Post by urmensch on Mar 8, 2013 13:32:53 GMT -5
Hello, I have never posted here before.
I have some kind of hereditary fructose intolerance, but the
symptoms are somewhat different from what most of you have.
I never had stomach upsets, although I did have incredible
amounts of gas. My main complaint was constant fatigue
going on for twenty years. I also had severe peripheral
neuropathy, although I attributed it to another cause.
Repeated visits to my HMO came to nothing; basically
they refused to even give me a physical. Later without
insurance I visited a clinic in a smaller city. They had no
doctors, but a PA had the wits to order blood tests.
I suspected hypoglycemia, but the tests showed the
opposite: diabetes/hyperglycemia.
The PA wanted me to train for using insulin, but instead
I decided to try something else. I have long known I had
allergies, and I began monitoring my blood glucose while
rotating my diet. By eliminating milk and fruit I was
able to reduce my blood glucose enough that insulin
was no longer indicated. I was already on a grain-free
diet. Within a year I stopped all medication.
Since that time I have continued to experiment. There
is no doubt about it; fructose caused my diabetes.
It seems that I `can tolerate only about 500 mg per day.
I have only been reading this board for a couple of months,
but many of the tips here have been invaluable. I thought
I had tried every possible dairy product, but one member
here suggested aged hard cheese for HFIers who are so
sensitive that they must avoid dairy. I tried dry jack
and parmesian, and they are both OK.
I share with you a dislike of sweets, although some foods
need something to make them palatable. I have found that
dextrose works just fine for me. It is not as sweet as
regular sugar, but I like it better that way. I use
it in tea and also mixed with fresh lime juice for a sports
drink.
I have had hypos, but not often. One that I remember came
in junior high school. It was the first day of school
after the Christmas holiday. My foster mother insisted
that I finish a sweet potato casserole that she had
baked special, but no one would eat. It consisted
of sweet potatoes smothered in high fructose corn syrup
and topped with marshmallows. I could barely choke it
down. The next day I passed out, and I had to be carried
off the baseball field.
I am certain that the problem is hereditary; my biological
father and grandfather also had it. Since my kidnapping
at the age of six, I have been unable to contact them
for political reasons. What I have is some kind of
hereditary fructose intolerance, but possibly due to
yet undiscovered genes and different syptoms.
What I see in my BG monitoring is a rise in BG after
I eat sugar, then a fall, and then another rise.
The final rise lasts for weeks, so every small amount
of fructose I eat adds to it and gradually increases
my fasting and postprandal BG.
I have not yet tried this with pure fructose, but I
think I should. Five grams should give a noticeable
response and only moderate unpleasant effects of brain
fog, fatigue and higher "prediabetic" BG for a few weeks.
What I want to know is whether I have the short term hypo
that seems to be diagnostic for HFI. I have
given up on doctors.
On a fructose free diet My health has turned around completely.
I bounce out of bed at 4AM. My legs and feet are no longer
numb. My teeth stopped falling out, and my hair is growing back.
BG stays in the normal range from 75 to 95. I don't
have constant brain fog any more, just an occasional whisply cloud ).
Generally I eat the same things that all of you do.
But I have found that fermented or cooked vegetables
do not have much effect. Homemade sauerkraut has
become a staple, and I use fried onion flakes in
salads without problems. I note that cooked
fruit is much less sweet than raw fruit; I think
that must mean that some of the fructose is converted
into something else.
If HFI can cause diabetes (thus masking hypos), then
there may be many more fructose intolerant individuals than
we realize.
I have some kind of hereditary fructose intolerance, but the
symptoms are somewhat different from what most of you have.
I never had stomach upsets, although I did have incredible
amounts of gas. My main complaint was constant fatigue
going on for twenty years. I also had severe peripheral
neuropathy, although I attributed it to another cause.
Repeated visits to my HMO came to nothing; basically
they refused to even give me a physical. Later without
insurance I visited a clinic in a smaller city. They had no
doctors, but a PA had the wits to order blood tests.
I suspected hypoglycemia, but the tests showed the
opposite: diabetes/hyperglycemia.
The PA wanted me to train for using insulin, but instead
I decided to try something else. I have long known I had
allergies, and I began monitoring my blood glucose while
rotating my diet. By eliminating milk and fruit I was
able to reduce my blood glucose enough that insulin
was no longer indicated. I was already on a grain-free
diet. Within a year I stopped all medication.
Since that time I have continued to experiment. There
is no doubt about it; fructose caused my diabetes.
It seems that I `can tolerate only about 500 mg per day.
I have only been reading this board for a couple of months,
but many of the tips here have been invaluable. I thought
I had tried every possible dairy product, but one member
here suggested aged hard cheese for HFIers who are so
sensitive that they must avoid dairy. I tried dry jack
and parmesian, and they are both OK.
I share with you a dislike of sweets, although some foods
need something to make them palatable. I have found that
dextrose works just fine for me. It is not as sweet as
regular sugar, but I like it better that way. I use
it in tea and also mixed with fresh lime juice for a sports
drink.
I have had hypos, but not often. One that I remember came
in junior high school. It was the first day of school
after the Christmas holiday. My foster mother insisted
that I finish a sweet potato casserole that she had
baked special, but no one would eat. It consisted
of sweet potatoes smothered in high fructose corn syrup
and topped with marshmallows. I could barely choke it
down. The next day I passed out, and I had to be carried
off the baseball field.
I am certain that the problem is hereditary; my biological
father and grandfather also had it. Since my kidnapping
at the age of six, I have been unable to contact them
for political reasons. What I have is some kind of
hereditary fructose intolerance, but possibly due to
yet undiscovered genes and different syptoms.
What I see in my BG monitoring is a rise in BG after
I eat sugar, then a fall, and then another rise.
The final rise lasts for weeks, so every small amount
of fructose I eat adds to it and gradually increases
my fasting and postprandal BG.
I have not yet tried this with pure fructose, but I
think I should. Five grams should give a noticeable
response and only moderate unpleasant effects of brain
fog, fatigue and higher "prediabetic" BG for a few weeks.
What I want to know is whether I have the short term hypo
that seems to be diagnostic for HFI. I have
given up on doctors.
On a fructose free diet My health has turned around completely.
I bounce out of bed at 4AM. My legs and feet are no longer
numb. My teeth stopped falling out, and my hair is growing back.
BG stays in the normal range from 75 to 95. I don't
have constant brain fog any more, just an occasional whisply cloud ).
Generally I eat the same things that all of you do.
But I have found that fermented or cooked vegetables
do not have much effect. Homemade sauerkraut has
become a staple, and I use fried onion flakes in
salads without problems. I note that cooked
fruit is much less sweet than raw fruit; I think
that must mean that some of the fructose is converted
into something else.
If HFI can cause diabetes (thus masking hypos), then
there may be many more fructose intolerant individuals than
we realize.