Budenoside, Adding Food Back and Eating Something "Wron
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- birdlover3
- Adélie Penguin
- Posts: 202
- Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2012 2:04 pm
- Location: Illinois
Budenoside, Adding Food Back and Eating Something "Wron
If you are on Budenoside will eating something 'wrong' trigger an episode? How quickly would it happen?
How about food sensitivities? If a person is adding back in food (trying different things), and it causes a reaction, how quickly does the reaction happen? Is it within hours, later in the day, the next day or when? it probably varies, but what have others of you experienced?
How about food sensitivities? If a person is adding back in food (trying different things), and it causes a reaction, how quickly does the reaction happen? Is it within hours, later in the day, the next day or when? it probably varies, but what have others of you experienced?
Diagnosed with Collagenous Colitis November 2012.
For some people, budesonide will mask their symptoms no matter what they eat. For others, food sensitivities can still cause a reaction. The most common time for a reaction is from 3 to 6 hours after eating the food in question. Some people react in as little as 10 or 15 minutes, though, and in some cases, it can take a day or more before a reaction shows up.
My reaction time is usually 3 to 6 hours, but for some foods it's much longer.
Tex
My reaction time is usually 3 to 6 hours, but for some foods it's much longer.
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.
- fatbuster205
- Gentoo Penguin
- Posts: 342
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2012 7:53 am
- Location: Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland
When I have been on budesonide my gluten symptoms are masked. That is one of the nice things about the medicine. On the flip-side, I tend to 'cheat eat' things I could not normally eat. I use the budesonide to heal my gut when I have a bad flare up or when I'm on vacation and can't easily follow a strict diet. It is when I am not on budesonide that I can really gauge my food allergies because then I get an immediate reaction to an 'unsafe' food I ingest. Usually I react quickly, anywhere between 20 minutes - 4 hours later. My advise would be: eat as cautiously as you can while on the medicine and then start a food log when you have rolled off.
CoryGut
Age 71
Diagnosed with Lymphocytic Colitis Sept. 2010
On and off Entocort(Currently Off)
Age 71
Diagnosed with Lymphocytic Colitis Sept. 2010
On and off Entocort(Currently Off)
Reactions largely depend on the dosage you're taking. Just dropping one pill a day can make a difference. The goal is to find a dosage that allows you to react within a day of eating a food, but not to be reacting to everything. My reactions on a dosage like that is between 12-24 hours.
Gloria
Gloria
You never know what you can do until you have to do it.
I've been GF for about 14 months now and been attempting to taper off enotcort. I am not so lucky with gaging reactions with D because that is my "normal" right now, I generally can tell if something I ate doesn't agree with my because I get a stomach ache and terrible fatigue. I was pleased that I finally tapered to 3mg every other day but today decided to go back up to 9mg because things have gotten intolerable since my bout with the flu two weeks ago. It's very disappointing but it is what it is. I hope you easily find a pattern with identifying what does and doesn't work for you- that communication with your body is truely a blessing.
I took Budesonide for about 4 months. While on it I could eat eggs. Off of it I found that wasn't true and within 3-4 hours the gurgling would start then I'd have several rapid bowel movements. Otherwise I kept to a strict diet both on and off of Budesonide.
When doing food challenges, my reaction would often occur the next morning, and it was D for some foods like pork and spinach. However if I eat peanuts, I don't get D. I ache all over the next day instead. So... for me reactions come in various ways. I suspect there are some things that cause me fatigue (and probably inflammation?) but I haven't been bothered enough to sort those out yet. I just keep moving the next day and it eventually goes away.
Carol
When doing food challenges, my reaction would often occur the next morning, and it was D for some foods like pork and spinach. However if I eat peanuts, I don't get D. I ache all over the next day instead. So... for me reactions come in various ways. I suspect there are some things that cause me fatigue (and probably inflammation?) but I haven't been bothered enough to sort those out yet. I just keep moving the next day and it eventually goes away.
Carol
“.... people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” Maya Angelou
Everyone is different and every food will bring a different time frame of reaction. When I was at full dose, i didn't seem to react to much of anything ( but I was VERY CAREFUL and restrictive with food), as I tapered down the dose, the reactions were more noticable. I didn't know I was reacting to soy and peanut butter until I was down to one pill a day. Like others have said, some foods react faster. Dairy is within 20 minutes for me, other things could be the next morning. That's why it's a good idea to test foods one at a time with about three days between ( but you really shouldn't be testing until you are on a much lower dose)
Leah
Leah
- birdlover3
- Adélie Penguin
- Posts: 202
- Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2012 2:04 pm
- Location: Illinois
I flat out could hardly tell any food intolerances while I was on Entocort and probably for about 6 weeks after I got off Entocort. I was able to tell that corn, rice and quinoa caused dizziness (i.e. more dizziness than normal) The Entocort "masked" everything. I honestly didn't understand much of the discussion on this forum regarding food intolerances. I blindly went GF, DF and SF and stayed the course. It wasn't until very late in the game that I did the Enterolab testing--in retrospect I which I'd done it much sooner.
Brandy
Brandy