Guest guest Posted October 30, 2001 Report Share Posted October 30, 2001 I say give it a try. We have a very mildly affected daughter and three drs. said the diet wasn't necessary bc she had normal bowel habits-or whatever they called it. We did it anyway and will never look back. Her sleep was a problem, it improved. Overall health improved. It is really just healthy eating and once you make it past the first few weeks, it's easy. Give it a try. What do you have to lose? We didn't see regression BTW. Janelle Jane 2 PDDNOS 1 NT Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2001 Report Share Posted October 30, 2001 > Hi All, > > My wife and I just got back from seeing an Autism specialist here in > Oregon and we are preparing to go on the the GFCF diet. We are going > to get our son 's urine/stool examined over the next week or so, > the specialist explained more about the diet and his suggestions for > doing the diet. These are the concerns that my wife and I have right > now, and I guess I would like your opinion on it. Our son is > high functioning and has been involved with EI / S.T.A.R. program > since we found out that he was Austic in 98. He has never had a > sleeping problem since he was born (sleeps fine every night, just > like clockwork), he has never had a chronic digestive problem (always > had and has normal B.M.'s). He is showing improvement with the work > were doing at home and at school. We are just afraid that since we > are so fortunate to have all of the above stated things that if we go > on this diet it may make things worse. We are at the turning point > right now and I am looking at all the advise and information I can > get. I've been on the GFCFdiet.com site and have been reading all of > the success stories, most of which had kids with sleeping / digestive > problems to begin with which case they really had nothing to loose. > What are your thoughts on our situation? Well - My boy had no sleeping problems either before we started the diet. Also, we didn't have noticable poop problems - however, he was constipated and sometimes had trouble passing a BM. I didn't think much of this, but now realize it was due to his very high consumption of dairy - gallons of milk a week (and I do mean gallons) and lots and lots of cheese. The only thing that happened as far as things getting worse was a short period of withdrawal - and some night terrors. This was about a week or so in length. Our son was 3 at the time. When the withdrawal was over we saw some really great things. Increased attention, increased eye contact, a jump in language, and overall our son was less stoned looking and more " present " - also, he began to feel pain. We hadn't really noticed that he wasn't feeling pain. He just seemed like he was a tough little guy who could walk off a bump and keep going. Well, I think he was too stoned on gluten and casein to feel it when he bumped his head. After he got " cleaned " up - we noticed that he would look surprised if he bumped into something, and rub the spot he bumped and sometimes, if he took a good spill, would cry and want to be comforted. Also, he started to run more. We didn't notice that he wasn't one of those kids who ran everywhere - but when he started running around we realized that it wasn't normal that he wasn't running everywhere before. These things are subtle, but the all go towards an overall sensory issue that was masked by the fact that these foods seemed to cloud him over. He was foggy and withdrawn, but clearing up his system brought him back to us. The therapies are much more effective now that he is clearheaded. I hope this helps. Moira mom to Vico (4.5 ASD) and Culzean (18 months) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2001 Report Share Posted October 30, 2001 My son has never had a sleeping problem. He never drank milk though he did like yogurt and cheese. I took him off both gluten and casein at the same time the middle of Sept. My son had been in group therapy for a few weeks by then. At the end of the first week of the diet, one of his therapists pulled me aside and asked me what I did different. I asked her why. She said my son seems to have all of a sudden " come of the fog " . He went from sticking to one activity in a session to going from activity to activity and therapist to therapist. It was like he all of a sudden noticed the world around him. Before the diet, he had very poor eye contact. Now he has excellent eye contact. Most of his stims are either gone or greatly reduced. Last night I was noticing that when he is in the living room while the family is watching TV, he does not play with his toys much. He now goes from family member to family member hugging, staring in our eyes, kissing and wrestling. Three weeks into the diet he had an infraction. In class he stole 1 goldfish from another kid. By the time I picked him up he had the worst smelling diahrea. On the ride home he cried most of the time. It was difficult to feed him lunch because he could not stop crying and screaming for the next 2 hours. He is usually quite a happy little boy - even before the diet. It took about a week for him to get back his eye contact and overall awareness of the world. Over this last weekend I bought him a dress-up Larry (from VeggieTales video series). I thought it would encourage pretend play. When I opened the box he looked in, pulled out a hat and put it on my head! Not only was he doing pretend play but he was doing it while interacting with me! I believe I owe it all to the diet. The thing about the diet is it de-fogs the brain so the child can learn. Therapy is great but is much more effective when the brain is clear. Just to think I dismissed the idea but some of the ladies on another list bugged me so much that I could not longer avoid it. > Hi All, > > My wife and I just got back from seeing an Autism specialist here in > Oregon and we are preparing to go on the the GFCF diet. We are going > to get our son 's urine/stool examined over the next week or so, > the specialist explained more about the diet and his suggestions for > doing the diet. These are the concerns that my wife and I have right > now, and I guess I would like your opinion on it. Our son is > high functioning and has been involved with EI / S.T.A.R. program > since we found out that he was Austic in 98. He has never had a > sleeping problem since he was born (sleeps fine every night, just > like clockwork), he has never had a chronic digestive problem (always > had and has normal B.M.'s). He is showing improvement with the work > were doing at home and at school. We are just afraid that since we > are so fortunate to have all of the above stated things that if we go > on this diet it may make things worse. We are at the turning point > right now and I am looking at all the advise and information I can > get. I've been on the GFCFdiet.com site and have been reading all of > the success stories, most of which had kids with sleeping / digestive > problems to begin with which case they really had nothing to loose. > What are your thoughts on our situation? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2001 Report Share Posted October 30, 2001 Thanks -that's what I wanted. My son is casein free and was gluten free for about 3 wks. I didn't notice much but at least now I know specifics to look for. The problem was I was so stressed trying to figure out what to feed him that he'd actually eat and then he developed loose bms from corn. I want to try again but I'm terrified of the allergies that may arise. After being on gluten again he can tolerate the corn (stange?) He does seem more in his own little world but that's about all I notice. Any thoughts? What is your child's diet consist of? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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