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Wrong foods for ADHD

Posted on the April 6th, 2012 under - ADHD,- Diet,- Foods for the Brain,365 daily messages by

Message: Check your food sensitivity

The ‘few foods’ elimination diet (1) is considered “a valuable instrument” for both testing the foods to blame for ADHD and, after eliminating these foods, for improving children’s behavior. 69.4% reduction on the ADHD assessment scale comparing with 45.3% in control group without dietary intervention (2).

The method

There are so called oligo-antigenic foods — foods that are unlikely to produce an adverse behavioral response: lamb, chicken, potatoes, rice, banana, apple and brassica (e.g., broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, Chinese cabbage, cauliflower, kale, kohlrabi, etc).

Additional foods were reintroduced, one by one, and if there was no adverse reaction they were retained in the diet. Foods causing adverse reactions were tested in a double-blind control setting: out of two similar meals only one contained the food causing an adverse reaction another being an analog of different chemical nature, for example, cows milk versus soya milk.

The usual suspects

Cows milk caused an adverse reaction in 64% of children; chocolate (59%), grapes (49%), wheat (49%), oranges (45%), cows cheese (40%) and hens egg (39%).

Food intolerance and behavior

• Some children with ADHD respond adversely to certain foods.
• Among the more common foods to blame are wheat, dairy products and chocolate.
• Not all children sharing diagnosis such as ADHD responded similarly to the diet intervention.

Sources

  1. Arch Dis Child, 2001 84:404–409
  2. Eur Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Volume 18, Number 1 / January, 2009

Why music is good for the brain

Posted on the January 18th, 2011 under - ADHD,- Alzheimer's,- Epilepsy,- Parkinson's,Mind & Body by

The study conducted by researchers at McGill University in Montreal and published in January issue of Nature Neuroscience showed that the music increased dopamine levels in certain areas of the brain. Various types of  music were shown to be effective depending on individual preferences. >> More at Brainfuels.com