Friday, March 24, 2017

Getting Started, Part 3 - Rationale for My Approach

The dietary approach that I am following personally, is informally dubbed by a few of us SNASies, as the INDD (Italian Nickel Detox Diet).  It is loosely based on the Mediterranean diet, and more specifically on the  Italian Low Nickel Detox Diet, adapted from Italian FB group - Allergia al Nichel - Il gruppo originale!  ... with permission of the group's administrator, Mavie Aliena.  Versions of this diet are utilized and recommended by the medical community, and backed by extensive research, in Italy and Denmark.

A similar approach also seems to be getting more and more recognition  by researchers and medical professionals in the US and Canada, but I believe the lists that patients get here, often do not go into enough detail, or provide enough education to help us manage the fact that SNAS is allergy to accumulation (of nickel) while at the same time, it can provoke or exacerbate additional symptoms of excess histamine production in our bodies.  The INDD does take into account that to achieve symptom relief, it's important to give ourselves at least an eight (8) week period on both - a very low nickel diet combined with ideally, a 
low histamine diet as well.  This approach assumese that certain high histamine foods can keep us in cycles of reactions that may not be directly related to the accumulation of nickel in our bodies. This is what happened to me!  My body was very reactive even to low nickel foods, initially, but when I addressed the need to stay away from histamine-loaded foods, as well as nickel-loaded foods, my symptoms began to slow down and resolve.  Unfortunately, I hadn't realized that there was a whole diet in Italy that addressed this 2-prong approach, and I thought that this was a situation unique to my body.  So, I would constantly have to consult several different lists as well as the nickel "counting" lists and the Ni App.   When I discovered the Italian groups I was thrilled!

Their philosophy is that d
uring the "detox" period, this combined approach allows the body time to naturally "detox", or naturally eliminate the nickel in our digestive tract from our former nickel-loaded diet, while helping reduce symptoms more quickly than the low nickel diet alone. 

The Mediterranean Diet Pyramid
Modifications for the INDD (or  a Modified Mediterranean Diet for SNAS):
While we must exclude most whole grains, nuts and legumes, and a number of dark green vegetables during the detox phase of the INDD,  this pyramid depicts the Mediterranean approach - We
 must also, ideally include perhaps more meet, fish and eggs initially, during the nickel detox period, the focus is on whole foods, variety in choices, drinking water always, and daily physical activity.   
In other words, or to reiterate - the INDD goes a step further in the early stages of the low nickel diet that is normally recommended here in North America, because it  embeds in its philosophy the role of histamine production in our GI systems, and the role that histamine reduction n symptom plays with allergies that manifest through the same or parallel pathways in our bodies.  So, it is intentionally designed to also reduce our consumption of high histamine, and histamine liberating foods.  The good news is that many high nickel foods are already, coincidentally high in histamine, so it only takes a few tweaks to customize the "dual" approach! The basic theory is that Healing takes longer if we consume too many histamine foods during the detox period of the low nickel diet, because they provoke similar symptoms in a vast majority of people with SNAS.

I think it is really important to learn about the nickel content of your food, and not just follow lists that have been provided to us, which can be either outdated or not relevant to our geographic area, or to the area where our foods are grown.  I know, this just sounds like too much! But it becomes important in the context of this allergy being one of "accumulation" - Researchers have suggested that to be free of symptoms, you must eat below the threshold of 150 ug total dietary nickel per day. Other researches peg it as high as 250 ug per day. Many of our peers say they actually need to be as low as 100 or fewer ug per day ... Children under 12 also must consume below 100 ug of nickel per day. 

All this takes time, and it isn't always completely necessary to change your life overnight, unless you are very ill.  Start with the basics - Part 1, and move toward starting the full INDD (Italian nickel detox diet), in Part 2, after a week or 10 days.  

The "Getting Started, Part 1" document is something I created myself, distilled from and supported by research, and accepted practices by health providers who deal with the allergy around the world. I believe it is quite comprehensive enough to get new SNASies started.

"Getting Started, Part 2", is the INDD in detail, translated from the Italian, and adjusted to reflect foods available in North America.  It may continue to be adjusted over time, as we learn more.  Both these posts will be edited and revised soon, to reflect my own learnings as I move through the diet and the research.  And of course, we should maintain a practice of checking the Ni content in foods lists (the Ni App and/or the other lists I have included in the side-bar of this blog.



2 comments:

Wendy Bartlett said...

Eggs are high in histamine? I feel
Like that's all I can eat.... I have been eating eggs chicken and zucchini for days and I am still itchy. How long for some improvement?

Nichelina & Co said...

Wendy - from research, and based on what I have seen in the Histamine groups and forums, egg whites are higher in histamine than the yolks. Not everyone with SNAS reacts to histamine foods, but many of us do. I cut back on eggs for a while, and when I reintroduced them, I started with just the yolks. Then I would eat 2 yolks and one egg white. When I am lucky, I can find double yolk eggs at my local farmer's market! If you follow the INDD - column 1 - these are the lowest Ni foods - many of us have seen symptom relief, or at least a drastic improvement in symptoms after about 8 weeks. It's up and down, and it's important to diversify your food choices over time, for overall health. The allergy doesn't go away, but it does become manageable. I struggled for years before I found this approach.
It is also really important to take vitamin C with every meal, and a good quality probiotic that contains not too many strains, but that does contain the Lactobacillus Reuteri strain. L Rhamnosus is another strain that has been proven to help. I stick with a supplement that contains the first strain, or a combo of the 2. In our situation, it is not a case of "more is better", so be wary of probiotics supplement that contain too many different strains - some also can be histamine liberators.
Good luck. This is do-able!