloodstream and settle in different tissues of the body causing an auto-immune attack on those tissues as the immune system tries to clean the body up. So someone with arthritis usually has some abnormalities with the gut flora; they are being poisoned by their own gut. There is a certain level of toxicity in the body, which has particular design to settle in the joints. So the grandmother will have arthritis, or rheumatoid arthritis, or allergies or digestive disorders.

“A baby is born with a sterile gut and as the baby goes throughout the birth canal at birth, it swallows its first batches of bacteria. So a major part of the gut flora which would populate the virgin gut of the baby, comes from the mother. So this grandmother gives her compromised gut flora to her daughter. So now the daughter will be prone to PMS perhaps, to migraines, to digestive disorders – that’s what I see in mothers of autistic children. Between 95-100% of mothers of children with autism, hyperactivity, asthma, eczema and other problems, also have conditions that are related to abnormal gut flora. I hardly ever see healthy mothers.

“What happens is that she initially inherited the compromised gut flora from her mum, but she grows up and at the age of 15 or 16, she goes on a contraceptive pill. Many mothers use an oral contraceptive for quite a few years before they’re ready to have children. The contraceptive pill is a steroid and that damages the gut flora even further. It has a devastating effect on the gut flora.

So by the time this woman is ready to have children her gut flora is seriously compromised and that’s what she passes to her child.

“Because the gut flora is the major part of the immune system, when children are born with compromised gut flora they are left immune-compromised as well. With autistic children and hyperactive children, we see that in the first year of life and second year of life they’re very prone to infections, to ear infections in particular, and a lot of chest infections as well. They quite often go through one ear infection after another and eventually they are put on permanent antibiotics, which would wipe out whatever precious little beneficial bacteria they got in there.

“If you thought that grandmother’s breast-feeding may have gone some way to repairing this damage, think again.

“Breast-feeding is the best thing to establish normal gut flora. But breast milk is a two-sided coin. On one hand it’s the best food for the baby, because children who are not breast-fed develop completely different gut flora from those who are. And that sort of gut flora predisposes them later to all sorts of health problems. So breast-feeding is best. On the other hand, a woman whose gut is populated by abnormal flora will have toxins from that gut flora in her blood. And whatever’s in her blood is likely to be in her breast-milk. So she will be passing toxins through her breast-milk to her baby.

“A lot of these children have low stomach acidity. So when they start solids at the age of six months, they usually can’t digest them – particularly dairy milk proteins. This results in toxicity coming from pathogens such as the clostridia and candida families, which grow in abnormal gut environment producing particular kind of toxins that reduce the ability of the stomach to produce acids.“

Because of all these factors, a baby is not going to develop normal gut flora. If the normal bacteria are not there, then the coast is clear for all sorts of pathogens to take hold. On top of that, says Natasha, because the normal gut flora plays a huge role in digestion and absorption of food, these children go on to develop multiple nutritional deficiencies. “In parallel, the pathogenic flora convert the food into a whole host of toxic substances. A lot of these toxins have been well-studied and you can test for them. They have been found routinely in autistic children and in hyperactive children.

“Some of these toxins are well-known to CAM practitioners, such as the acetaldehyde produced by yeasts acting on sugars, and the ethanol that results from that when candida species get going. Others are less familiar, but can be found in the medical literature. Clostridium, for example, one of the opportunistic pathogens unleashed by antibiotics is known to produce a potent tetanus neurotoxin, which has been identified as a possible cause of autism in some case. (2) The suggestion is that this neurotoxin can be transported along the vagus nerve from the intestinal tract to the central nervous system and into the brain, disrupting the release of neurotransmitters. Another form of clostridium produces a botulinic neurotoxin, says Natasha.

Other researchers believe that sulphate-reducing bacteria in a disturbed gut flora may explain why around 95% of autistic children have low serum sulphate – about 15% of that found in controls (3). The resulting reduced sulphation not only increases gut permeability and inflammation but may also inactive neurotransmitters involved in the modulation of mood and behaviour. The sulphate research trail was kick-started by the observations of the UK self-help group Allergy Induced Autism. AIA encouraged Dr Rosemary Waring of Birmingham University, whose pioneering research proved that autistic children have problems with detoxification, so that certain foods and used neuro-transmitters are not processed effectively. (4)

One of the most significant findings is that opportunistic fungi in the gut can produce opiate-like substances. Dr Alan Friedman, PhD, a Johnson & Johnson researcher with an interest in autism, has found dermorphin and deltorphin in the urine of autistic children (5). As Reading university’s Dr Max Bingham, PhD, comments, these compounds are “many times more potent than morphine“ and had previously only been found on the skin of “poison dart frogs“ and traditionally used as arrow-tip poisons and hallucinogens.

There is already a well-established “opioid theory of autism“, in which researchers have confirmed that children with autism had many abnormal peptides (small pieces of partially broken down proteins) in their urine. These included casomorphine and gliadomorphin. These peptides are the breakdown products of casein and gluten, giving a sound biochemical basis for a successful dietary intervention first investigated in Norway and then replicated at the university of Sunderland’s Autism Research Unit by Dr Paul Shattock and colleagues (6). Opiates and the gluten/casein sensitivity turn autism into a living nightmare for the afflicted children. “These opiates absorb very well, cross the blood-brain barrier and then block the brain in certain areas“, says Natasha. “These children have got normal eyes, normal ears, normal tactile sensitivity, but their brains cannot process the information. So the result is that children don’t hear, don’t see and don’t feel the same way we do. The whole sensory input gets jumbled up in their heads. They don’t develop speech because they don’t hear properly. The speech that is addressed to them from their parents, from their carers, is jumbled in their heads. They can’t make sense out of it. The highly functioning autistic individual they say that quite often they can see one half of the page and can’t see the other. They can hear certain vowels and they can’t hear others. They can hear certain frequencies but not others.

One child, for example, could clearly hear his mother’s voice, but not his father’s. The same happens with children with dyslexia; that’s why they can’t read, because their visual areas of the brain are blocked with toxicity.“ And this all comes from the gut. Just like the nature cure pioneers always maintained: your gut can poison you. The good news is that the gut can be helped back into balance and the research• clearly supports dietary intervention. – autism is NOT all in the mind.

“Diet is a huge part of the treatment for these children“, says Natasha. “They need the kind of diet that heals the digestive tract, stops it leaking and establishes the normal gut flora.“ Natasha employs the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, a strict grain-free, lactose-free and sucrose-free meal plan that limits the particular carbohydrates needed by harmful yeasts and bacteria. (See panel.) Only mono sugars are allowed: fructose, galactose and some others found in fresh vegetables, fresh fruit and honey.

The original diet was developed in the 1950s by Drs Sidney and Merrill Haas to cure patients with coeliac disease and was first published in the Haas’s book The Management of Celiac Disease in 1951. It has since been championed by biochemist and cell biologist Elaine Gottschall, MS, author of Breaking the Vicious Cycle: Intestinal Health through Diet (first published in 1987 and still in print). Gottschall’s eight-year-old daughter, diagnosed by specialists with incurable ulcerative colitis and with a deteriorating condition, was symptom-free in two years after following the Haas instructions. With more than 40 years experience of the diet, Gottschall says; “Some of the most dramatic and fastest recoveries have occurred in babies and young children with severe constipation and among children who, along with intestinal problems, had serious behaviour problems. These included autistic-type hyperactivity as well as hyperactivity, often accompanied by severe and prolonged night terrors. Very often the behaviour problems and night terrors cleared up within ten days after initiation of the Haas Specific Carbohydrate Diet.“ (7)

Natasha says, “Autistic disorder is essentially a digestive disorder. So once you put the digestive tract right, you lay the ground for recovery.“

Dr Andrew Wakefield is the internationally respected gastroenterologist who was researching Crohn’s and Ulcerative colitis when he found a type of inflammatory bowel disease in autistic children who had received the MMR vaccine. He was sacked when he published his findings in the Lancet. Wakefield has written: “I sit across from you as the parent and you say: 'this is what happened to my child, they were developing normally, they had speech, language, social skills, they received their MMR vaccine and they developed bowel symptoms and their behaviour deteriorated, I lost them, the light went out'. You listen to that story, you don't buy into it, but you say: 'is there anything I can do to substantiate this in my job as a physician?' You investigate the symptoms and you find that there is an inflammatory bowel disease that has gone unrecognised in these children . So the parents were right“. (8)

According to Natasha, before Wakefield started investigating, the medical profession didn’t want to know about digestive abnormalities in autistic children. “How many autistic children that I see have digestive abnormalities!“ she says. “All parents talk about it. They have diarrhoea, constipation, flatulence, pain, bloating, the whole picture. So the occasional child who actually made it to gastroenterologist and whose gut has been x-rayed, invariably showed faecal compaction. Old compacted rotten faeces glued to the walls of their gut.

“Wakefield was the first gastroenterologist to seriously look at it; he found the same thing – an autistic child’s gut is chock a block. He also found inflammation, which in some features was similar to ulcerative colitis, in others was similar to Crohn’s disease and others were unique to autistic children. He found abscesses filled with pus. He found ulcers, he found compaction, he found erosions, he found the whole length was inflamed. And because these children cannot communicate, they cannot tell you that they’re in pain, cannot tell you that their tummy is hurting, the parents don’t know about it. But many do go to doctors and say ‘My child has diarrhoea’, ‘My child has constipation’. Some of these children have horrendous constipation. They don’t go to the toilet for a week to ten days and then they have an enormous, extremely painful hard stool, which cracks their anus and the anus bleeds. This sort of experience is very painful for the child, so they end up holding on for as long as they can, until they just can’t hold any longer – and they have another hard stool.“

Remember, these are children who are also unable to communicate to their parents and carers the pain they are in.

Along with diet, Natasha says supplementation is very important. Probiotics are the absolute foundation – but they must be the right sort. And that means a multi-strain product containing soil bacteria, not just lactobacilli and bifidobacteria. These are what she calls “therapeutic“ probiotics as opposed to the milder, prophylactic products. “You need soil bacteria to break down the putrefaction and clear out the pathogenic flora because they are aggressive, they actually use them in industry because they have great ability to clear out putrefied waste. They work in a clinical setting far more effectively.“

Even so, a child is typically kept on the strict diet and taking probiotics for at least two years. “Nothing works that fast in nature“, she says. The good news is that autisic children are born with normal brains and recovery is possible. “The majority of them are developing normally until the scales are tipped and toxicity starts affecting their brain development. It usually happens in the second year of life. If you catch them early and you teach them appropriately, they become perfectly normal, they finish up in mainstream schools. Obviously they’re all different, some of them would have some idiosyncracies, or they’ll be a little bit eccentric, but they’re within normal range.“

Apart from fish oils, she doesn’t include many other supplements. “I do believe in providing most things through the diet with children. Once the diet is put right, the gut starts healing and the child starts absorbing nutrients from food.“

Similarly, she finds that once the gut flora is right a lot of food intolerances disappear and the major source of toxicity is removed, easing the load on the liver and detoxification systems. However, some children will need to be actively detoxified using combinations of juices. “We all have a so-called detoxification system. When the system is overloaded with toxicity, overloaded with work“, she explains, “then the more you store it in various tissues in order to deal with it later. But in children which are highly toxic, autistic children, the time never comes for the toxins which are stored in tissues.“ They also tend to store a lot of heavy metals – even so, she prefers the gentle effectiveness of juices to chelation. "The child has a couple of 8oz glasses a day of freshly pressed juice. Therapeutic kinds of juices are generally vegetable juices, particularly green juices, which taste ghastly! So I suggest 50% of something tasty, like pineapple or orange or apple or mango, to disguise the taste of the other 50%. Of that about 40% will be carrot juice, 10% beetroot. You have to be careful with beetroot because it is extremely powerful and can really make you sick. So other juices we use are celery, lettuce and then greens like spinach, parsley, dill, fresh nettles, dandelion leaves, those sort of things."

The children use the juices while on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. The only other thing they drink is water – unchlorinated, bottled or
filtered, and lots of it.

To check progress, Natasha may use a Great Smokies stool test. "It is useful when we have been through the intial stages of the programme and if we are struggling with something and what to know what's going on. I don't do the test before we have done the intial baseline treatment."

The only other test she is liable to use is the organic acid test (OAT) developed by Dr William Shaw of the Great Plains Laboratory. A non-invasive urine test, it measures around 70 different biochemical compounds, picking up abnormal urinary metabolites that are the "signatures" that can reveal what specific overgrowth a child has. It also reveals some nutritional deficiencies. We'll give Shaw the last word: "The last half of this century could be termed the era of antibiotics.

The next century will be involved in developing new antimicrobial treatments (probiotics or beneficial bacteria) or other therapies that have less potential for harming young children. Pasteur and others found that lethal strains of bacteria could be rendered harmless if animals were given other benign bacteria simultaneously." (9)

· Dr Campbell-McBride holds a Degree in Medicine and a Postgraduate Degree in Neurology. She also holds a second Postgraduate Degree in Human Nutrition from Sheffield University. In her Cambridge Clinic she specialises in Nutrition for Children with Learning Disabilities, and Adults with Digestive and Immune System Disorders. She lectures at a BANT-accredited conference
in London on October 9.

· Cambridge Bioceuticals Probiotics site:www.bio-kult.com Includes case histories and other articles by Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride.
· Reprinted from CAM Magazine August 2003.

References
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www.chiroweb.com/archives/17/17/01.html
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