At 01:35 PM 1/9/00 -0500, you wrote:
>First of all, I am not a Doctor. I will attempt to answer some, but not
all, of
>your questions. My understanding, from multi-year personal experience goes
like
>this:
> * LI is lactose intolerance and is exactly that. Your body doesn't
produce
> enough of one type of enzyme and the body has difficulty processing the
> untreated sugars. This situation results in bloating, diarrhea, etc. I
have
> been LI for roughly 18 years.
> * An allergy, on the other hand can range from a severe reaction such as
> anaphylaxis to feeling ill. I have suffered from a relatively mild
allergy
> for roughly 5-6 years. The problem went away when I stopped ingesting all
> dairy exactly 3 years ago.
> * When you mention that some things bother you but others don't. There
>is an
> explanation. Butter doesn't have a great deal of lactose in it and if you
> eat it with other foods, doesn't affect you. I experienced a similar
thing.
> But try a glass of regular milk on an empty stomach and see what
happens! I
> found out by process of elimination that I could eat a dairy protein
called
> casein, whereas anything with whey was very bad. However, most people,
> according to what I have read, react to casein.
> * An Internist (Doctor) I went to see said I could also be intolerant to
> chocolate. Every once in a while I react to something in chocolate but
not
> cocoa. Chocolate chips which were certified Kosher Pareve (dairy free)
> caused me a problem. It's not clear to me what is happening. I'm offering
> it as a comment when you say you react to chocolate.
> * To complicate matters, most LI symptoms seem to be very close to
>Irritable
> Bowel Syndrome. So when I eat fruit or drink fruit juice on some
occasions,
> I get the same intestinal problems as I do for LI. As an aside, some OJs
> cause a reaction, others don't. Go figure.
> * Lastly, no one in medicine can properly diagnose your particular
> situation. Most Doctors just don't have the knowledge or time to diagnose
> accurately. On an airplane trip, a passenger seated next to me
explained he
> had IBS. When he said what the symptoms were, I said he should check
> whether he was LI. The symptoms he reported were classic LI. The point is
> -- you have to do some empirical testing. That is very complex unless you
> absolutely know what you've eaten. I found it difficult because LI or IBS
> reactions are with 6 hours or so. But dairy allergy reactions for me
start
> at about 36 hours and run for up to 72 hours. Try to imagine what foods
> you've eaten and, whether you prepared them or not, and what your
reaction
> was, and what the time frame was. That's too many variables for most
> analytic exercises. But it can be done. It just takes a while. You could
> try an elimination diet but I didn't have the fortitude to try it.
That is
> usually reserved, I suspect, for people with more serious allergies
than I
> do
>I hope this helps. Please remember that I have never been properly diagnosed
>as having a dairy allergy (but was for LI). But my life has dramatically
>improved since I stopped all dairy 3 years ago. And, by the way, most
>margarines have dairy in them. Check the container for "whey". It's usually
>1.4-1.8%
>
>Good luck.
>
>Don M
>
>At 10:28 PM 00/01/08 -0800, you wrote:
>>
>>I've been reading messages now for a few months and have learned a lot
>>for which I'm grateful. However, for every question that is answered,
>>two are left unanswered!
>
>
|