Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable
-
@sneedful How would u fix that if that was the case?
-
@sneedful "For example, Bilophila wadsworthia, which increases with meat consumption, appears to link dietary fat, bile acids, and GI inflammatory responses. B. wadsworthia was found to grow well upon bile acids and to express sulfite reductases that produce the GI irritant H2S."
Ive been eating a bit of meat recently.. my armpits smell of sulphur like, after meat and eggs...
"Bilophila wadsworthia is a gut bacteria that has a complex role in health and disease, and produces hydrogen sulfide in our gut."
-
@Samyo if you dont have sulphur farts its probably not that bad
bornfree.life has a whole protocol on recovering from this stuff
in the meantime cyproheptadine can be super helpful
emodin , methylene blue, vitamin c , all stuff to think about trying
-
@sneedful said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
free.lif
I get these farts, if i ate too many oats for example, apart from that I dont fart at all on this zero fiber
-
@Samyo did this all start after the meme virus
-
@sneedful no
-
@Samyo said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
Only way i calm down my rashes is removing fiber, and becoming constipated the opposite way is, regular bowels with rashes on my skin I've attempted both ways nearly for 3 years now
- It's not the appropriate way to solve the problem, as you can see.
You have to regulate the overgrowth of intestinal bacteria and you have to get the bacteria go out of the second part of the colon. Not only. - Several points have to be followed, with a plan. Just B1 is not going to solve everything for every body. It's to facilitate communication between the brain and the stomach / the intestines.
- It's not the appropriate way to solve the problem, as you can see.
-
@sneedful interesting, thanks for the share.
-
@sneedful said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
@LetTheRedeemed coconut oil literally enhances some of the bacteria that can cause these issues particularly bilophila wadsworthia and others that feed in bile acids
Is that to say coconut oil is pro bacteria? I've never heard this before, but from my experience with coconut oil, I could see this being the case. I don't feel well when I take it. This is really pronounced when I take it straight, but I'm now considering even within food it may negatively affect me.
-
@Mossy said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
- Is that to say coconut oil is pro bacteria?
2.I've never heard this before,
3.but from my experience with coconut oil, I could see this being the case. I don't feel well when I take it.
4.This is really pronounced when I take it straight, but I'm now considering even within food it may negatively affect me.
- some kinds of SFA are useful , but excess unbalance is not appropriate. Let's say 45/45/10 %.
- doi: 10.1159/000371687
Interactions between diet, bile acid metabolism, gut microbiota, and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases.
=> excess SFA, sugar and lack of veggies. - Listen to your body. Stop 1 month with coconut oil. Then take 2 x1 tsp with a meal.
Other kinds from butter and free-range cattle / poultry / duck / ... - Coconut oil has the capacity to kill LPS bacteria. Liver overburdened. Need some olive oil to carry them away. Not advised to take coco at he beginning of a detox, or when you take antibiotics.
When I have have problem to digest food:
- enzymedica lipogold (when bloating)
-- Betaine HCL (with ginger & gentian bitters), from Doctor's best. once a day, at evening meal.
- Is that to say coconut oil is pro bacteria?
-
@Mossy im probably wrong about that tbh
coconut oil is generally anti bacterial. that bacteria bilophilia wadsworthia and some others feed off bile and increased fat intake can increase bile but coconut oil is mostly absorbed by another method, so in general coconut oil is anti bacterial and @LucH is probably right
so I retract the previous statement saying coconut oil can feed bacteria.
-
@LucH said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
@Mossy said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
- Is that to say coconut oil is pro bacteria?
2.I've never heard this before,
3.but from my experience with coconut oil, I could see this being the case. I don't feel well when I take it.
4.This is really pronounced when I take it straight, but I'm now considering even within food it may negatively affect me.
- some kinds of SFA are useful , but excess unbalance is not appropriate. Let's say 45/45/10 %.
- doi: 10.1159/000371687
Interactions between diet, bile acid metabolism, gut microbiota, and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases.
=> excess SFA, sugar and lack of veggies. - Listen to your body. Stop 1 month with coconut oil. Then take 2 x1 tsp with a meal.
Other kinds from butter and free-range cattle / poultry / duck / ... - Coconut oil has the capacity to kill LPS bacteria. Liver overburdened. Need some olive oil to carry them away. Not advised to take coco at he beginning of a detox, or when you take antibiotics.
When I have have problem to digest food:
- enzymedica lipogold (when bloating)
-- Betaine HCL (with ginger & gentian bitters), from Doctor's best. once a day, at evening meal.
Much appreciated, LucH. I will consider and apply some of these.
- Is that to say coconut oil is pro bacteria?
-
@sneedful said in Assumimg I have dysbiosis gut is made worse by any soluable fiber and insoluable:
@Mossy im probably wrong about that tbh
coconut oil is generally anti bacterial. that bacteria bilophilia wadsworthia and some others feed off bile and increased fat intake can increase bile but coconut oil is mostly absorbed by another method, so in general coconut oil is anti bacterial and @LucH is probably right
so I retract the previous statement saying coconut oil can feed bacteria.
Thanks for clarifying. I appreciate your explanation.
-
@Mossy I appreciate your appreciation
-
I'll assume these are accurate for the supplements you're taking, unless you respond otherwise:
https://www.amazon.com/Doctors-Best-Betaine-Gentian-Bitters/dp/B00HA67WCQ
https://www.amazon.com/Enzymedica-Supplement-Digestion-capsules-servings/dp/B00124UKJ4
-
-
@Samyo I tried the whole ray peat style metabolic eating when I had SIBO but it did not help. When the gut microbiome is in dysbiosis you need to address that directly. You have no poops on no fiber diet. This is actually quite normal. Carnivore people only poop 3x a week. No fiber no poop because your body digests and absorbs everything. It’s fiber which is indigestible and must come out the back end.
For a normal protocol I would recommend doing 2-3 weeks of antimicrobials. For example Dysbiocide and FC Cidal with Oregano oil drops. Take twice a day until finished. Google “baking soda stomach acid test” to see if you have low stomach acid. If low then take betain hcl, digestive bitters, or apple cider vinegar before meals. Also take Ox Bile 200-500mg 1.5hrs after meals. Don’t take it with meals because it will alkalize the stomach which you don’t want.
Bile is a laxative as well as antibacterial to wash out any unwanted bacteria in the small intestines (probiotics belong in your colon).
Do a lot of walking or movements throughout the day. This helps the MMC. Very important to keep food moving along the intestines and not being sluggish which feeds the bacteria. Another way is to do stomach massages 2hrs after meals. Simply press down from the solar plexus down to your groin. You’re manually pushing things along the intestines. Also very effective. Some people buy supplements for Motility that have artichoke leaf extract and ginger. They’re expensive. Might as well just do walking or massage. Or you can buy artichoke leaf extract by itself and take some ginger.
After your anti-bacterial protocol and fixing your stomach acid and bile production. Then you start on a selective soluble fiber protocol to feed the good guys. Yes it feeds the bad guys too, but the bad guys like proteins and sugars more so your good guys will benefit more from these fibers and eventually overpower the bad ones. Twice a day take 1 tbsp PGHH, 1 tbsp stabilized rice bran or wheat bran or rye bran or barley bran, 1 heaping teaspoon inulin, 2x Granny Smith apples for the pectin. 1 tbsp unmodified potato starch (don’t take the starch if you have constipation). If you have constipation use 1 tbsp psyllium husk. Add it last and drink quick or it will gel up. You may get bloating for the first 2-3 weeks as your microbiome is adjusting but it will level out.
The first time I had SIBO I followed Dr ruscios protocol with antibacterials and triple probiotics and fasting as well as with leaky gut healing supplements, but this time I’m doing the protocol I mentioned above. Check out Guy Daniels on YouTube. Makes a lot of sense and it’s much cheaper than buying all sorts of supplements like probiotics or leaky gut stuff or antimicrobials for months and months.
-
@sneedful I think coconut oil is only helpful for candida which is higher up in the intestinal tract. It never did anything for my SIBO.
-
@Samyo, do you have access to raw milk and if so, have you tried it? I experienced the same issue as you, even after eliminating the methane SIBO (causes constipation) that I had, when pasteurized dairy comprised the majority of my diet and my diet was fiber-free. My skin and gut were happy but like you, I had rabbit stools. Also, I’m not sure why but eggs caused constipation too, until I switched to eggs from heirloom hens. With raw milk and heirloom eggs, even without fiber, my eliminations are perfect.
-
@ora Proper gut motility relies on thyroid function more than fiber.