Wow, you folks are alive! We definitely have a pulse here! Great group.
Tex, I was confused myself the other day on various aspects of dairy (casein vs lactose), so no apology needed. In fact, I forgot that I even was tested for casein till you folks reminded me that it might have been part of Dr. Fine's lab test - and to ask them to send it to me again...
Joanna, that quote is an interesting part of the celiac story. Years of research appear to have been abandoned after a single report that focused on 'gliadin' (also known as gluten) sensitivity. Some Celiacs did not respond to elimination of gluten/gliadin, the SCD believes in the original work of 1951 Drs. Sidney V. and Merrill P. Haas saying that relief will come if they eliminate ALL grains.
Jean, you make an excellent point here:
Jean says: A true intolerance has to be completely avoided. I once found a quarter inch piece of noodle in my soup at a restaurant. I took it out and finished the soup and was in bed for two days.
I suppose I screwed up by only posting Lucy's response, rather than including my question to her (I tend to be overly-long, and try to resist...) So here's what I had sent to Lucy Rosset:
> The lab test I had done a couple years ago showed some antibodies to
> dairy,
> and mentioned casein. I think I am going to do the yogurt anyway. Screw
> it. If I do OK, and the bad bacteria overgrowth gets under control, then
> maybe the "intolerance" will disappear. I will be alert for "reactions"
> to
> the yogurt, but I have eaten it from stores (before discovering SCD) and
> it
> didn't kill me, or even stand out as different from my usual bad
> digestion.
>
> Suppose I was just curious if you have heard of this before, people
> allegedly intolerant of dairy, doing it anyway...
>
> Thanks, Bob H (3 weeks into SCD)
So you see, I had explained to her that I was getting a lab result showing an intolerance, yet I hadn't noticed a "severe" reaction to that food.
Pg 69 of the SCD book would basically tell me NOT TO EAT a food that was known to cause a severe reaction:
If a food specified in the diet is known to cause an anaphylactic reaction (severe allergic reaction) eliminate it permanently from the diet. If, in the past, an allowable food did not agree with you, eliminate it for a short tine (about one week) and try it again in small amounts. If, after a week of eliminating it, a food continues to cause problems, do not include it in the diet.
Previously in this thread, I mentioned that perhaps I DO HAVE PROBLEMS with casein, but due to the Multiple Intolerances, and chaos from other irritants that had not yet been eliminated (rice, for me), I was unable to see an improvement when casein had been eliminated.
Believe me, if I don't see an improvement in a couple weeks I will eliminate casein. Perhaps things will clear up, as many of the other MI offenders have also been removed.
So in closing, I think the "spirit" of Lucy's comment was along the lines of: people who have bowel trouble, who have been victim of the "vicious cycle" (eating sugar and complex carbos -> dysbiosis -> rapid transit time -> further difficulty digesting complex carbos) will start to manifest all kinds of intolerances. I am referring to something that could be reversible, as opposed to a "life-threatening" type of allergic reaction.