Digestion: The Good, The Bad, and The Dirty
Digestion: The Good, The Bad, and The Dirty
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Disclaimer
This guide is for educational and informative purposes only and is not intended as
medical or professional advice. The use of diet and nutrition to control metabolic
disorders and disease is a very complicated science, and is not the purpose of this
program. Before making any changes to your diet or undertaking an exercise program
it is essential that you obtain clearance by your physician/doctor.
Table of Contents
When your digestion is working as it should be, you don’t notice anything
about it. It’s easy, pain-free and mostly sensationless. For an enormous
amount of people, however, this is not the case.
Even though digestion is not something we may discuss publicly much, this
topic gets a lot of action behind the scenes.
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HOW DIGESTION
WORKS
While the physical breakdown of food starts in the mouth, digestion begins
as soon as you think about eating. The thought of an incoming meal sends
signals from the brain to your gut, priming it by increasing your production of
digestive factors and getting your body ready to receive the meal or snack.
As you pop the food in your mouth and begin to chew, your teeth crush it
up into smaller pieces, and enzymes contained in the saliva begin to break
it down. You swallow, and after a six-second trip down your esophagus, the
chewed food is in your stomach.
The stomach is a big blender. Not only does it continue the mechanical
breakdown that the mouth has started, it is the mixing place of food,
stomach acid, bile and digestive enzymes, all of which cleave the proteins,
carbohydrates and fats that you have eaten into their readily absorbable
building blocks of amino acids, sugars and fatty acids.
After being reduced to a very soft paste called chyme, the food moves from
your stomach to your small intestine. Your small intestine is a rather impressive
organ, up to 45 feet long, with so many folds and crypts that if you were to
stretch it all out, the surface area would equal that of a tennis court.
That’s a good thing, considering that the job of your small intestine is to
absorb the macronutrients and micronutrients of your food. Your small
intestine acts as an intelligent gatekeeper, letting nutrients and beneficial
compounds in and keeping harmful compounds and pathogens out. Since
the surface area is so large and the potential for exposure to harmful things
through what we eat so high, the small intestine is embedded with immune
tissue and cells.
Peristalsis is the rhythmical, muscular contraction that propels food down and
out and helps you poop regularly. Orchestrated by your “Second Brain” (more
on that below), it is responsible for transferring food from your stomach to your
small intestine, and from your small intestine to your large intestine. Problems
with peristalsis are related to motility - constipation, diarrhea, or both - and are
a common reason for distress.
By the time lunch makes it to your large intestine, much of the usable nutrition
has been extracted, and your large intestine reabsorbs most of the water. The
fiber you have eaten has its time to shine in the large intestine. In addition
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to helping to keep things moving, fiber is also fuel for your microbiome. The
approximately 100-trillion-cell strong colony of beneficial bacteria turn fiber
into short chain fatty acids, which the body uses for energy and as anti-
inflammatory agents. Keep in mind that you’re not just eating for you, you’re
eating for at least a trillion!
Working through the large intestine, the digested food reaches the end of the
road and when enough accumulates, you get the urge to defecate. This is the
first time that you have had a conscious say in your digestive process since
you swallowed your food. Your body does it all for you, under the direction of
your Second Brain.
Bottom line: Your brain, mouth, stomach, intestines, pancreas, and gallbladder
all play a role in your digestion! This is important to know, because symptoms
can give us clues as to which of these parts of the digestive system could be
contributing to the problem!
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HOW YOUR GUT
AFFECTS YOUR HEALTH
There’s good reason to pay attention to your gut even if it doesn’t give you
much trouble. Your gastrointestinal system is not only the avenue through
which you digest and absorb nutrition, it plays a myriad of other parts when it
comes to keeping you in tip-top shape.
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that it is equal to that of the spinal cord. It operates independently of your
central nervous system - the brain and spinal cord - but takes input from it
and gives feedback to it in a bimodal relationship. More and more evidence
is suggesting that the state of the gut may have more to do with the state of
your central nervous system and even your mental state than was originally
thought. Not only is the Second Brain a player in neurological health, the
microbiome is too.
Bottom line: The health of your gut is foundational to the health of your
body. Your digestive process and how easy or painful it is for you is an
indicator of this state. When you understand how it works and the many
components that go into it, you can begin to adjust your daily nutrition
and lifestyle to promote healthy and pain-free digestion.
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5 SIGNS OF
DIGESTIVE PROBLEMS
(AND HOW TO
HEAL THEM)
Much digestive distress, though it manifests in so many different ways, is
caused by similar underlying themes. Eating foods that are not appropriate
for you, failing to eat based on symptoms or diagnoses, low digestive ability,
an imbalance of the microbiome or frank infection of it, lack of integrity of the
intestinal lining, a stressed-out Second Brain, and any combination of these
factors underpin much chronic digestive distress.
Keep these factors in mind and the framework outlined for each of
them. You can get a lot of relief from digestive distress by following the
recommendations described earlier in this guide. This section takes common
digestive complaints and gets more specific about how to tackle them.
Bloating
Bloating is one of the most common complaints that people report. Most of
us can say that we have felt bloated at one time or another in our lives, but
bloating every day, or after every meal, is simply not normal.
You should not have to get into a one-sided wrestling match to peel of your
jeans at the end of the day, especially if they so smoothly zipped up in the
morning.
If you did a Google search for “causes of bloating,” you might notice that you
could compile a list of dozens of reasons. Figuring out the WHY of bloating
will shed good light on HOW to de-bloat.
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Chew your food
Eating on the run, scarfing down a sandwich on the way to your car, or
slamming down a protein shake standing by the sink doesn’t give your body
much time to get into a nice, relaxed state to support optimal digestion.
Eating quickly and talking with your mouth full introduces a lot of extra air that
eventually has to escape. Sit when you eat, slow down, and chew your food
until it is a soft paste. This will help decrease gas and bloating and cut down
on overeating, too.
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Constipation
If you have less than three bowel movements per week (some would argue
less than one per day), feel as if you are not quite “done” at least 25% of the
time, feel as if there is an obstruction at least 25% of the time, if stool is hard
25% of the time, or if you need to use an instrument or enema or some other
form of help at least 25% of the time - you’ve got constipation.
When it comes to tackling constipation and regulating your motility, there are
several factors to look at.
Fiber adds bulk and volume to the stool, which actually helps our Second
Brain push it along and out. This ONLY works, however, if we are well hydrated.
So, if we are indeed fiber-deficient, the very first order of business is to begin
to increase our water.
Now, my very favorite form of fiber is the type found in vegetables. If you
are getting in non-starchy veggies, you are also getting a bit of water to go
alongside your fiber and helping the entire process move right along.
Eat at least four cups of vegetables daily, at a bare minimum. Not only are the
veggies providing fiber and water, they are also providing minerals (also key
for regularity), vitamins, antioxidants and a variety of healthy phytochemicals.
Veggie intake is hugely important.
Some are interested in supplemental fiber, and for that, the gentlest one on
the block is acacia. Like probiotics, fiber is something that you want to start
at low amounts and slowly increase over time to not exacerbate symptoms.
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Start with 1/2 teaspoon in 8 ounces of water, and every 3-4 days increase this
amount by 1/4-1/2 teaspoon until you are doing 2-3 teaspoons in 8-10 ounces
of water twice daily.
A mix of fats, of animal and plant origin, is ideal. When it comes to animal
fats, buy the absolute best that you can afford, focusing on fish that are wild-
caught, meats that are grass-fed, and chicken/poultry that is pastured.
In the plant kingdom, the easiest and safest options to stick with for cooking
are extra virgin olive oil (look for labels that say “100% olive oil” - otherwise you
may be getting a blend cut with canola or soy oil), coconut oil and avocado
oil. Oils to stay away from are canola, soy and anything labeled “vegetable oil.”
Seed oils are best consumed raw, as in a salad or other veggies.
Avocado, nuts and seeds and their butters, coconut and coconut products,
egg yolks, fatty fish (salmon, mackerel), and fattier cuts of meat (ribeye, chuck)
are all good sources of fats.
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apply firm but comfortable pressure there for 60 seconds each morning when
you are sitting and breathing.
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Diarrhea
Diarrhea can be categorized as infectious or noninfectious. Infectious diarrhea
means you’ve got some pathogen and your body is doing its best to get it out.
Infectious diarrhea typically resolves on its own or is something you receive an
antibiotic for. Antibiotics, of course, can create diarrhea as well.
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Take a probiotic
Probiotics help regulate bowel motility and calm the Second Brain. They are
particularly important if you have taken antibiotics recently or if antibiotics
preceded your diarrhea. Aim for 50-100 billion CFUs of a probiotic that
contains Bifidobacterium breve, longum and infantis at a minimum.
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Low Stomach Acid
Your stomach acid serves multiple functions. It helps break down protein
and absorb certain vitamins and minerals (think folate, iron and B vitamins).
Stomach acid acts as defense against bad bacteria and other bugs and
viruses that can make you sick, and maintains an appropriate pH throughout
the entire system.
It is possible to be tested for low stomach acid through the Heidelberg test,
although not many doctors perform this test. Based on your symptoms and
your history, your health care provider may recommend a trial of supplemental
acid (known as Betaine HCl) taken with meals to see if it improves symptoms.
If you have gastritis or an active ulcer, you should NOT take supplemental
acid.
Bottom line: Your stomach acid helps break down your food, keep
your gut running smoothly, and protect you from illness. Symptoms
of low acid can be uncomfortable and are often reversed with Betaine
HCl supplementation, but don’t ever supplement if you have an ulcer
or gastritis.
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Gut Infections/Parasites
You have learned that dysbiosis is a major factor in much chronic digestive
distress and has implications for disease not limited to the gut. Sometimes,
there is more than just an imbalance present in your microbiome - there is
frank infection. A pathogenic bacteria, yeast or parasite is on board.
Go low-FODMAP
For the course of your treatment, choosing foods that are low on the FODMAP
scale (see above in the nutrition section for examples) will help reduce
symptoms of gas, bloating, spasm, cramping, and any motility changes by
reducing the levels of fermentation done by your infected gut flora.
Some folks opt for both conventional and natural antimicrobials, harnessing
the best of both worlds. If you take that approach, natural antimicrobials are
typically swapped every 3-4 weeks. Taking the time to focus on healing your
gut knocks out the infection and improves the health of your digestive tract,
making relapse or another infection less likely.
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Choose antimicrobials that are appropriate for YOU
Your sensitivity test should be the primary way that you determine what
antimicrobials to use, whether they are natural or pharmaceutical. There
is good data that demonstrates the efficacy of a variety of plant-based
antimicrobials. Grapefruit seed extract, berberine, black walnut, plant tannins,
garlic/allicillin, oil of oregano, wormwood and wormseed are examples.
While it makes them tricky to treat, it simply means you need more tools.
Specific polysaccharide-busting enzymes like glucoamylase, chitosanase,
beta-glucanase, cellulase, hemicellulase and pectinase should be used,
along with other specific enzymes like lysozyme, protease and peptidase
that have DPP-IV activity. An additional enzyme called serratia peptidase or
serrazyme is often used, and the best products will also contain disodium
EDTA, which helps remove metal. There are several products on the market
that have these enzymes in them, specifically for biofilms. Biofilm busters
should be taken at the same time as your antimicrobials to enhance delivery.
Bottom line: The number one rule when considering any type of
infection, whether it is candida, another type of yeast or parasites or
unhealthy bacteria, or SIBO (small intestine bacterial overgrowth), is to
test for it. Stool testing can rule all of these things in or out, minus SIBO,
which is a breath test. Do not assume you have an infection and go on
an extensive protocol without actually knowing what is going on. Get a
test, get the data, and go from there.
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MICRONUTRIENTS
AND DIGESTION
Unlike the macronutrients of protein, carbohydrates and fiber, micronutrients are
vitamins and minerals that are required by the body is smaller amounts than their
macro counterparts.
Micronutrients contribute to all aspects of human health, and you derive them
from your diet and supplements.
Your gut plays an important role in micronutrient absorption and assimilation. For
example, a compound called intrinsic factor is made by the same cells within
your stomach that make acid. Intrinsic factor binds vitamin B12 and allows it to be
absorbed into your body.
Iron, folate, magnesium, calcium require adequate stomach acid for their
absorption. Chronic use of acid-blocking medications has been associated with
increased risk of osteopenia and anemia.
Even your gut flora play their part for the uptake of micronutrients. They help to
“humanize” (or make usable) the nutrients that we get from plants. This allows
more nutrition to be absorbed into your body.
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HOW TO EAT FOR
BETTER DIGESTION
The topic of nutrition can be overwhelming. Mountains of books, blogs and
gurus all have their say, often offering conflicting advice and resources. This
may sound trite, but finding what works for you is one of the key factors in
getting to the root of digestive distress, reducing or banishing symptoms, and
looking and feeling your best.
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Eating for your diagnosis can be more subtle and nuanced. For example, there
is a lot of research that demonstrates that people who have been diagnosed
with IBS or other dysbiosis-based issues benefit from a low FODMAP
(Fermentable Oligosaccharide, Disaccharide, Monosaccharide and Polyols)
diet. FODMAP is just a fancy acronym to say certain carbohydrates and fibers
can be problematic (gas producing, motility changing, pain inducing) for those
with an imbalanced microbiome. FODMAPs are found in a wide variety of
seemingly random foods. Gluten and dairy are high in FODMAPs, but many
healthy - and even classically gut-friendly - foods contain high FODMAPS, like
onion, apples, avocado and asparagus.
Take stock of the foods you eat regularly and compare them to the foods that
can be inherently irritating or specific to your condition. These are the items
you want to target for elimination. Elimination diets can be done with one food
at a time or many - it depends on what you are able to handle and commit to.
Elimination diets help you to assess whether a food is truly an issue for you,
if it is/was an issue because of something off in your system, or if it’s not an
issue at all. It’s important to know so you’re not overly restrictive if you don’t
have to be, because that can be pretty miserable.
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The most beneficial things to focus on adding into your daily nutrition are
high quality protein, vegetables and water. Also included are fruit options.
Vegetables and fruits are sources of fiber, antioxidants, vitamins, minerals,
polyphenols. There is an enormous amount of variability in the choices
available for each of these categories, parlayed with your own unique
personal preferences and sensitivities. Play to your strengths and go for what
you like rather than trying to force yourself to eat something you don’t like.
It’s not fun, and you’ll probably find yourself dropping the food anyway. Our
willpower only lasts so long!
Keep in mind that this is a general list, and that there may be items that you
don’t like or that your body doesn’t tolerate. You may notice some foods on
this list that were included in the problematic foods section. This is not
meant to be confusing, but rather to highlight the variability these foods can
have on different people. Listen to your body and experience first.
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Bottom line: Nutrition plays an enormous role in how you feel and
look, and your digestion is no exception to that. In fact, many digestive
complaints are initiated or exacerbated by the foods you may eat, and
can be helped by making changes to the diet.
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SUPPLEMENTS FOR
BETTER DIGESTION
This section could fill a whole book - and indeed it has - but this is a solid
list of the most helpful supplements to improve your digestive function and
reduce pesky, common symptoms.
Digestive enzymes: Enzymes help you break down proteins, fats and
carbohydrates. They will help with a wide variety of symptoms, including
gas and bloating, and help improve the consistency and frequency of bowel
movements.
Look for a product that contains pepsin, protease, lipase and amylase, and
take 1-2 with each meal.
Probiotics: These are the supplemental form of beneficial bacteria, and are
highly useful in both constipation and diarrhea, particularly if there is a history
of antibiotic use, recent food poisoning or lots of international travel. Probiotics
help improve the diversity and strength of your gut flora.
L-glutamine: Glutamine, the most common amino acid in the human diet,
is also the preferential fuel for the cells that line the digestive tract. Beyond
nourishment, glutamine also helps these cells to divide, regenerate and repair
themselves. This is a must-have for those struggling with intestinal integrity -
aka “leaky gut” - issues.
Glutamine has the added benefit of helping with muscle recovery and
decreasing muscle soreness for athletes and those who exercise frequently.
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Magnesium glycinate: The quintessential natural laxative, magnesium
glycinate is the gentlest form on the block, with the extra perks of easing
tight muscles, reducing headaches, settling heart palpitations and more.
Magnesium, used by the body in over 300 biochemical reactions, is very safe
and inexpensive.
Take 450-600mg before bed. The amount can be adjusted up or down based
on your own individual response, and keep in mind that if you get loose stool
from magnesium supplementation, you should decrease your dose!
Bottom line: The above supplements are helpful and safe, but if you
have any questions or concerns or need additional guidance, ask your
doctor or competent health care provider.
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7-DAY
Gut-Healing
MEAL PLAN
DAY 1
Paleo Tacos.
There are several different options here, all of
which contain protein and healthy fats and are
low-FODMAP.
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DAY 2
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DAY 3
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DAY 4
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DAY 5
Taco Salad.
This salad is loaded with protein, veggies and
flavor and is easily made in bulk to be used for
leftovers the next day if you desire!
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DAY 6
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DAY 7
Paleo Egg Bake.
This is a great option for those looking to
prepare a lot of food at once for convenience.
Rich in protein and healthy fats, this flexible
recipe will allow you to sub any veggies to your
taste and unique sensitivities.
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