Guest guest Posted April 6, 2008 Report Share Posted April 6, 2008 On page 100, the paragraph that begins, " Phase 2 metabolism has many parallel paths, " is particularly difficult for me to understand. I'm assuming that, since he's talking about parallel paths, these paths share similar " cures " . (?) Here's the sentence (pathway) I have the biggest question about: " Sulfation will show up most notably if the patient does well on the Feingold diet, or if she responds poorly to DHEA supplementation. " Could you also interpret the Feingold sentence this way: " Liver Phase II enzyme reactions will be in evidence if the patient improves by eliminating Salicylates, etc. " I just have absolutely no idea what " show up " means in his sentence.. Or, er, I just plain don't get that whole sentence. What I simply want to know is this: if I have poor sulfation (and tons of chemical sensitivites as a result) do I want to eliminate salicylate containing food or not? Ok. Then the next sentence down the same paragraph says, " Impaired methylation leads to slow clearance of epinephrine, norepinephrine and dopamin, which would exacerbate agitation, anxiety and " psychotic " symptoms. " Since the topic was again brought up mid-paragraph, is Andy saying that sulfation is in the same ballpark as methylation? I assume so.. So, overall here, it sounds like he's saying all these liver pathways can be improved if the patient avoids salicylates, choline, trimethylglycine, folic acid and vitamin B-12. Right? Although I'm sure I have problems with slow phase II metabolism, I just really hope I don't have to follow the Feingold diet and avoid all those foods. I do great with sulphur foods if that helps? And, btw, is choline the same as phoshatidyl choline, or close enough? I get injections. I've studied a lot of the book but need to get a bead on where I sit with treatment. I'm almost psychotic reading pages 110 and 111 as that piece seems core to my problems... ANY help appreciated with that whole section on liver, sulfate, suphur and sulfite metabolism.. Danke. ~robin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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