Showing posts with label coconut oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coconut oil. Show all posts

Friday, April 8, 2011

Thyroid & DS Go Hand in Hand

The symptoms of low thyroid hormone are sometimes difficult to recognize, especially in infants. They include slow growth, delayed development, an enlarged tongue, low muscle tone, dry skin and constipation. (Hmmm... sounds awfully similar to DS symptoms...) You can't usually tell by looking at someone how their thyroid is unless it's bad and has been for a while.

Since it is hypothesized that most everyone with Down syndrome will develop hypothyroidism or in a lesser percentage, hyperthyoidism, it's important that you know the symptoms and how and what to test so you can detect it early and treat it before it does permanent damage.

Hypothyroidism is typically diagnosed by a combination of blood tests (including TSH, Free T4, Free T3, reverse T3 and thyroid antibodies), clinical examination and evaluation of symptoms. The clinical exam looks for slowed reflexes, slowed heart rate, enlarged neck, puffiness in the face, swelling in hands and feet and other clinical signs of hypothyroidism.

Although Jett's thyroid results showed numbers in the hypothyroid range, his endocrinologist said he was fine and didn't need to be seen for three months. He said high TSH is "normal in people with Down syndrome." Yes, and since people with DS have hypothyroidism, that makes sense. But it doesn't make sense to use that as an excuse to not treat them!! It's like saying people with diabetes have high blood sugar so it's normal for them....

Needless to say, I wholeheartedly disagreed and never went back to him. Jett had a lot of signs of hypothyroidism and I had a small window of time to get him treated before permanent damage was to take place! Maybe we can't fault the endo's because with DS, we have to be super aware of the thyroid issues? Maybe for a typical child, that kind of (lack of) treatment would be okay? It's just that we want to give our kids the best chance for proper development. We don't need any more strikes against them!

Confused about lab results?

Check out the thyroid lab charts at the end of this post. Typically in hypothyroidism, the T4 will be low and the TSH will be elevated (as the brain is trying to tell the thyroid to get going). Anything above a TSH of 2.0 is cause for concern, especially when it's a child with T21. Research demonstrates impaired development in children with DS with a TSH of 5.7 or more. (http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/test/tsh/overview.html) Why wait until it reaches 5.7?

Some infants and young children have blood tests that show a normal T4 but a high TSH. This condition is called "idiopathic hyperthyrotropinemia." (Jett had this.) While the cause isn't clear, this may reflect a regulatory defect of TSH, or it may be a sign of impending true hypothyroidism. Some endocrinologists will recommend retesting in three to six months, and others will recommend treating as if it were an early hypothyroid state. I chose to immediately treat because he exhibited the tale tell symptoms and because I wanted to prevent permanent damage.

Treatment is the replacement of thyroid hormone with either synthetic thyroxine or natural thyroid. The most common (and popular) medication with physicians is synthetic T4 -- known generically as levothyroxine. Common brand names in the US include Synthroid, Levoxyl, Levothroid, and Unithroid. Some patients do better with the addition of the T3 hormone, in synthetic form. The drug lithyronine (Cytomel) can be added to the levothyroxine. The drug liotrix (Thyrolar) combines both synthetic T4 and T3 into one pill, and is helpful for some patients.

The more holistic and integrative practitioners sometimes use Armour Thyroid. Armour is an older natural drug, derived from the desiccated (dried) thyroid gland of pigs. Some practitioners and patients prefer the drug because it includes natural forms of T4, T3, and other thyroid hormones and cofactors.

For adults, the natural hormone replacement such as Armour is preferable. (See stopthethyroidmadness.com) but since children can build up antibodies against it, you should consider going with a T3 and/or T4 compound until you can get your child's thyroid to work on its own.

Important Note: Armour is readily available for the thyroid to use but synthroid takes 1-2 weeks to become available in the system.
Iron within a multi-vitamin or other supplement will cause absorption problems if taken within 4 hours of thyroid hormone. Calcium in the vitamin would also do the same.

As a precaution, I'd be prepared for possible hypothyroidism by purchasing the dessicated porcine thyroid now and have it handy if your child starts to show symptoms. It may be weeks or months (in Jett's case) before you can find someone to treat your child. Be sure to research thoroughly before giving any medication yourself. stopthethyroidmadness.com has a step by step guide.

Jett was on dessicated porcine thyroid, which I had to give him myself until I found someone to treat him. Now he is on a T3 compound. In three weeks after taking the T3, he gained a pound, his skin was no longer dry, his body temperature went back to normal and his constipation went away. After being on T3 for 3 months, his TSH level is the same that it was when I gave him the dessicated thyroid medicine. (1.7)

The dose is managed by watching sequential blood tests to see how the thyroid responds. Treatment is usually needed for life, but I'm working now to ween Jett off his thyroid meds with the following plan my doctor help me come up with.

If you find he has a problem, until you find someone to listen to you, there is plenty you can do help to get his thyroid working properly.

The plan I've worked out with my integrated doctor:

1) Stop all soy & goiterific foods until thyroid is stable.

2) Add Epsom salts to his bath.

3) Massage with coconut oil or just give a teaspoon a day. See below for why coconut oil works.

4) Get a urine test to see how much iodine he needs (too much iodine is dangerous) and the appropriate blood tests to check the thyroid function as well as the levels of zinc & selenium. See below how iodine works.

5) Keep track of his basal body temperature to check for signs of hypo/hyperthyroidism.

6) Monitor his heart rate for a week with a pulse oximeter since he's had heart surgery and his heart rate may increase if he's taking too many meds when his own thyroid takes over. (You have to watch symptoms of hyperthyroidism as he's gradually eased off the meds.)

7) Once the test results are back, supplement appropriately. For iodine, he recommends applying a 2 inch square on his skin and reapply when it disappears. Follow the instructions at http://breastcancerchoices.org/iprotocol.html. He also recommends 100 mg of l-tyrosine (100 mg is in Nutrivene, but your child has to weigh 80 lbs to get up to that dose). The combo of tyrosine & iodine will help heal the thyroid. Iron levels should be at least at 50 for the thyroid to work properly.

These work together to make his thyroid work again. It's amazing because you can watch his temperature gradually rise to normal. But, you don't really have time to wait for it to heal... you need to get it working NOW.

How to test the thyroid yourself

A big clue to the function of a normal thyroid is body temperature. A normal axillary temperature is around 98° F. Normal rectal temperature is no greater than 100.2° F.

It's best to take the temp first thing in the morning, before he gets out of bed (basal body temp). Food, drink, room temperature, etc. can all change body temperature. If his thyroid isn't working properly, his temperature will run low.

I took Jett's temperature everyday. It was consistently around 98.6. Then one morning his hands felt cold and when I took his temperature that day and thereafter, it was consistently a degree lower. He also developed constipation, dry skin and wasn't growing.

To take his temperature, go to http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/temperature/ for details. This is a great site, but it's not for children and not for our children so there are some different things we would want to do to treat the thyroid.

If you have become used to a calm, sedate child who is hypothyroid, once the thyroid is treated, it may seem as if your child has suddenly become hyperactive, when in fact your child is returning to his or her "natural" state! I thought Jett was very active until his thyroid was fixed and I was shocked by how much more active he'd become. After three weeks of treatment, he gained a pound and his temperature rose to a normal 98.6.

From an experienced Mom:

Thyroid supplementation is tricky.

Steps:
1. Determine why you are having trouble with thyroid hormone levels
2. Determine what the course of treatment will be (supplements/full suppression/partial suppression)
3. Determine which thyroid hormone you will use
4. Monitor constantly (with blood tests/temperature/symptoms)

*First*, you must determine WHY you are having trouble with thyroid hormones. Is it auto-immune, is it a failing thyroid, cancer of the thyroid, growing nodules in the thyroid, poor conversion due to bad nutrition, celiac disease which will cause poor nutrient uptake and therefore poor conversion, overall gluten sensitivity which will cause poor conversion, iodine
deficiency, etc.

You need to know the state of your body. Have you been so hypo for so long that you have thrashed your adrenals? Are you anemic? Are you lacking in other minerals/vitamins?* If you go on thyroid medication too quickly with any other deficiencies, you will crash and burn.* You could have heart palpitations, etc. In any case, you need to work up slowly on thyroid
hormones...small amounts adjusted every 6 weeks or so to keep from overwhelming all the rest of the body. There truly are physical reasons why throwing high doses of thyroid hormone at a person suddenly can cause massive problems. But, that goes beyond the scope of this discussion.

So, supplementation with everything else first or concurrently with your thyroid hormone is necessary to truly be successful. It is a slow process with constant rebalancing as you go.

*Second*, Are you going to go for mere supplementation? Or, are you going for complete shutdown of the gland with full replacement. In cases of cancer and auto-immune, the new idea is to shut down the gland completely with full replacement. It is even written up in Synthroid's product insert as such.
Not that I think Synthroid is the best answer, but if they are saying complete replacement is necessary, then doctors should be listening. However, many doctors don't read the product insert and fail to be notified by the reps when there are changes.

And, I do know there are several theories on this one. Some people go for
complete shut down in auto-immune. Others are having great success in
treating the auto-immune with iodine and such. I think the people who do
poorly on iodine with auto-immune may be suffering from undiagnosed adrenal
fatigue. In any case, there are competing theories and you would be best
served by researching this thoroughly for yourself. And, it is absolutely
necessary to do something about those antibody levels due to the high
correlation between thyroid auto-immune antibodies and lymphatic cancer.
Just noting that. Don't let any doctor tell you high antibody levels are
normal and will eventually burn out your thyroid, but that is to be
expected! There are bigger implications.

As an interesting note, there is some evidence to suggest that gluten antibodies attack your thyroid tissues. So, if you are auto-immune to gluten, chances are you have antibodies attacking your thyroid gland as well.


*Third *the question comes to what type of thyroid supplementation:

And an important note: *Do NOT, NOT, NOT, take your thyroid hormone within 4 hours of calcium or iron supplements if you are taking the hormone by swallowing it.* DO NOT!!!!!! These vitamins will bind with the hormone and render it inactive. You could take it all day long and have no effect. This seems to apply more to the actual supplements you swallow than to food
products. Here you get into chemistry....so research it if you are curious as to why. Doctors just don't seem to understand this, so I try to shout it from the rooftops!

Porcine/Pharmaceuticals: My preference is porcine. It gives Free T3, Free T4, calcitonin, and small amounts of T2 and T1. One of the advantages of natural thyroid is you can take them sublingually (dissolve them under your tongue). The advantage to this is that you do not have to wait one hour after taking the hormone to eat or drink anything. If you eat or drink too
soon, you risk absorbing less of the hormone. Note, if you have been swallowing them, do not switch suddenly to sublingual dosing. You can cause problems due to increased absorption.

Amongst porcine, you have several options:

Armour:
Armour was reformulated several years ago. They changed the filler from a
sugar based filler to a cellulose based filler. Somehow this change
prevented the uptake of the thyroid for some people. They theorize that the
thyroid hormone does not cross the blood brain barrier without the
sugar...but that is only a theory. In any case, for some people (me
included) the reformulated Armour caused terrible problems.

Compounded:
So, now there are several compounding pharmacies making a comparable product
to Armour. If you find a compounding pharmacy, they typically do not take
insurance, but you can submit the receipts to your insurance for
reimbursement. *Make sure they are using porcine ingredients*. Many of them
are making synthetic but "bio-identical" hormones. These are NOT natural
thyroid and will NOT give you the same hormones as the natural products

Erfa:
Canadian brand of the old Armour thyroid. You can have your doctor write a
prescription for thyroid and have it filled by a Canadian pharmacy. They
will ship it to you. It is the same as the old Armour thyroid. They
purchased the Armour recipe from the company. So, there you go!

Glandulars such as Nutrimed:
Typically these do contain all of the same ingredients as the prescription
products. However, since many people do these products without a doctor, you
must know to work up slowly and watch temperature/heart/symptoms. Best done
with a natural doctor's supervision. You can get into trouble quickly if you
don't watch what you are doing. But you can order blood tests on line in
most states so you can monitor what is happening to your body. I took an
adrenal glandular once and had a problem immediately with my heart. But, I
was so out of balance in other areas that I had no business trying that by
myself. Everything must balance in all of these equations or you will get
yourself into trouble quickly. I don't really think I can emphasize this
enough. Caution and care when using these is absolutely necessary. But, I do
know many people who utilize this option and do quite well because they make
it their full time job to know what is going on.


Then we get to Synthetic options:

With synthetic, you have to take this 30-60 minutes before you eat. It
REQUIRES stomach acid to break down the bonds between the chemicals in the
synthetics (although I do have to ask how people on acid inhibitors break
down these bonds...but that is another discussion!)

T4 goes by a number of names, the most popular one being Synthroid. The T3
is Cytomel. I don't prefer these products because they do not have the full
range of thyroid hormone. But, some people, although I don't know many, do
well on this.....I don't really have much to say on this because I simply
believe they could do better on natural...if they were balanced in other
areas. My problem is that if you are only getting T4 you must have all other
body systems working normally so you are converting from the T4 to other
forms of thyroid. If you are not perfectly functioning in other nutrients
(and honestly, how many hypo thyroid patients are functioning in other areas
perfectly!!!!) then you will fail to convert properly. Your TSH will show
normal, you may even have enough Free T4 in your system, but you may be
failing to convert further due to nutrient deficiencies and many doctors
will NOT check for this conversion factor. So you will slowly get worse and
worse while having normal blood tests.

This same mom's notes on my plan:
You need to get his ferritin levels up higher. He needs to have ferritin up at 60-80 in order for his body to utilize his hormone levels and convert thyroid form T4 to T3. Low ferritin stores can cause many of the same symptoms as hypothyroid.

Also check Vit D, B12. Both are necessary for proper functioning of hormones...not just thyroid hormones. Typically, a hypo person will have lower than normal Vit D levels which can cause some of the symptoms, especially depression.

Watch for extreme fatigue with his Epsom salt baths. They can cause too rapid detox and really wipe you out. Just back off a bit if that happens.

Watch heart function with T3 that high. You may be seeing heart palpitations etc. with high T3. There are so many problems with T3 only supplementation. You have to divide the dosage and give it every 3-4 hours because it leaves the body after that time. If you don't, you dose all at once, elevate the T3 too high for those 3-4 hours and then cause the body to crash after the T3 leaves the body. And, because the body's T4 is so low, you don't have enough to use for natural conversion. So, you go through this see saw effect. Not pleasant. Too much energy....too little energy...to much energy...The body really doesn't know what to do with that! If you gave the dosage and then had the blood draw right after that, you may only have elevated T3 levels due to the supplementation. You won't really be seeing what is going on after the T3 has dissipated from his body.

From Q. Fish's book, Down Syndrome What You CAN Do:

Doc Don, Downs, and Hypothyroidism

The Major Handicap

As infants, they begin life with a host of handicaps. Their mothers are usually advanced in age. Indeed, their risk of their illness increases with each passing decade of their mother’s age at conception.

Infancy is difficult as they tend to be less active than healthy newborns, often feed poorly, and growth is usually sluggish. Bowel movements are frequently a problem, and constipation can be so bad that rectal prolapse is not rare.

They lag behind their peers with linear growth being more retarded than their tendency to gain weight. If the diet includes adequate carotene, there might well be a yellow-orange tinge to their thickened, puffy skin. They retain fluids easily, and may have dry and scaly skin.

Mental and physical retardation are the most common outcomes, and parents are frequently frustrated by the difficulty getting health professionals to help. They are prone to frequent illnesses, obesity, hearing problems, and delays in mental, emotional, physical, and sexual development.

The above is pretty much a classic textbook description of Cretinism that is Undiagnosed, Untreated, HYPOTHYROIDISM in childhood. Also, it is very similar to descriptions of Down’s Syndrome (DS). Indeed, these conditions overlap often enough that some investigators feel that Hypothyroidism is not only the cause of many of the problems associated with DS, but that it may indeed be a causative factor in DS. (David Derry, MD, PhD, personal communications)

If an infant is born without a well functioning thyroid gland, the physician has a matter of weeks to figure out what is wrong and fix it. If the doctor misses this Golden Window, that child is condemned to a lifetime of mental and physical retardation; and even good treatment later in life cannot make up for the missed critical time for maturation. The window lengthens as the child matures, but the severity of the consequences is always much greater for the underdeveloped brain than for the adult.

It’s Everywhere And Affects Everything...

Because thyroid hormone activity regulates how many calories each cell is allowed to burn into energy, for its own use; that small, butterfly shaped gland weighing less than an ounce sits in your throat and controls virtually every function in your body. Thyroid disease plays a major (if not the major) role in: conception, fetal development, pregnancy and delivery, ongoing growth and maturation, cardiovascular diseases, stroke, brain development and thinking, skin and hair texture and growth, and any other health concern one could imagine. (You might like to read, “Solved: The Riddle of Illness” by Langer, MD.)

Thyroid Disease Is Common...

Some parts of the Country have always had an abundance of thyroid problems. The Great Lakes Basin has long been called the “Goiter Belt.” (A goiter is an enlarged, probably malfunctioning thyroid gland.) Iodine is critical for adequate thyroid function. The use of fluorides in the water, tooth paste, and plastics, and many drugs has seriously contributed to an increase in thyroid disease by preventing iodine utilization. (And, incidentally, there is NO reasonable evidence that adding this dangerous, toxic industrial waste to drinking water helps teeth.)

The chlorine that is put in water to “purify” it, actually displaces iodine in the diet and prevents adequate uptake, as well. (Incidentally, it reacts with impurities in water to form known carcinogen; and it is not banned in Europe where ozone-activated oxygen does the same job, safer and cheaper.)

Iodine was used in bakery goods as a dough conditioner, and a slice of Wonder Bread (for all of its evils) could easily provide a reasonable supply of dietary iodine to prevent a goiter. But, that is not allowed, and instead, bromine which is another iodine antagonist is now used. (“Iodine: Why You Need it, Why You Can’t Live Without It” by David Brownstein, MD does a great job with the role of iodine in health.)

In addition, many of the chemicals used in plastics and foods prevent adequate thyroid function. For all the problems most people have, DS makes successful adaptation to Hypothyroidism even more difficult. Communication difficulties coupled with low expectations from health care professionals often condemns the DS child to one more unnecessary difficulty.

There Is No Money In Treating Not Thyroid Illness...

If a doctor adequately treats thyroid illness, the patient gets markedly better in a relatively brief period of time and uses cheap medicine. There is no thyroid replacement that is still expensive and on patent, and no well patient will want to come in more that every few months. Your doc is not going to get neat gifts from the thyroid replacement (about 30-50 cents a dose) people that Prozac ($2 to $5 a dose) or Lipitor ($5 or more a dose) people pass out. And, adequate thyroid replacement can solve many depressions and many problems with elevated cholesterol so that people don’t need frequent trips back to the doc.

If you do surgery, it is even more lucrative to not treat thyroid problems. If a women comes in with “Periods from Hell,” (Crampy, clotty, heavy menses that go on for 7-10 days and end with passing “things that look like calf’s liver,” as a patient explained to me.) adequate thyroid replacement usually resolves it. End of story, end of financial gain. However, don’t treat; and she will eventually return begging for a hysterectomy. That is about 4 grand for a morning’s work. You do the math. Coronary Artery disease is far more common in hypothyroid people, and bypass surgery or a stint is even more lucrative than a hysterectomy that could have been avoided with a 50 cent a day pill.

In general, almost all medical problems are more common in hypothyroid people. Heart disease, obesity, cancer, stroke, and infectious diseases all occur much more often in the person with low thyroid function.

Not Much Is Expected From DS Kids...

When I used to do Psychiatry, nothing would anger me quite as much as when another physician would ignore my patients’ valid complaints with a shrug and, “(what do you expect) they’re a Psych patient.”

I feel the same way about doctors who ignore valid complaints of weight gain, constipation, increased infections, decreased alertness, and slowed mental and physical maturation with the rationalization that it’s because “they have Down’s.”

This sin is especially frequent when the DS kid has one of the many sorts of hypothyroidism which cannot be diagnosed by labs alone. I have people come from all over the country because they could not find a doctor smart enough to shut up and listen to the very cogent argument that they made for Hypothyroidism, just because the lab could not do the thinking that the other doctors should have.

Thyroid Labs Or The TSH, Full Speed Ahead...

When this chapter was suggested to me, I think that I was supposed to help parents second guess doctors and other lab jockeys with the numbers that the labs crank out. More important than that is to realize a thyroid condition cannot be diagnosed by labs alone, and there are NO labs that can rule out the presence of a thyroid
problem. Anytime a doctor is looking for a Diagnosis (That’s fancy for “What’s wrong?”), 85% of the information comes from the History (What has been happening to my patient before they came to the office?); about 10% comes from the Examination (How does this person appear to the, hopefully, well trained eye?); and the Labs, in reality, only contribute about 5% to most diagnoses. This formula is the one we are all taught in Medical School, has been the model of Good Medical Care since Hippocrates, and which no reasonable doctor would deny. Yet, all this good sense is totally ignored daily by physicians dealing with thyroid problems.

Normal Means You Are Like Other Sick People...

On the average lab slip, you will see a number which is your value, and next to it a Range which the doctor is supposed to look at to tell if your number is “normal.” Something like this is common on lab slips:

Free T3 2.4 2.4-4.4 pg / mL

Free T4 0.80 0.80-1.80 ng /dL

TSH 4.0 0.4-4.3 mIU / L

In the “Good Old Days,” they would make the doctor look at each number and each range to see if your number was between the little number and the big number. Now they print abnormal values outside the normal column, and to be sure that you don’t screw things up, they will put an “H” or an “L” next to the abnormal value.

Ranges will vary from time to time and from lab to lab. While the above lab work is “Normal,” it is not necessarily healthy. Actually, if this was my lab work, I probably could not walk around the block under my own steam. That “Normal” range represents the middle 95.5 % of the scores of the (sick) people who we send to the lab because we suspect their thyroid is too high or too low. (Technically, “2 Standard Deviations either side of the mean of the scores.”) And if, by some fluke of luck, you are sicker than those other 95.5% of the people, you will lower the average, and it will then become that much harder for the next poor soul who comes along.

“We are People, NOT lab values” Mary Shomon

The next problem is that the lab values do not have anything to do with the state of health of the patient. Those same labs could have come from a living patient or a dead one, and there is no way to tell from the labs. The lab values are merely the lab’s estimate of the amount of various chemicals in the blood. And, those chemicals may, or may not, be related to the health of the patient. There are countless conditions that could allow identical labs
and a range of patients from moribund to relatively healthy.

And Those Estimates Are Not Always Good Ones.

To further muddy the waters, labs do not always do a reasonably good job. When the Centers For Disease Control has sent out standardized laboratory specimens to hospital and commercial laboratories, between 8 and 25% of those tests come back with erroneous results, according to an article in The American Medical News (Langer, op cit).

Turn Around And Look At The Tree!

To pay attention to lab slips, instead of to your patient, is as foolish as looking at the shadow of a tree, instead of looking at the tree. When I was in Medical School, back in the 60’s, if we dared to base treatment solely on a lab slip while ignoring the condition of our patient, we would earn a glare with admonition from staff, “Doctor, around here, we treat patients, not lab slips!” and we would be lucky to pass that rotation. Today, it is done routinely and is called “Standard of Care.” Be advised: your life and the lives of those you love are far more important than any lab slip. If the doctor you hire will not maintain your priority, it is time to look for another doctor.

Labs are NOT a substitute for brains

Labs cannot diagnose anything! The labs only know what is healthy from what is sick because Clinicians have told the lab those things. Hypothyroidism was treated (more adequately) for more than a hundred years before the Clinical Lab was anything more than a place to ‘taste’ urine to detect diabetes. (Diabetes Mellitus means “passing through sweet” referring to the sweet taste of the urine of uncontrolled diabetics.) Physicians, who now think that they can use the lab instead of acumen, are crippling and killing countless patients. But, that keeps patients ill and is good for the Medical-Pharmaceutical complex.

Don’t Believe Any Doctor Blindly, Not Even Me

I advise all my patients to bring someone with them when they go to the doctor, listen carefully, ask lots of questions, and take notes or record the session. Then, learn as much about their problem as they can. Finally, decide what treatment and which doctor they want to work with. Your health is too important to risk on someone who doesn’t listen, understand, respect, and explain. No one can be as interested in your health as you and your loved ones. You would never take your car to a mechanic who insults your intelligence, makes things worse, charges an arm and a leg, and refuses to hear your real complaints. Give your health as much respect!

If You Think Hypothyroidism Is A Problem

Excellent books include: Hypothyroidism: The Unsuspected Illness by Broda Barnes, MD; Solved the Riddle of Illness by Langer, MD; Iodine: Why You Need It, Why You Can’t Live Without It by David Brownstein, MD.

Great web sites include: http://thyroid.about.com Mary Shomon who knows more about thyroid disease than any two Endocrinologists I have met;

www.wilsonssyndrome.com/ A good look at a different kind of Hypothyroidism that is not found with labs.

www.drrind.com/ Dr. Rind has a good understanding of the interaction of thyroid disease and Adrenal Fatigue, a common illness that few doctors find.

www.dmichaelmd.com a chance to look at some interesting materials and an opportunity to share ideas.

A prayer that you and your loved ones get what is needed to get well.

D. Michael, MD, PC
(AKA Doc Don) © 2008


Info about coconut oil & the thyroid:

This link explains about hypothyroidism and coconut oil (and much more): http://www.naturodoc.com/library/nutrition/coconut_oil.htm

This is an excerpt:

General aging, and especially aging of the brain, is increasingly seen as being closely associated with lipid peroxidation.

Several years ago I met an old couple, who were only a few years apart in age, but the wife looked many years younger than her doddering old husband. She was from the Philippines, and she remarked that she always had to cook two meals at the same time, because her husband couldn't adapt to her traditional food. Three times every day, she still prepared her food in coconut oil. Her apparent youth increased my interest in the effects of coconut oil.

In the 1960s, Hartroft and Porta gave an elegant argument for decreasing the ratio of unsaturated oil to saturated oil in the diet (and thus in the tissues). They showed that the "age pigment" is produced in proportion to the ratio of oxidants to antioxidants, multiplied by the ratio of unsaturated oils to saturated oils. More recently, a variety of studies have shown that ultraviolet light induces peroxidation in unsaturated fats, but not saturated fats, and that this occurs in the skin as well as in vitro. Rabbit experiments, and studies of humans, showed that the amount of unsaturated oil in the diet strongly affects the rate at which aged, wrinkled skin develops. The unsaturated fat in the skin is a major target for the aging and carcinogenic effects of ultraviolet light, though not necessarily the only one.

In the 1940s, farmers attempted to use cheap coconut oil for fattening their animals, but they found that it made them lean, active, and hungry. For a few years, an anti-thyroid drug was found to make the livestock get fat while eating less food, but then it was found to be a strong carcinogen, and it also probably produced hypothyroidism in the people who ate the meat.
By the late 1940s, it was found that the same anti-thyroid effect, causing animals to get fat without eating much food, could be achieved by using soy beans and corn as feed.

Later, an animal experiment fed diets that were low or high in total fat, and in different groups the fat was provided by pure coconut oil, or a pure unsaturated oil, or by various mixtures of the two oils. At the end of their lives, the animals' obesity increased directly in proportion to the ratio of unsaturated oil to coconut oil in their diet, and was not related to the total amount of fat they had consumed. That is, animals which ate just a little pure unsaturated oil were fat, and animals which ate a lot of coconut oil were lean.

In the 1930s, animals on a diet lacking the unsaturated fatty acids were found to be "hypermetabolic." Eating a "normal" diet, these animals were malnourished, and their skin condition was said to be caused by a "deficiency of essential fatty acids." But other researchers who were studying vitamin B6 recognized the condition as a deficiency of that vitamin. They were able to cause the condition by feeding a fat-free diet, and to cure the condition by feeding a single B vitamin. The hypermetabolic animals simply needed a better diet than the "normal," fat-fed, cancer-prone animals did.

G. W. Crile and his wife found that the metabolic rate of people in Yucatan, where coconut is a staple food, averaged 25% higher than that of people in the United States. In a hot climate, the adaptive tendency is to have a lower metabolic rate, so it is clear that some factor is more than offsetting this expected effect of high environmental temperatures. The people there are lean, and recently it has been observed that the women there have none of the symptoms we commonly associate with menopause.

By 1950, then, it was established that unsaturated fats suppress the metabolic rate, apparently creating hypothyroidism. Over the next few decades, the exact mechanisms of that metabolic damage were studied. Unsaturated fats damage the mitochondria, partly by suppressing the repiratory enzyme, and partly by causing generalized oxidative damage. The more unsaturated the oils are, the more specifically they suppress tissue response to thyroid hormone, and transport of the hormone on the thyroid transport protein.

Plants evolved a variety of toxins designed to protect themselves from "predators," such as grazing animals. Seeds contain a variety of toxins, that seem to be specific for mammalian enzymes, and the seed oils themselves function to block proteolytic digestive enzymes in the stomach. The thyroid hormone is formed in the gland by the action of a proteolytic enzyme, and the unsaturated oils also inhibit that enzyme. Similar proteolytic enzymes involved in clot removal and phagocytosis appear to be similarly inhibited by these oils.

Just as metabolism is "activated" by consumption of coconut oil, which prevents the inhibiting effect of unsaturated oils, other inhibited processes, such as clot removal and phagocytosis, will probably tend to be restored by continuing use of coconut oil.

Brain tissue is very rich in complex forms of fats. The experiment (around 1978) in which pregnant mice were given diets containing either coconut oil or unsaturated oil showed that brain development was superior in the young mice whose mothers ate coconut oil. Because coconut oil supports thyroid function, and thyroid governs brain development, including myelination, the result might simply reflect the difference between normal and hypothyroid individuals. However, in 1980, experimenters demonstrated that young rats fed milk containing soy oil incorporated the oil directly into their brain cells, and had structurally abnormal brain cells as a result. Lipid peroxidation occurs during seizures, and antioxidants such as vitamin E have some anti-seizure activity. Currently, lipid peroxidation is being found to be involved in the nerve cell degeneration of Alzheimer's disease.

Hypothyroidism is a condition in the body that is caused by a reduction in the levels of the thyroid hormone. The thyroid gland is situated in the neck just below the Adam's apple and it is this gland that produces the thyroid hormone which determines the body's metabolism or the rate at which it burns calories.

Sometimes the thyroid gland may produce a quantity of the thyroid hormone much less than that required by the body to function normally and this results in a slower metabolism which shows physical signs manifesting itself in what most people call the symptoms of hypothyroidism.

Coconut oil acts as a catalyst to the metabolic activities of the body. It not only regulates, but the proper dosage will bring to moderation all the functions necessary to burn energy and consume calories. Coconut oil consumption creates a hormonal balance and raises the stamina and energy and also brings about mood stability.

If coupled with a healthy diet and reduced intake of toxins (such as wheat flour, potatoes, refined sugar and other foods that rate high on the glycemic index) then the results will be immediate and physically noticeable. Not only do the symptoms of hypothyroidism disappear but the body will feel fit and rejuvenated in comparison to the state of lethargy that is generally caused by a low hormonal level.

Coconut oil however should be taken in amounts that are befitting to your age and body structure. Most companies put on their coconut oil packages or cartons, an approximation or a suggestion for dosage and this is indicated with the use of a chart.

From what I've read, a tablespoon a day is sufficient for a child.



Iodine is the treatment of choice for hypo- and hyperthyroid problems-with or without goiter.

Doctors could get as high as a 90% cure rate with hyperthyroid (overactive thyroid) by using what would be considered high doses of iodine daily. doses of six to 37 mgs daily seemed equally effective in resolving cases of hypothyroid (underactive thyroid). These doses, once considered normal, are now considered high by most people in the medical profession.

Whole body iodine sufficiency is also a critical means to counter the side effects of thyroid hormone medications (synthroid, etc.). Long-term use of these drugs is associated with depletion of thyroid and tissue iodine levels, as well as increased rates of cancer. Fluorescent scanning of the thyroid clearly shows how drug and other medical thyroid therapies deplete the gland and body of critical iodine.

Therefore, synthroid or thyroid-destructive therapies should never be taken without iodine therapy-something you will never hear from your endocrinologist. If all thyroidologists and endocrinologists were forced to fluorescence scan their patients' thyroid glands, they would then have to fess up to the damages they are causing to these glands and their patients!

In addition to thyroid therapy, all thyroid patients should be on iodine therapy, with the goal to reach a whole body iodine sufficiency. when this state is reached, the following results (gathered using sophisticated lab testing, fluorescence screening, clinical measurements, and a host of other high-tech medical testing procedures) have been observed:

Goiter is reduced or eliminated.
Stress on the pituitary gland with resultant high TSH readings is eliminated.
Increased excretion of thyroid poisons and heavy metals occurs via the kidneys.
The liver's detoxification mechanisms are enhanced.
Obesity is more easily overcome-in fact, iodine therapy may be a critical and unknown factor in obesity.
Diabetes and high blood pressure are more easily controlled.
Breast tissue normalizes with decreased occurrences of fibrocystic breast disease.
Menopausal symptoms are improved.
Polycystic ovary syndrome can be cured.
Brain function is better, with less brain fog.
Heart function is better, with reduced arrhythmia problems.
Cancer rates, especially of the thyroid and breast, are reduced.

Additionally, through the iodine project studies, Dr. Abraham discovered that even patients with complete thyroidectomy (removal of the whole gland) benefited from iodine therapy. Therefore, it became known that iodine not only improved the thyroid gland, but the other target areas of the body where iodine and thyroid hormone are active.

The doctors in the project found that patients who achieved iodine sufficiency were often able to resolve diabetes problems without insulin. They could normalize blood pressure without medication. goiters were resolved and those taking thyroid hormone medication could greatly reduce or completely eliminate these drugs.

Heart, arrhythmias, fibrillation

As you have read over and over in health alert, there is an epidemic of cardiac arrhythmias and atrial fibrillation in this country. Expert thyroidologists like Dr. Abraham are convinced that the medical iodine phobia has a great deal to do with this phenomenon. Adequate stores of iodine are necessary for a smooth heartbeat.

Amazingly, while medicine shuns iodine therapy, their most popular anti-fibrillation drug, amiodarone, actually is iodine in a toxic, sustained release form. this drug can produce a smooth heartbeat when the body has accumulated about 1.5 grams (1,500 mgs) of iodine. this is exactly the same amount of iodine retained by the human body when iodine sufficiency is achieved by natural iodine supplementation.

The problem with amiodarone is that this form of iodine (which the medical profession has a penchant for) is extremely toxic. the side effects are most often too great for patients to regain a normal heartbeat.

Risk Factors

In addition to Down syndrome, there are a number of risk factors and hypothyroidism symptoms that should be evaluated if observed in infants:

___ The infant drinks soy formula
___ Infant has family members (parents, siblings) with thyroid disease, or any autoimmune disease
___ The infant has a puffy face
___ The infant has a swollen tongue
___ The infant has a hoarse cry
___ The infant has cold extremities
___ The infant has mottled skin
___ The infant has low muscle tone
___ The infant is not eating well
___ The infant has thick course hair that goes low on the forehead
___ The infant has a large soft spot
___ The infant has had prolonged jaundice
___ The infant has a herniated bellybutton
___ The infant is lethargic
___ The infant sleeps most of the time
___ The infant appears tired even when awake
___ The infant has persistent constipation
___ The infant is bloated or full to the touch
___ The infant has had little to no growth

Some hypothyroidism factors that should be evaluated if observed in children include:

___ The child took soy formula as an infant
___ The child has family members (parents, siblings) with thyroid disease or any automimune disease
___ The child is not keeping up with growth charts for height
___ The child has been diagnosed with attention deficit disorder
___ The child is having a delayed puberty
___ The child is unusually fatigued, exhausted, or sleeping far more than usual
___ The child is gaining weight gain inappropriately
___ The child is severely constipated
___ The child is sensitive to cold
___ The child's hair is rough, coarse dry, breaking, brittle
___ The child's hair is falling out more than usual
___ The child's eyebrows or eyelashes are falling out
___ The child's skin is rough, coarse, dry, scaly, itchy and thick
___ The child's voice has become hoarse, husky or gravelly
___ The child is complaining of pains, aches and stiffness in various joints, hands and feet
___ The child seems depressed
___ The child seems restless
___ The child has difficulty concentrating
___ The child seems be losing interest in normal daily activities
___ The child seems more forgetful lately
___ The child complains of strange feelings in neck or throat, or difficulty swallowing
___ The child seems to have some sort of fullness or growth in the neck area
___ The child gets more frequent infections, or infections that last longer
___ The child is snoring more lately
___ The child yawns frequently to get oxygen
___ The child has puffiness and swelling around the eyes and face
___ The child has swollen feet, hands or eyelids

More info:
http://einstein-syndrome.com/2009/04/19/15-treat-the-thyroid/

Related Posts:
Thyroid
Coconut Oil Info and Recipes


Thyroid Laboratory Ranges1


Total T3 (Triiodothyronine)

Age

ng/dL

nmol/L

Newborn

7.5 - 260

1.16 - 4.00

1-5 years

100 - 260

1.54 - 4.00

5-10 years

90 - 240

1.39 - 3.70

10-15 years

80 - 210

1.23 - 3.23

> 15 years

155 - 190

1.77 - 2.93

Total T4 (Thyroxine)

Age

µgr/dL

nmol/L

1-3 days

8.2 - 19.9

106 - 256

1 week

6.0 - 15.9

77 - 205

1-12 months

6.1 - 14.9

79 - 192

1-3 years

6.8 - 13.5

88 - 174

3-10 years

5.5 - 12.8

71 - 165

> 10 years

4.2 - 13.0

54 - 167



TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone)

Age

Target Range (µIU/L)

2-20 weeks

1 - 28.9

5 months-20 years

0.3 - 3.03



Operational criteria or thyroid disorders2

Free T4

TSH

Hypothyroidism

Low (<9pmol/l)

High (>5mU/L)

Hypothyroidism
(subclinical/compensated)

Normal (9-24pmol/L)

High (>5mU/L)

Hyperthyroidism

High (>9pmol/L)

Low (<0.5mu/l)

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Coconut Oil Info and Recipes

I buy the NSI brand 54 oz container from vitacost: http://www.vitacost.com/NSI-Extra-Virgin-Certified-Organic-Coconut-Oil-54-fl-oz It's amazing how fast we go through it and I just use it for Jett.

This link has a six part YouTube video that explains how coconut oil helps with Alzheimer's:
https://sites.google.com/site/superdownsyndrome/alzheimers/coconut-oil-and-ad (I'm sure you know that DS is very similar to Alzheimer's Disease.)

This link explains about hypothyroidism and coconut oil (and much more): http://www.naturodoc.com/library/nutrition/coconut_oil.htm
This is an excerpt:

General aging, and especially aging of the brain, is increasingly seen as being closely associated with lipid peroxidation.

Several years ago I met an old couple, who were only a few years apart in age, but the wife looked many years younger than her doddering old husband. She was from the Philippines, and she remarked that she always had to cook two meals at the same time, because her husband couldn't adapt to her traditional food. Three times every day, she still prepared her food in coconut oil. Her apparent youth increased my interest in the effects of coconut oil.

In the 1960s, Hartroft and Porta gave an elegant argument for decreasing the ratio of unsaturated oil to saturated oil in the diet (and thus in the tissues). They showed that the "age pigment" is produced in proportion to the ratio of oxidants to antioxidants, multiplied by the ratio of unsaturated oils to saturated oils. More recently, a variety of studies have shown that ultraviolet light induces peroxidation in unsaturated fats, but not saturated fats, and that this occurs in the skin as well as in vitro. Rabbit experiments, and studies of humans, showed that the amount of unsaturated oil in the diet strongly affects the rate at which aged, wrinkled skin develops. The unsaturated fat in the skin is a major target for the aging and carcinogenic effects of ultraviolet light, though not necessarily the only one.

In the 1940s, farmers attempted to use cheap coconut oil for fattening their animals, but they found that it made them lean, active, and hungry. For a few years, an anti-thyroid drug was found to make the livestock get fat while eating less food, but then it was found to be a strong carcinogen, and it also probably produced hypothyroidism in the people who ate the meat. By the late 1940s, it was found that the same anti-thyroid effect, causing animals to get fat without eating much food, could be achieved by using soy beans and corn as feed.

Later, an animal experiment fed diets that were low or high in total fat, and in different groups the fat was provided by pure coconut oil, or a pure unsaturated oil, or by various mixtures of the two oils. At the end of their lives, the animals' obesity increased directly in proportion to the ratio of unsaturated oil to coconut oil in their diet, and was not related to the total amount of fat they had consumed. That is, animals which ate just a little pure unsaturated oil were fat, and animals which ate a lot of coconut oil were lean.

In the 1930s, animals on a diet lacking the unsaturated fatty acids were found to be "hypermetabolic." Eating a "normal" diet, these animals were malnourished, and their skin condition was said to be caused by a "deficiency of essential fatty acids." But other researchers who were studying vitamin B6 recognized the condition as a deficiency of that vitamin. They were able to cause the condition by feeding a fat-free diet, and to cure the condition by feeding a single B vitamin. The hypermetabolic animals simply needed a better diet than the "normal," fat-fed, cancer-prone animals did.

G. W. Crile and his wife found that the metabolic rate of people in Yucatan, where coconut is a staple food, averaged 25% higher than that of people in the United States. In a hot climate, the adaptive tendency is to have a lower metabolic rate, so it is clear that some factor is more than offsetting this expected effect of high environmental temperatures. The people there are lean, and recently it has been observed that the women there have none of the symptoms we commonly associate with menopause.

By 1950, then, it was established that unsaturated fats suppress the metabolic rate, apparently creating hypothyroidism. Over the next few decades, the exact mechanisms of that metabolic damage were studied. Unsaturated fats damage the mitochondria, partly by suppressing the repiratory enzyme, and partly by causing generalized oxidative damage. The more unsaturated the oils are, the more specifically they suppress tissue response to thyroid hormone, and transport of the hormone on the thyroid transport protein.

Plants evolved a variety of toxins designed to protect themselves from "predators," such as grazing animals. Seeds contain a variety of toxins, that seem to be specific for mammalian enzymes, and the seed oils themselves function to block proteolytic digestive enzymes in the stomach. The thyroid hormone is formed in the gland by the action of a proteolytic enzyme, and the unsaturated oils also inhibit that enzyme. Similar proteolytic enzymes involved in clot removal and phagocytosis appear to be similarly inhibited by these oils.

Just as metabolism is "activated" by consumption of coconut oil, which prevents the inhibiting effect of unsaturated oils, other inhibited processes, such as clot removal and phagocytosis, will probably tend to be restored by continuing use of coconut oil.

Brain tissue is very rich in complex forms of fats. The experiment (around 1978) in which pregnant mice were given diets containing either coconut oil or unsaturated oil showed that brain development was superior in the young mice whose mothers ate coconut oil. Because coconut oil supports thyroid function, and thyroid governs brain development, including myelination, the result might simply reflect the difference between normal and hypothyroid individuals. However, in 1980, experimenters demonstrated that young rats fed milk containing soy oil incorporated the oil directly into their brain cells, and had structurally abnormal brain cells as a result. Lipid peroxidation occurs during seizures, and antioxidants such as vitamin E have some anti-seizure activity. Currently, lipid peroxidation is being found to be involved in the nerve cell degeneration of Alzheimer's disease.



Here's an except from another website:

Hypothyroidism is a condition in the body that is caused by a reduction in the levels of the thyroid hormone. The thyroid gland is situated in the neck just below the Adam's apple and it is this gland that produces the thyroid hormone which determines the body's metabolism or the rate at which it burns calories.

Sometimes the thyroid gland may produce a quantity of the thyroid hormone much less than that required by the body to function normally and this results in a slower metabolism which shows physical signs manifesting itself in what most people call the symptoms of hypothyroidism.

Coconut oil acts as a catalyst to the metabolic activities of the body. It not only regulates, but the proper dosage will bring to moderation all the functions necessary to burn energy and consume calories. Coconut oil consumption creates a hormonal balance and raises the stamina and energy and also brings about mood stability.

If coupled with a healthy diet and reduced intake of toxins (such as wheat flour, potatoes, refined sugar and other foods that rate high on the glycemic index) then the results will be immediate and physically noticeable. Not only do the symptoms of hypothyroidism disappear but the body will feel fit and rejuvenated in comparison to the state of lethargy that is generally caused by a low hormonal level.

Coconut oil however should be taken in amounts that are befitting to your age and body structure. Most companies put on their coconut oil packages or cartons, an approximation or a suggestion for dosage and this is indicated with the use of a chart.

From what I've read, a tablespoon a day is sufficient for a child.


Here are some recipes using coconut oil... These are also gluten free.

Coconut Cake


Ingredients


6 eggs
¼ cup coconut oil
¼ cup coconut milk
2 Tablespoons of Agave nector
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon orange /lemon zest
½ cup coconut flour
½ teaspoon baking powder (aluminum free)
½ teaspoon sea salt
juice of ½ medium orange or lemon or other


Directions


Take your eggs out of your refrigerator and allow them to come to room temperature. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Melt coconut oil. Whisk the eggs, coconut milk, agave, vanilla and orange zest together.
Combine coconut flour, baking powder and sea salt. Stir the dry ingredients into the wet. Pour coconut oil into batter and mix until all lumps are gone. Stir well or else the eggs cook together in chunks.
Pour the batter into your greased pan and place on the middle rack of the oven. Bake for 35-40 minutes, until browned on top and a toothpick comes out clean. 30 minutes for my red silicone bunt pan. Probably can cook in toaster oven since it's not tall. Place the cake on a cooling rack.
After the cake has cooled a bit, but is still warm, poke holes all over the top with a fork. Juice the orange /lemon half right over the whole cake, making sure to evenly distribute the juice.

I used cherry juice and it turned out well. It was super moist and a little greasy.

---

Recipe for coconut yogurt:

Coconut Milk Yogurt

3 14-ounce cans coconut milk

1/4 cup good quality commercial plain yogurt (or previous home made batch)

1 tablespoons agave

Candy thermometer

  1. Bring the coconut milk to ~125 degrees and remove from heat.
  2. Cover and cool to about 110 degrees. It is very important that you allow the temperature to drop so as not to kill the bacterial culture you are now ready to introduce.
  3. Remove about one-half cup cooled coconut milk and make a paste with one quarter cup of good quality commercial yogurt. The commercial yogurt you use should be unflavored and unsweetened. You could use a starter but why spend the extra bucks? Commercial yogurt works fine. (The goat milk yogurt at Whole Foods has 10 live bacteria in it, so that would be a good one to use.) You can use your home made yogurt as a starter for your next batch.
  4. Mix the paste with the remainder of the cooled coconut milk, agave and stir thoroughly.
  5. Pour milk into any appropriately sized shallow glass, enamel or stainless steel container (I use a Le Creuset pot), cover and let stand for 24 hours at 100-110 degrees up to a maximum of 29 hours. To keep the correct temperature for the culture, I use a 60 watt bulb in my oven and leave the light on. No other heat is needed. Remember, too high a temperature will kill the bacterial culture; too low of a temperature will prevent the activation of bacterial enzymes.
  6. Remove from oven and refrigerate.

---

Another coconut yogurt recipe from the expert at SCD website
(haven't tried it myself)



Coconut Yogurt Recipe (1st draft)

1.5 cups unsweetened shredded coconut
3 cups water
2 tbsp honey (optional) {Can't use honey for infant, use 1/2 amount of agave}
starter
gelatin (optional)

Simmer coconut, water and honey for 5-15 minutes. Remove from heat,
cool for ~ 5-15 minutes. Place in blender/food processor and
carefully blend the mixture for 10-30 seconds (don't burn yourself!)
Strain coconut milk through a coarse (large)hole mesh strainer/sieve.
Next, run coconut milk through a fine (small) hole mesh strainer/sieve
and ensure that all pulp has been removed. If necessary, run coconut
milk through the strainer lined with a coffee filter or cheesecloth.
Put coconut milk in a pot and heat to ~180°F. Remove from heat and
cool to about room temperature 20-25 °C (64-77 °F).
When cool add starter and place coconut milk in yogurt maker. When
the temperature reaches 100°F, begin timing the yogurt for 8-12 hours.

Five minutes before removing the yogurt from the yogurt maker I
dissolve one packet of gelatin in ~1/8 cup water (or reserved coconut
milk) and then mix this gently into the coconut yogurt. Chill
approximately 8 hours and enjoy.

Notes:

Amount of yogurt starter.
For GiProstart: ~1/8 tsp for 1 quart/1 litre of coconut milk



For thicker coconut milk add extra coconut per amount water (eg. 2
cups coconut to 3 cups water)

I let the coconut yogurt ferment about 10 hours. It does not need to
ferment for 24 hours since there is no lactose. If you use extra
honey you may be able to let it go a little longer but when I let it
run longer than 12 hours I didn't see any noticeable change in the
acidity level so I stick with 2-3 tbsp of honey for ~ 2 cups of
coconut milk.

After the first straining I add fresh water to the coconut pulp,
simmer for 5 minutes then strain this second batch through the
strainers. It is thinner than the first batch, so I don't use it for
coconut yogurt but like to use it when making chai tea. The coconut
pulp is then discarded ( I compost it).


Here's a bunch of recipes using coconut. I haven't tried them all yet. Let me know how they work for you if you do try any.

Coconut Bread

Ingredients

¾ cup sifted Organic Coconut Flour
½ cup Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
6 eggs
2 tablespoons honey
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder

Method

Blend together eggs, butter, honey and salt. Combine coconut flour with baking powder and whisk thoroughly into batter until there are no lumps. Pour into greased 9x5x3 inch or smaller loaf pan and bake at 175C (350F) for 40 minutes. Remove from pan and cool on rack.

Pancakes

Ingredients

2 eggs
2 tablespoons Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
2 tablespoons coconut milk or whole milk
1 teaspoon sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons sifted Organic Coconut Flour
¼ teaspoon baking powder

Method

Blend together eggs, oil, coconut milk, sugar and salt. Combine coconut flour with baking powder and thoroughly mix into batter. Heat 1 tablespoon of coconut oil in a skillet. Spoon batter onto hot skillet making pancakes about 2 ½ to 3 inches in diameter. Batter will be thick, but will flatten out when cooking. Makes about 8 pancakes.

Pecan Pancakes

Make Pancakes as directed above and add ½ cup of chopped pecans.

Blueberry Pancakes

Make Pancakes as directed and, after mixing in the coconut milk, fold in ½ cup of dry fresh blueberries.


Banana Nut Bread

Ingredients

1 ripe banana, mashed
8 eggs
½ cup coconut milk
½ cup brown sugar
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon almond extract
½ teaspoon salt
¾ cup sifted Organic Coconut Flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ cup pecans or walnuts, chopped

Method

Blend together mashed banana, eggs, coconut milk, sugar, salt, vanilla and almond extracts. Combine coconut flour with baking powder and whisk thoroughly into batter until there are no lumps. Fold in nuts. Pour into greased 9x5x3 inch loaf pan and bake at 175C (350F) for 60 minutes. Remove from pan and cool on rack.


Honey Muffins

This is a basic coconut flour muffin recipe you can use to make a variety of muffins.

Ingredients

3 eggs
2 tablespoons Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
2 tablespoons coconut milk or whole milk
3 tablespoons honey
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla
¼ cup sifted Organic Coconut Flour
¼ teaspoon baking powder

Method

Blend together eggs, butter, coconut milk, honey, salt and vanilla. Combine coconut flour with baking powder and thoroughly mix into batter until there are no lumps. Pour batter into greased muffin cups. Bake at 205C (400F) for 15 minutes. Makes 6 muffins.


Brownies

Ingredients

1/3 cup Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
½ cup cocoa powder
6 eggs
1 cup sugar
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon vanilla
½ cup sifted Organic Coconut Flour
1 cup nuts, chopped (optional)

Method

In a saucepan at low heat, blend together butter and cocoa powder. Remove from heat and let cool. In a bowl, mix together eggs, sugar, salt and vanilla. Stir in cocoa mixture. Whisk coconut flour into batter until there are no lumps. Fold in nuts. Pour batter into a greased 11x7x2 or 8x8x2 inch pan. Bake at 175C (350F) for 30-35 minutes.


Maple Pecan Cake

Ingredients

½ cup Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
½ cup coconut milk
12 eggs
1 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon maple flavouring
1 cup sifted Organic Coconut Flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
¾ cup pecans, finely chopped
Frosting

Method

Blend together butter, coconut milk, eggs, sugar, salt and maple flavouring. Combine coconut flour with baking powder and whisk into batter until there are no lumps. Pour batter into a greased 11x7x2 inch or 9x9x2 inch pan. Fold nuts into batter. Bake at 175C (350F) for 35-40 minutes or until knife inserted into centre comes out clean. Cool and cover with maple frosting.


Crepes

Ingredients

2 tablespoons sifted Organic Coconut Flour
2 tablespoons Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
2 eggs
1 teaspoon sugar
teaspoon salt
1/3 cup whole milk

Method

Blend together eggs, oil, sugar and salt. Thoroughly mix in coconut flour. Stir in coconut milk. Heat 1 tablespoon of coconut oil in a small skillet. Pour a quarter of the batter into the skillet; immediately rotate skillet until a thin even layer of batter covers the bottom of the skillet. Crepe should be about 5 to 6 inches in diameter. Cook until batter is bubbly and cooked around the edges. Turn and cook other side. Cover one side of crepes with your choice of chopped fruits, nuts or jelly. Roll up and sprinkle with powdered sugar or top with whipped cream. Makes 4 crepes.


Drop Biscuits

Ingredients

1/3 cup sifted Organic Coconut Flour
¼ cup Organic Virgin Coconut Oil or butter, melted
4 eggs
¼ cup honey
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon baking powder

Method

Blend together eggs, butter, honey and salt. Combine coconut flour with baking powder and whisk into batter until there are no lumps. Drop batter by the spoonful onto a greased cookie sheet. Bake at 205 Degree C (400F) for 14 to 15 minutes. Makes 8 biscuits.


Super easy & healthy chocolate frosting or chocolate pie filling:

Chocolate Mousse
Just double the recipe for chocolate pie.
Makes about 2 cups

2 small ripe avocados
1/2 -3/4 C Madhava's Light Agave Nectar
1/4 C raw cocoa powder (or carob if you prefer)
2 T coconut butter or oil
1 T alcohol-free vanilla
dash of sea salt
dash of cinnamon (optional)

Preparation:
Place everything in an emulstion blender or high-powered blender or food processor and blend (on high) until very smooth.

Fats & Oils

Phosphatidylcholine

Phosphatidylcholine is a phospholipid that makes up 50% of the cell membrane. The membrane is the lining of every nerve cell that carries our signals. We are trying to heal the brain by growing new neurons and allowing them to fire. Giving PC is like bringing the bricks to the construction site when building a house.

Formulated with a 4:1 Ratio of Omega 6 to Omega 3 in Liquid form or Softgel pills.

Of the tens of thousands of molecules that make up the life of a cell, Phosphatidylcholine (PC) stands apart; probably the most important one of all. BodyBio PC is made of only pure phospholipids which automatically form liposomes in the watery environment of the body, but it goes one important step further....it is also formulated with the essential lipids at a 4:1 ratio. Most PC currently available has an EFA ratio of ~12:1. BodyBio PC not only has a higher concentration of PC, up to 66% but also maintains EFA concentration at the preferred 4:1 ratio, a BodyBio exclusive. (online at bodybio.com)

Body Bio Balanced Oil

Body Bio Balanced Oil is included to reduce inflammation so that we reduce the onset of Alzheimer's Disease. It was shown in 2004 that reducing inflammation in the brain of the DS mouse prevented neuron loss and delayed decline of function. (online at bodybio.com)


The fallacy of using DHA alone for brain [health]


I am constantly amazed by the lack of understanding by neurologists of basic
essential fatty acid biochemistry in the treatment of brain trauma and
concussions. They often blindly believe that the only omega-3 fatty acid that
has any impact in the treatment of concussions is DHA alone. Their blind faith
is based on the observation that you find a lot of DHA in the brain and little
EPA. This obviously means that EPA must not be important for brain function.
This is similar to stating the world is flat because it appears that way to the
naked eye.

I have mentioned many times in my books that EPA and DHA have different
functions, and that’s why you need both of these essential omega-3 fatty acids
(1-4). This is especially true for the brain. EPA produces most of the
anti-inflammatory properties of omega-3 fatty acids since it’s structurally
similar to arachidonic acid (AA) as they both contain 20 carbon atoms with
approximately the same spatial configuration. As a result, EPA can inhibit
the enzymes that would otherwise produce pro-inflammatory eicosanoids from AA.
It is AA that generates the inflammation caused by brain trauma. DHA, on the
other hand, is primarily a structural component of neural tissue. They do
different jobs, and that’s why you need both in combination.

So why isn’t there as much EPA in the brain compared to DHA? The reason is
simple. EPA enters the brain just as quickly as DHA, but it is rapidly
oxidized, whereas DHA is sent off to long-term storage in neural tissue (5-7).
The lifetime of DHA in the human brain is measured in years, whereas the
lifetime of the EPA is measured in days. So obviously when you kill an animal
and look at the brain, you are not going to find very much EPA.

What complicates the issue is that if you only treat a concussion with DHA,
some of the DHA will be converted to EPA. This gives the appearance that DHA
is working to reduce inflammation. Since brain trauma and concussions generate
inflammation in the brain, doesn’t it make more sense to provide as much EPA as
possible to reduce the inflammation as opposed to supplementing only with DHA
and hoping some fraction of it will be converted to EPA?

To answer that question, it is useful to look at two recent studies that used
the same protocol to study inflammation induced by a concussion injury (8,9).
The same total amount of omega-3 fatty acids was used to treat the animals
after the concussion injury. One experiment used a 2:1 ratio of EPA to DHA,
and the other experiment used only DHA. If the DHA was so important, then the
animals treated with the DHA alone should have demonstrated three times the
reduction of neuro-inflammation compared to the group that received omega-3
fatty acids containing only one-third as much DHA.

In fact, just the opposite was the case. The 2:1 EPA/DHA group demonstrated
greater benefits compared to the DHA-alone group in reducing neuro-inflammation
induced by a concussion. Why? EPA is a far more powerful anti-inflammatory
agent than DHA. This is why in both studies the AA/EPA ratio was used as the
marker of inflammation induced by the concussion injury. Since the AA/EPA
ratio was decreased in both studies, this meant that some of the pure DHA was
converted to EPA providing at least some anti-inflammatory actions. Thus
giving 100 percent DHA is not exactly the most efficient way to decrease
neuro-inflammation induced by a concussion injury. This is further emphasized
by a recent study that indicated that 1 gram of DHA per day for an 18-month
period had no impact in the cognitive improvement of Alzheimer’s patients (10),
even though Alzheimer’s is known to be a neuro-inflammatory disease (11).

Does this mean that DHA is not important for brain repair? Of course not. This
is because you need both EPA and DHA for optimal repair of brain damage after a
concussion. You need the EPA to reduce the neuro-inflammation, and you need
the DHA to help rebuild new neurons. But to give DHA alone without additional
EPA to maximally reduce neuro-inflammation caused by concussions simply makes
no sense.

Dr. Barry Sears is a neurologist and expert on inflammation at the cellular
level.


<http://blog.zonehealth.com/2011/05/the-fallacy-of-using-dha-alone-for-brain-trauma/>



References
1. Sears B. “The Zone.” Regan Books. New York, NY (1995)
2. Sears B. “The OmegaRx Zone.” Regan Books. New York, NY (2002)
3. Sears B. “The Anti-inflammation Zone.” Regan Books. New York, NY (2005)
4. Sears B. “Toxic Fat.” Thomas Nelson. Nashville, TN (2008)
5. Chen CT, Liu Z, and Bazinet RP. “Rapid de-esterification and loss of
eicosapentaenoic acid from rat brain phospholipids: an intracerebroventricular
study.” J Neurochem 116: 363-373 (2011)
6. Chen CT, Liu Z, Ouellet M, Calon F, and Bazinet RP. “Rapid beta-oxidation
of eicosapentaenoic acid in mouse brain: an in situ study. “Prostaglandins
Leukot Essent Fatty Acids 80: 157-163 (2009)
7. Umhau JC, Zhou W, Carson RE, Rapoport SI, Polozova A, Demar J, Hussein N,
Bhattacharjee AK, Ma K, Esposito G, Majchrzak S, Herscovitch P, Eckelman WC,
Kurdziel KA, and Salem N. “Imaging incorporation of circulating
docosahexaenoic acid into the human brain using positron emission tomography.”
J Lipid Res 50: 1259-1268 (2009)
8. Mills JD, Bailes JE, Sedney CL, Hutchins H, and Sears B. “Omega-3 fatty
acid supplementation and reduction of traumatic axonal injury in a rodent head
injury model.” J Neurosurg 114: 77-84 (2011)
9. Bailes JE and Mills JD. “Docosahexaenoic acid reduces traumatic axonal
injury in a rodent head injury model.” J Neurotrauma 27: 1617-1624 (2010)
10. Quinn JF, Raman R, Thomas RG, Yurko-Mauro K, Nelson EB, Van Dyck C, Galvin
JE, Emond J, Jack CR, Weiner M, Shinto L, and Aisen PS. “Docosahexaenoic acid
supplementation and cognitive decline in Alzheimer disease: a randomized
trial.” JAMA 304: 1903-1911 (2010)
11. Akiyama H, Barger S, Barnum S, Bradt B, Bauer J, Cole GM, Cooper NR,
Eikelenboom P, Emmerling M, Fiebich BL, Finch CE, Frautschy S, Griffin WS,
Hampel H, Hull M, Landreth G, Lue L, Mrak R, Mackenzie IR,McGeer PL, O’Banion
MK, Pachter J, Pasinetti G, Plata-Salaman C, Rogers J, Rydel R, Shen Y, Streit
W, Strohmeyer R, Tooyoma I, Van Muiswinkel FL,Veerhuis R, Walker D, Webster S,
Wegrzyniak B, Wenk G, and Wyss-Coray T. “Inflammation and Alzheimer’s
disease.” Neurobiol Aging 21: 383-421 (2000)


The fats... Jett gets tons of fats... Coconut oil, fresh avocado, Bio Body PC, fermented cod liver oil and raw/organic butter from grass fed cows... The fermented CLO & butter supports the good bacteria in Jett's stomach. Without it, he just doesn't have bowel movements...
CLO & the butter mixture also always for proper Vitamin D absorption.

Here's what Teresa wrote in one of the forum entries:

Oils, Oils, Oils...... this is the tough stuff of chemistry. But here goes. Dr. Kane and some very compelling research says that the perfect ratio of omega 6's to omega 3's is a 4 to 1 ratio. With that said, let me back up and try to explain what that means.
When someone says omega 3, it means that there is a double bond at the third carbon from the end. If they say, omega 6, then the first double bond is at the 6th carbon.

What body bio did is put [omega 6 -18 carbon long oil] 4x to [omega 3 - 18 carbon long] 1x ratio. this is like putting the beginning of the lipids in and then the body can add carbons to make them longer carbon chains. EPA has the first double bond at the third carbon and is 20 carbons long. DHA is 22 carbons long.

Yes, Leichtman says that flax goes rancid too quickly. I've never had this problem with this product. That is like saying I don't buy fresh fruit b/c it goes bad. All good oils (cis) go rancid. The reason they made trans oils is b/c they extended the shelf life. Right the bacteria don't want to eat plastic. Almost all things in nature are in the cis conformation. Stereochemistry. cis is a boat and trans is a chair.

Wikipedia has a good explanation of fatty acids.

So what you are doing is giving your child fatty acids that are longer than Body bio. It is not that fish oil is not recommended it is that we mess up the ratio if one takes too much fish oil. There is a theory that we eat mainly omega 6's so taking fish oil brings the ratio into balance. Good idea but somehow doesn't cut it. Taking the 4:1 BBB seems to be the key to triggering the resolvin pathway.I have attached some research on the resolution pathway. It resolves inflammation and that is what we really want.
I have attached two files. One with a picture of a phospholipid and the other research about resolvins.

Ok, so the long chains of carbons are anywhere from 16 carbons to 24 (and they can get longer and they are called very long chain fatty acids)

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