Swedish Egg

Swedish Egg
Showing posts with label treatment options. Show all posts
Showing posts with label treatment options. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Leaky Gut and SIBO: Are they BFFs or not?


A lot of people (like me) who end up with SIBO just started out with plain old IBS. Studies have found that anywhere from a meager 10% of IBS patients all the way up to a whopping 84% (hel-lo!) will test positive for intestinal bacterial overgrowth. Not all people with IBS get SIBO, therefore, but if you have SIBO, you pretty much are guaranteed to have IBS. SIBO and IBS go together like outlaws in love.

Lots of people with IBS also test positive for increased intestinal permeability—sometimes referred to as gut barrier dysfunction, and commonly known as "leaky gut syndrome."

A leaky gut situation results from chronic irritation, inflammation and immune activation in the GI tract. Alcohol abuse, aspirin and other drugs, toxins, trauma, synthetic food additives, food allergies and food intolerances (think gluten, casein, even potatoes) are some possible causes of leaky gut syndrome.

Anyway, the other day I was wondering if I have leaky gut. My thinking was that if both leaky gut and SIBO are common in people with IBS, leaky gut might be common in people with SIBO, too. Makes sense, right? But evidently, the association is not that straightforward.

A 2009 study titled The Relationship between Small-Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth and Intestinal Permeability in Patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (Park JH, et al. Gut Liver. 2009 Sep;3(3):174-9) looked into this very question.

Researchers compared the digestive tracts of 38 people with IBS and 12 healthy controls without IBS. All subjects were tested for both SIBO and leaky gut, and the results were surprising.

Yes, incidence of leaky gut was higher in subjects with IBS, as expected. However, in those people with IBS, the presence of leaky gut was NOT correlated with the occurrence of SIBO.

The researchers stated, "no significant difference in intestinal permeability was observed among the patients with IBS-D, IBS-C and IBS-A". [Note: A=Alternating Diarrhea and Constipation, but sometimes called M for Mixed.] In other words, leaky gut was equally common in IBS of all types.

Not so with SIBO. The researchers had expected SIBO and leaky gut to go together like cheese and crackers, but contrary to expectations, no significant difference in leaky gut occurrence was observed between those IBS patients with SIBO, and those without.

Take home message: If you have SIBO, 
you may or may not have leaky gut syndrome, too.

Ha!

If you want to find out if you actually have leaky gut, you can take a test such as the famous Lactulose/Mannitol urine test—in use since the mid-1970s and available from places such as Genova Diagnostics. The test is pretty basic. You drink a pre-measured amount of two sugars, lactulose and mannitol, in solution, and then pee in a cup at 30-minute intervals over a 6 hour period. Typically, only mannitol, the molecularly smaller of the two sugars, is rapidly absorbed by villi in a healthy, intact small intestine, after which it is excreted in urine. The chunky disaccharide lactulose molecule is too large for normal villous absorption, and therefore should not show up in the urine, unless it managed to "leak" through the intestinal lining due to swelling, inflammation and weak gut barrier function. So depending on how much lactulose appears in the urine, leaky gut is there or not.

A nice cup of bone broth, with herbs.
If you DO have a leaky intestine, your next step is deciding how to address it.

It goes without saying that numero uno is maintaining your diet upgrade and continuing to avoid all the fermentable sugars and starches that feed SIBO bugs.

In addition, I suggest you consume bone broth made with marrow bones or meaty bones (not cartilaginous joint bones) and either drink a cup daily, or use the broth regularly in your cooking.

Leaky gut or not, bone broth is deeply nourishing for the intestinal lining.

Next, consider supplements. Interestingly, some of the so-called "top supplements" for treating leaky gut syndrome are verboten, or at least highly questionable on a SIBO-friendly diet. FIBER supplements? No, thanks! PROBIOTICS? A big question mark for SIBO peeps. (We already have too many bacteria in our guts—much of which may be the right bacteria, but in the wrong place—so adding in more doesn't necessarily make a whole lot of sense.)

But there are a few SIBO-friendly supplements that I really do like for treating leaky gut syndrome. Two favorites are L-Glutamine powder and Hydrolyzed Collagen powder—supplements that can be stirred into water and taken daily to help heal your inflamed intestinal lining. I also recommend taking digestive support with meals, both to help promote proper food digestion and breakdown, and to help minimize the chances of large undigested food particles traveling too far down the digestive tract where they can interact with and irritate your gut lining.

L-Glutamine is an amino acid that directly enhances gut barrier function and protects the endothelial cells lining your small and large intestines. Glutamine has been shown to help support the rapid turnover, healthy reproduction and maintenance of these cells. Glutamine also has an anti-inflammatory effect on the gut lining, to help further promote healing.

Collagen is a short chain protein, or peptide, that occurs naturally throughout the body as a building block of connective tissue. Collagen peptides are present in hair, skin, nails, bones, joints, cartilage and the endothelial cells lining both vascular and intestinal tissues. Collagen contains high levels of the amino acids proline and glycine which, along with L-glutamine, are critical players in repairing a damaged intestinal lining.

Digestive Enzymes supplement the function of your pancreas, an organ designed to secrete digestive enzymes every time we eat. Pancreatic enzymes are required to help us break down fats, proteins and carbohydrates. However, pancreatic function decreases with stress and age, and many of us just don't produce a sufficient quantity to do the job. Taking supplemental pancreatic enzymes or plant-based digestive enzymes can make a HUGE difference in how well you digest your meals.

Betaine HCl is a form of hydrochloric acid (HCl). Hydrochloric acid is naturally produced in the stomach to initiate protein digestion and to kill pathogenic microbes every time you eat, but again, production decreases as we age, or may be impaired by medications such as proton pump inhibitors prescribed for reflux. Many people with IBS and SIBO have hypochlorhydria, a fancy term for low stomach acid production. Taking extra helps.

I have not been tested for leaky gut syndrome and don't know if I have it, but I am currently taking a few supplements to help support digestion and promote intestinal comfort. Since readers often ask what I personally am eating or taking to treat my SIBO, I'm sharing this short list with you in friendliness, not as a prescription. (For a prescription, please email me to set up an appointment!)

Pancreatin Select is a broad-spectrum digestive enzyme that contains pancreatic digestive enzymes along with extra lipase, ox bile, digestive bitters and betaine HCl. It's fantastic. I take one or two per meal. And I'll take an additional capsule or two of straight up Betaine HCl if I'm eating a large protein meal. These two supplements are fantastic for increasing digestive power and vitality.

I also just started taking a Hydrolyzed Collagen supplement which, surprisingly, tastes awesome—kind of like whey protein. I'm hoping it will help fortify my gut lining, but other researched benefits include stronger bones, stronger joints and improved skin tone and texture, so we'll see how that goes!

Finally, I've been enjoying a drink of GI Select at least a few times a week. This product combines L-glutamine with other gut healing ingredients, comes in a powder you mix with water and tastes like lemonade. I find it to have a very soothing effect on my gut while being refreshing and hydrating. (Drinking enough water is always an issue for me, so anything that makes water taste better gets two thumbs up from Sexy Sibo.)

xo

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Fasting therapy - a solution for IBS?

People with SIBO put a lot of focus on food. Figuring out the Right Diet that will allay symptoms for good, once and for all, is basically our Holy Grail. I've talked about this a bunch, like in this earlier post about creating your own list of safe foods to eat. But what if not eating anything at all for a while was the answer?

In an article entitled "Effects of fasting on irritable bowel syndrome" (Kanazawa M, Fukudo S. Int J Behav Med. 2006;13(3):214-20), a study is described where fifty-eight patients with IBS were divided into two groups. One group was given prescription meds and psychotherapy to reduce their symptoms. The other group fasted for 10 days, drinking only water. To break the fast, food was reintroduced in a controlled manner over a 5 day period.
 
Results? The 10-day fasting group did better. Fasting was found to significantly improve 7 out of the 10 symptoms assessed: abdominal pain-discomfort, abdominal distension, diarrhea, anorexia, nausea, anxiety and "interference with life in general" (love that symptom). Drugs and psychotherapy improved only 3 symptoms (abdominal pain-discomfort, abdominal distension and interference with life.)
 
The researchers concluded that fasting may have beneficial effects on intractable IBS. "Intractable" would include those of us for whom IBS has advanced to SIBO, I fathom.

In my former life, I juice fasted on a regular basis (consuming only green juices and/or veggie juices with lemon and green apple added for flavor and sweetness, see photo above.) A 3-day fast was sufficient to give great results in the bloating department, although I remember feeling gassy was still a problem.
 
Maybe juice fasting low-FODMAPs style would be a success. 
 
I hesitate to water fast, despite the great results reported above. Fasting on water alone is often not recommended for anyone. There are different reasons for this, such as potential to damage the intestinal lining due to lack of substrate for fiber-fermenting bacteria. (Hmmm...isn't that who we want to starve? I'm in a quandary.)
 
One popular SIBO therapy is to follow a 10-day+ Elemental Diet, which is essentially a modified fast with fortified liquid protein drinks taken daily. Supposedly they taste pretty nasty, though.
 
I'm having good luck doing a very simple, unflavored isolated whey protein shake in the AM, which I spike with powdered supplements including L-glutamine, quercetin and a powdered multivitamin/mineral. Now I'm thinking about doing some kind of fast, maybe drinking more of these shakes per day in place of meals, or adding in small quantities of low-FODMAP vegetable juices. Not sure, just contemplating. Would love to hear your thoughts.
 
Bottom line: Diet alone isn't cutting it.

And: Sometimes, no food is the best medicine.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Treating SIBO with an herbal antibiotic protocol

Fresh oregano, a potent antimicrobial.
Because I am the kind of person who always prefers to use natural medicine whenever possible and because research indicates that herbal antibiotics may be as effective as prescription antibiotics in the treatment of small bacterial overgrowth, I decided to treat my SIBO with herbs.

After reading a ton of articles on SIBO treatment strategies and microbiome structure/function, I developed a protocol for myself. This was largely based on the recommendations of Allison Siebecker, ND (from her siboinfo.com website) and on a 2014 paper entitled Herbal Therapy is Equivalent to Rifaximin for the Treatment of Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth by Victor Chedid, MD, et al.

My program incorporated a biofilm disruptor and a variety of herbal antimicrobials. I also used a 2-part rotation protocol to keep the minions guessing. SIBO bacteria are smart little buggers. As sessile creatures (meaning stay-put surface colonizers vs free-living planktonites) they live within a self-generated biofilm: a flexible, slippery matrix composed of proteins and polysaccharides. Intestinal biofilm adheres to the gut lining and resists dislodgement (so that you don't 'evacuate the premises' every time you poop). Unless you break it down, you can’t get through to the bugs.

Biofilms aren’t all bad, mind you. They are what allow friendly flora, for instance, to reside happily in the colon and do their good work there—breaking down fiber, making butyrate, contributing to intestinal barrier function, etc. It's just that when you have SIBO, you’ve got biofilm-embedded flora in the wrong place.

To kill the overgrowth, you first need to disrupt the defensive biofilm shield, and for that, there are some excellent products. My favorite is InterFase™ by Klaire Labs, a potent enzyme formulation clinically researched to help degrade biofilm matrix and to degrade bacterial and yeast cell wall structures. InterFase basically breaks down the biofilm wall so that antibiotics can access their intended target, the SIBO bugs. You just gotta have it.

To kill the bugs themselves, I used two different herbal strategies. Bacteria are so damned good at mutating to develop tolerance to antibiotics. A rotation protocol cycling multiple products can help to inhibit their adaptive abilities.

Consider oregano, one of our best botanical antimicrobials. Even in its most concentrated form, Oil of Oregano, this powerful bactericide has been reported to “only work” for the first month of treatment—indicating to me that if you want to avoid developing a tolerance, a solid month of oregano may be too long. For enhanced efficacy, my thinking is to do a bait and switch, known clinically as a rotation protocol. Example: use Oil of Oregano for two weeks, then replace it with a different herb or comprehensive formula and cycle it back in at a later date if needed.

This is what I did. For a total of 30 days of treatment, I used InterFase™ all the way through, plus two different herbal antibiotic strategies for two weeks each. (The prescription antibiotic Rifaximin only requires two weeks of use, but studies suggest herbal ABx treatment requires double the length of its prescription counterpart to be effective, hence my 30-day program.)

I also took digestive enzymes plus Betaine HCl with every meal and followed a strict Level One SIBO diet. (No grains. No starchy vegetables. No high-FODMAP foods. Limited seeds and nuts. Chicken soup up the wazoo.) And I did everything I could to keep my bowels moving, using magnesium citrate, herbal motility support and an enema here and there, as necessary. C people: your bowels MUST move if there is ever to be healing.

That being said, here’s an outline of my herbal ABx program.

Sexy Sibo Herbal Antibiotic Protocol

Note: Take products together on an empty stomach, 20 minutes before food.

Week Zero: Preloading Titration Phase
Days 1-3                               1 cap, once per day: InterFase

Days 4 & 5                            1 cap each of the following, once per day:
                                                InterFase, Berberine, Oil of Oregano

Days 6 &7                             1 cap each of the following, twice per day (AM and PM):
                                                InterFase, Berberine, Oil of Oregano

Week One - Take the following, TWICE daily (AM and PM):
2 caps InterFase
2 caps Berberine
1 cap Oil of Oregano

Week Two - Take the following, TWICE daily (AM and PM):
2 caps InterFase
3 caps Berberine
1 cap Oil of Oregano
1 cap Allicillin (garlic macerate) or AlliMax

Week Three - Take the following, TWICE daily (AM and PM):
2 caps InterFase
2 caps CandiBactin-AR
2 caps CandiBactin-BR

Week Four + 2 extra days (for 30-day treatment total) -
Continue taking the following, TWICE daily (AM and PM):
2 caps InterFase
2 caps CandiBactin-AR
2 caps CandiBactin-BR

For at-a-glance products checklist, scroll to bottom of page.*

Please Note: For most of the time I was on the herbs, I felt like crap. Antibiotics are not known for causing gut ecstasy in general, but still, it was discouraging, especially since I continued to feel bloated, even on my ‘perfect’ diet. 

I will say, however, that for once in my life, I wasn’t farting up a storm. Basically I was having no burps and farts whatsoever. Even at night. Miraculous.

Finally on day 27, I started feeling better. (Day 27 out of 30, mind you!!) But at long last, feel better I did. This was a breakthrough.

It worked!

After 37 days (30 plus the preloading titration week) I was so happy to get off the pills. I stayed off them for two whole weeks. But I know from the way my gut feels now that I am not altogether cured. So a few days ago, I started again.

I’m still mixing it up. Keeping on top of the situation, which I believe is firmly entrenched, but not forever. I expect to need a few cycles of herbal treatment. And I expect to keep working with my diet, hydration and motility support for as long as it takes. Probably for life.

The GI doc I saw last winter told me that “refractory SIBO is VERY common” in her patients taking Rifaximin and other prescription drug treatments. Refractory means “it comes back.”

This makes sense. Unless you address the slow motility and reduce the starches, FODMAPs and anything else that caused the problem in the first place, your SIBO will come back. Guaranteed.

You just gotta keep fighting, is all. Be a calm belly warrior. Stay in it for the duration, for victory. To arms!


*Sexy Sibo Herbal ABx Products Checklist

o InterFase (Klaire Labs)
o CandiBactin AR & BR (Metagenics)
o Berberine Select (Moss Nutrition) or Berberine Synergy (DFH) - 400 mg capsules
o Oil of Oregano - 150 mg softgels (Moss Nutrition)
o Allicillin (DFH) or AlliMax or other high allicin garlic cap - 200+ mg capsules

Note: These products are all professional brand supplements, meaning they are intended for use only by practitioners and their patients. I like them because they are formulated by clinicians, based on research, manufactured in tightly controlled, GMP-compliant facilities and rigorously tested for purity and potency. (Safety first!) For details on how to access to these products, to schedule a FREE 15-minute Supplement Consult or to become my client, email me at eat2evolve@gmail.com.