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Healing Adrenal Fatigue

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Healing Adrenal Fatigue

 

Diet and De-Stress

Once you've done your saliva levels and determined you have low adrenal output, you'll need to make changes in your lifestyle, stress level, sleep, and diet. Read these recommendations by James Wilson, N.D., D.C., Ph.D., author of Adrenal Fatigue. Discussion of adrenal supplements will follow in another article.

1. Diet recommendations for healing adrenals:
"Even in the best of times, you need food to survive and be healthy. Adrenal fatigue is definitely not the best of times, so the food choices you make become even more important to your health. When your adrenals respond to stress your cell metabolism speeds up, burning many times the number of nutrients normally needed. With adrenal fatigue, the cells have used up much of the body's stored nutrients, creating a nutritional void. Good quality food is the best source for replenishing these nutrients. Read full article

2. How to de-stress to heal your adrenals
During these stressful times it is vitally important that you look after your health and the health of those around you. Stress intensifies the demands on your body - nutrients are used up faster than they can be replaced by food, toxic by-products rapidly build up, and every organ and gland (including your brain) is asked to work harder. During stress your body is in a race. Read full article

adrenal fatigueJames L. Wilson D.C., N.D., Ph.D. has helped thousands of people experiencing adrenal fatigue regain their health and vitality during his many years of private practice.For the past 10 years he has lectured extensively to physicians and is acknowledged as an expert on endocrine imbalances and their impact on health, including the effects of stress on adrenal function.He is the person who presented adrenal fatigue as a distinct, diagnosable syndrome. A scientist as well as a physician, Dr. Wilson holds 3 doctorate degrees and 2 master's degrees, all from different health disciplines. He was one of the founding fathers of the Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine (CCNM) in Toronto, Ontario and is listed in The International Who's Who in Medicine (Cambridge, England).His internationally-renown book, Adrenal Fatigue: The 21st Century Stress Syndrome (Smart Publications, 2001), is a comprehensive, easy-to-use guide to uncovering, dealing with and preventing adrenal fatigue and the negative effects of stress on health. Dr. Wilson currently resides in Tucson, Arizona.

Food, Amino Acids and Brain Chemicals

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neurotransmitters
I'm hoping you're beginning to understand the huge role brain chemicals play in how you feel. If you're not feeling GREAT all or most of the time, it's a sign that your brain is not getting what it needs. And, yes, you should and can expect to feel good most all the time. You get brain support from your diet, the right exercise, light, sleep and supplements. Toxins, poor quality or lack of food, lack of sleep, food allergies, digestive problems, lack of light and exercise (or the wrong kind of exercise for you) and certain food substances rob your body of the brain chemicals you need to feel good.

You've been reading "Female Brain Gone Insane" pages 113-135 about Food and Supplements to the Rescue.

Let's recap this chapter: 

"A malfunctioning brain expresses itself with symptoms reflected in your emotions, moods, thoughts and behaviors." "Inadequate supplies of amino acids leads to deficits and imbalances in neurotransmitters, causing emotional breakdowns and uncontrolled behavior".

  • When your brain is fed properly, you feel vibrant and happy. The ideal is to get the fuel from food. If you're depleted, you'll need help with individual amino acid supplements for a few months, possibly longer.
  • You're depleted if you feel depressed, lethargic, anxious, racing thoughts, unhappy, can't sleep, can't focus, teary, lack of drive, flat, attention deficit, cravings for sugar, starch or alcohol, stressed and burned out, crave comfort food, overly sensitive, PMS, winter blues, fibromyalgia, phobias, panic, irritability, rage, intolerance, obsessive thoughts, low self esteem, or unable to relax.
  • Women are especially prone to brain chemical depletion due to dieting, calorie restriction and stress.
  • Dieting (low calorie, low fat, skipping meals, etc) results in deficiencies in amino acids, essential fatty acids, vitamins and minerals, all essential for the creation of brain chemicals (neurotransmitters).
  • Diet must provide protein, carbs and fat at every meal.
  • Protein is the building block for amino acids. get it at every meal including breakfast. Plan for 20g protein per meal.
  • Carbs provide energy for your brain. 60% of the glucose you eat is used by your brain to aid thinking, memory and sleep. Low carb diets rob your brain. Carbs should be whole foods, not processed. Eat beans, nuts, veggies, fruits, whole grains. Avoid simple sugars: honey, molasses, maple syrup, brown sugar, agave syrup, rice syrup, corn syrup, milk, fruit juice, processed grains.
  • Fats: 2/3 of your brain is made of essential fatty acids (EFAs). Get these from nuts, olives, avocado, coconut oil, olive oil, butter. Fish have EFAs, be careful and aware of high mercury levels in fish. If you take fish oil supplements, be sure the bottle indicates the product is free of mercury and other heavy metals. 
  • Do not eat protein alone or carbs alone. Your brain needs them together, along with good fat.
  • Foods to avoid and how they affect your brain: Alcohol: Has a depressant effect on your brain, leading to a lack of motivation and flat mood over the long term. Artificial colors: can cause hyperactive behavior, difficulty focusing, and lack of impulse control. Artificial sweeteners: can cause disruption of neurotransmitters resulting in headaches, depression, ADD, rages, joint pain, muscle spasm and can mimic MS, chronic fatigue amino acidsand fibromyalgia. Sugar: Shifts in blood sugar level lead to decreased focus, concentration and memory. Can raise adrenaline levels causing insomnia and anxiety. High sugar diet increases insulin levels, blocking hormone receptors, resulting in hormonal deficiency syndromes. Hydrogenated (trans) fats: they replace the healthy fat in your brain and impair the brain cell-to-cell communication. White flour: Adds nothing positive to your brain chemistry. Is especially detrimental if your are gluten sensitive, leading to brain fog and other symptoms. Empty calories that don't fuel your brain and contributes to blood sugar spikes.
  • Healthy eating habits should have a dramatic positive impact on your mood

    Use the chart below
    to help you identify aminos based on your symptoms. Chart from The Diet Cure by Julia Ross. More good information on aminos headed your way in a future blog.
Deficiency
Symptoms 
Addictive
substances used 
Amino
Acid 
Neurotransmitter
or brain fuel: promotes
 
Cravings for sugar,
starch or alcohol
Reduced mental stability
sweets
starches
alcohol
L-glutamine  Fuel source for the brain
stable, calm,
alert brain function. 
Depression
Lack of energy, Lack of drive
Lack of focus, concentration.
ADHD, ADD

sweets
starch
chocolate
aspartame
alcohol
marijuana
caffeine
cocaine
speed
tobacco 

L-tyrosine

L-phenylalanine

Dopamine
Norepinephrine

arousal
mental focus
energy
drive 

Stiff/tense muscles
Stressed/burned out
Unable to relax
sweets
starch
tobacco
marijuana
Valium
alcohol 
GABA (with relaxing aminos taurine and glycine if needed) GABA
calmness
relaxation
Very sensitive to emotional or physical pain.
Cry easily.
Crave comfort, reward or numbing treats.
"Love" certain foods or drugs.
sweets
starch
chocolate
tobacco
heroin
marijuana
alcohol
DL-phenylalanine
D-phenylalanine 
Endorphin
psychological and physical pain relief.
pleasure
reward
loving feelings
numbness
negativity
depression
worry
anxiety
low self esteem
obsessive thoughts
winter blues
PMS
irritability, rage
heat intolerance
panic, phobias
afternoon/eveening cravings
fibromyalgia, TMJ
night owl
insomnia, disturbed sleep
suicidal thoughts 
sweets
starch
tobacco
chocolate
Ecstacy
marijuana 

L-tryptophan
5-HTP

melatonin for sleep at bedtime

Serotonin
emotional stability
self-confidence

Melatonin
good sleep (made from serotonin) 


 

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