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Why Does My Ability To Handle Dairy Constantly Change Back And Forth?


munchkinette

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munchkinette Collaborator

I'm totally baffled about dairy. I had gotten to the point where I cut it out completely except for traveling, since focusing on avoiding gluten is the priority, and because I seem to tolerate dairy in other countries. (Still a mystery.) I've never been sure what about dairy bothers me. I just know that I get painful cystic acne for 3 weeks, a bloated stomach ache for two days, and kind of spacey in the head for two days.

I just got back from a trip, and I'm pretty sure I was mildly glutened. My acne was horrible from the sunblock, and my belly looked pregnant and I had some major C, so I said, what the hell, I already feel like crap, I'll have some Haagen Dasz. Nothing happened. I have not gotten any painful cystic acne, I wasn't completely nauseated.

I mean, I know that dairy tolerance can change after healing, but after some gluten? I took extra probiotics when I got home from my trip, but I wouldn't expect that to make much difference.


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Looking for answers Contributor

I'm totally baffled about dairy. I had gotten to the point where I cut it out completely except for traveling, since focusing on avoiding gluten is the priority, and because I seem to tolerate dairy in other countries. (Still a mystery.) I've never been sure what about dairy bothers me. I just know that I get painful cystic acne for 3 weeks, a bloated stomach ache for two days, and kind of spacey in the head for two days.

I just got back from a trip, and I'm pretty sure I was mildly glutened. My acne was horrible from the sunblock, and my belly looked pregnant and I had some major C, so I said, what the hell, I already feel like crap, I'll have some Haagen Dasz. Nothing happened. I have not gotten any painful cystic acne, I wasn't completely nauseated.

I mean, I know that dairy tolerance can change after healing, but after some gluten? I took extra probiotics when I got home from my trip, but I wouldn't expect that to make much difference.

Is the dairy you consume in other countries pasteurized? If not, that may be the connection. This is explained much better on mercola.com (who advises only to consume raw dairy). When dairy is pasteurized the dead bacteria/enzymes remain in the food and your body may mistaken the bacteria as a foreign substance. This can cause problems for some. I get acne as well. Adding probiotics can help because then the live bacteria make the dairy "whole" again, because food is supposed to have bacteria and enzymes - they help break it down. Perhaps, this is why you could handle the ice cream after taking the probiotics. This is also why many people can tolerate yogurt and not other dairy. My husbang can eat raw cheeses and have no problems. Give him pasteurized cheese and he starts wheezing. Like I said, I'm explaining this poorly. I recommend you logging on to mercola.com and searching for raw milk...he explains it much better.

munchkinette Collaborator

Is the dairy you consume in other countries pasteurized? If not, that may be the connection. This is explained much better on mercola.com (who advises only to consume raw dairy). When dairy is pasteurized the dead bacteria/enzymes remain in the food and your body may mistaken the bacteria as a foreign substance. This can cause problems for some. I get acne as well. Adding probiotics can help because then the live bacteria make the dairy "whole" again, because food is supposed to have bacteria and enzymes - they help break it down. Perhaps, this is why you could handle the ice cream after taking the probiotics. This is also why many people can tolerate yogurt and not other dairy. My husbang can eat raw cheeses and have no problems. Give him pasteurized cheese and he starts wheezing. Like I said, I'm explaining this poorly. I recommend you logging on to mercola.com and searching for raw milk...he explains it much better.

Thanks for the link- I'll check it out. I actually suspected this. Last summer I was eating dairy the whole time in Greece and Turkey. When my dad was a kid (in Turkey) he wasn't allowed to eat dairy because it wasn't pasteurized, although that was many years ago. When I went to Italy on that same trip I didn't tolerate the dairy as well, but they had a lot more processed products like we have in the US.

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