I read with great interest this article on lectins from a link that Marsha sent awhile back.
http://tinyurl.com/htmz6
I always wondered why I react to cabbage, and now, it seems, cucumbers. On top of that, I am reacting to the canola oil I recently bought after reading the Paelo book. Apparently, it is counter-indicated lectin-wise. Onions and garlic fall into lectin world too.
I wonder if I could be lectin intolerant. It seems obvious that I am at least to the main lectin families (wheat, milk, soy...). But I wonder if I might also be reacting to lectins in other foods even though they have smaller amounts of lectins. Fruits are listed as containing lectins, but not the specific ones. Any thoughts about how I could find out more about the lectins in fruit?
Apparently, there are 155 foods that contain lectins, but I haven't been able to find a complete list of them. If this is key to my problem, it might help me clarify what I can eat, if I could find a list of lectin free foods. If you have any resources, let me know!
One of the articles in this article recommends staying away from your lectin sensitive foods for an entire year before testing them. They say that the sensitivity can be induced or genetic. Some foods you may gain back, others not if it's a genetic issue.
I find this fascinating! Thanks, Celia
Lectins
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Celia,
This book contains a list of 200, but it's a bit pricey at $325:
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitl ... 6445X.html
Here's a free list with a little information:
http://www.owendot.com/Health_Science/L ... Foods.html
Tex
This book contains a list of 200, but it's a bit pricey at $325:
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitl ... 6445X.html
Here's a free list with a little information:
http://www.owendot.com/Health_Science/L ... Foods.html
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.