Sunday, April 20, 2014

C677T and A1298C Mutations

I recently took a MTHFR (methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase) test (from Spectracell Laboratories) to find out that I have one copy of the C677T mutation (heterozygous) and am negative for the A1298C mutation.  My husband took this test and found out he is heterozygous for both mutations.  This is a genetic mutation, so if you have it, it's likely one of your parents has it too -- possibly your siblings.

There are a number of webpages devoted to these mutations, however the short and sweet of it is that (at least for my situation) my body is running at 60% normal activity in regards to enzyme activity.  This enzyme is involved in the metabolism of folate and homocysteine.

Basically is means that your body isn't working the way it should, and to help it you need to do a couple of things.  Specifically you need to supplement with the right folate and B-vitamins.

Most B-complex, multi-vits, and individual B vitamin supplements will end up being the wrong kind for you, if you have these mutations.  What are the right kind?  The kind with the word "methyl" in front of them.  For the multi-vitamin I take, which I mentioned in the previous post, it has both methylcobalamin (the right kind of B12) and L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate (the right kind of folate).


Then, for the B-complex vitamin I take:



It also has the right kind of B12 and folate.  Both of these brands of vitamins were recommended to me by my naturopath.

Friday, April 18, 2014

Bumps on your Arms

For as long as I can remember I've had these bumps on the outer side of my upper arms.  It felt like I had goosebumps permanently on my upper arms.  And it looked like all the hair follicles had something hard sticking out of them.

I inadvertently got rid of these bumps awhile back, much to my surprise!!  One day I just noticed they were gone!   A few days after noticing it was gone I was reading Kate Rheaume-Bleue's book:





and saw it written up.  It's called follicular hyperkeratosis, and even has it's own wiki page (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperkeratosis).  Both the wiki and her book says that it's due to a vitamin A deficiency.  It just so happens that a week or two before I read that entry in her book I started taking cod liver oil, which has a lot of vitamin A in it.

Back when I discovered this I was taking Sprouts generic brand of Cod Liver Oil.  I have since stopped taking cod liver oil and now get my A through a multi-vitamin, here:


This multi-vitamin has 10,000IU of Vitamin A, 50% as mixed carotenoids and 50% as retinyl acetate.  I've been taking this multi-vitamin for a year or more now and do well on it.

This all was quite a surprise to me, as I always thought those bumps were irritating, but didn't think they were indicative of any sort of problem or deficiency.  It just shows how people live with a problem for so long that they start to think it is normal.  Well, now I know that our bodies work perfectly with the right nutrients.  And even something as annoying as bumps on your arms is a sign that your body isn't working at 100%.

Life is better without bumps on my arms....

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Magnesium Deficiency Symptoms

Dr. Carolyn Dean has written a lot about magnesium deficiency.  On her website she lists out many possible magnesium deficiency symptoms:

http://drcarolyndean.com/2010/06/gauging-magnesium-deficiency-symptoms/

There's quite a few possible symptoms listed -- what I've seen improve in me, from taking 600mg+ of magnesium glycinate are migraines, heart palpitations, and blood pressure stabilization.


Calcium Magnesium Ratio

It's important to take a 1:1 ratio of calcium to magnesium.  Dr. Carolyn Dean writes about it a lot, saying that Americans have an unhealthy ratio of about 10:1 calcium to magnesium.  And it is very important to consider all sources of calcium (diet and supplements) when adding up your amounts.

Here's a great video from about the importance of calcium magnesium balance:



What irritates me is that there are a lot of supplement brands out there that will combine their magnesium and calcium in the same supplement.  In Dr. Dean's books she talks about how calcium and magnesium are antagonists when taken together -- they compete with one another.

All I know is that one day I took a calcium supplement at the same time as my magnesium supplement, and shortly afterwards got a migraine.  All I can think is that my magnesium didn't absorb all the way like it usually does.  After that I never took calcium and magnesium at the same time, and haven't had a problem since.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Epsom Salt Soaks

I do alot of soaking in Epsom Salts.  It makes me feel great.  I prepare a bath with many cups of Epsom Salts, and Dead Sea Salts (just a different combination of salts), plus some magnesium oil, and some essential oils:




I don't know exactly the right amounts to add to your bath.  I sort of make a bath just like I make a dish in the kitchen.  A little bit of this, a little of that, and a dash of this.  I know that people use quite a bit of salts in their baths, more than you would think. So I would say I put many cups of epsom salts, and a couple cups of the other salts, and then 10 or so sprays of oil.

I love taking the baths, and I feel so good afterwards.  I feel like I could do cartwheels, and nothing aches.  It's great.

I probably spend about 20 minutes in the bath, reading.  So overall it is very relaxing.

If you just put "magnesium" into the Amazon search, and then look for books, you'll see numerous books written about it.  On my previous post I mention a list of books that I have read.  I think I will continue reading about magnesium and tweaking my dosage.  It truly is a mineral miracle, and we all need it!

Migraines -- Where it All Began

I think my interest in nutrition and supplements began with the search to cure my migraines.

The type of migraine I would get was called a 'visual migraine' or 'ocular migraine'.  This type of migraine would only effect my vision, and not necessarily give me a headache -- I was lucky.  So many millions of people have full blown migraines which last for days and days, and really knock them out of commission.


Ocular Migraine Disturbance
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Aura_ss.jpg

I was getting these migraines about once a week, some weeks I'd get them twice in a week, and they were becoming more frequent.  The visions would start at the center of my field of view, as a pin-prick size wiggling light, and then expand to the larger light field that you see above.  Then it would move from the center of my vision to the side of my field of view.  Then finally it would move out of my field of view.  Again, no headache, just the visual disturbance.  However, this disturbance can be troublesome if you're trying to drive, or have an important business conversation with someone across the table from you whom you now cannot see.

The first time I got one, years ago, I didn't know what it was.  My vision got distorted, and it lasted for about 20 minutes, and then it went away.  I asked my eye doctor about it and he was the one who diagnosed me.  When I went into my regular doctor, she just told me it would get worse, and some day would start to be painful in addition to the visual disturbances.

I'm not sure how I discovered the solution....  I was probably googling around to learn more about it.  Anyway, I think I stumbled upon a website and reference to trying magnesium for migraines.

That led me to ordering some Amazon Kindle books about magnesium:


All these books were great and eye opening.

What I learned from them, and reading other books, is that migraines are caused by a number of factors.  Some people maybe have a vitamin B (complex) deficiency, some may have a gluten sensitivity, etc, etc, and some may have a vitamin deficiency.  In my case, it was magnesium.

I started supplementing per the suggestions in the books -- which is scary at first.  Doctor's aren't trained to know anything about vitamin and mineral supplementation, and they warn you against doing it.  If it's a milligram above the RDA then they say, "ooohhh, that dosage is awfully high".  Anyway, what I've learned in my multi-year quest for optimal health is that vitamin supplementation hasn't killed anyone over the years that drug deaths have been monitored.  But prescription meds have killed A LOT of people.  A LOT.

Anyway, so I started supplementing.  Dr. Carolyn Dean is truly the magnesium expert.  She suggests 4-6mg per pound of body weight, and she says that you should take as much as your bowels can handle (if you take too much, you have to go to the bathroom!!).

What she also teaches is that there are a lot of different types of magnesium -- oxide, citrate, glycinate, you name it.  They all absorb differently.  What you get in your Centrum multi-vitamin is magnesium oxide.  It's the cheapest form of magnesium, and only absorbs 4% once it gets in you.  What does that mean?  It's no good -- and it will come right out of you via your bowels.  So, unfortunately for alot of people they think, "oh I already take magnesium in my multi-vitamin, so that must not be my problem then."  Well, if you have mangesium deficiency (as Dr. Dean explains, the whole world is mostly deficient!) then you need A LOT of magnesium.  So taking a tiny bit of magnesium in your multi-vitamin, especially a kind that doesn't absorb well, is going to be like taking a sip of water when you're severely dehydrated.  It's not going to do anything...

After oxide, citrate is the next best form, and easily available.  After that is glycinate.  There are more fancier types after glycinate, but they are harder to come by, are in liquid form, and I haven't tried them.  But they do absorb even better than glycinate.  Anyway, I've had great luck with magnesium glycinate.  KAL brand on Amazon.  I take the KAL Magnesium Glycinate 400mg.  Two pills is 400mg.  I take anywhere from 3-5 pills a day, depending on how I feel.



I started to get sick last week, aches and pains of the flu -- but never went into full blown flu, just the aches.  I'm sure it was the flu because everyone around me at work was sick with flu!  During that time I upped my magnesium dosage, because I had so many aches and pains (magnesium is good for muscle pain).  The exciting thing was -- it didn't effect my bowels, even though I went higher than my usual standard dosage.  That's a sign you're sick.  You need more vitamins and minerals due to the illness, therefore you can tolerate more vitamins and minerals.  Once I got over the illness (after a few days) I could tell I was well again, because the high dosage of magnesium started going right through me.

As I mentioned, I rarely get a migraine now, and it's been over a year.  If I do get one, its because I screwed up my dosage on a particular day -- it happens pretty quickly, too.

So what do I suggest?  Get some of the books I mention above and read up on it.  Try some magnesium glycinate and see how much you can supplement -- see if your migraines go away.  In rare occasions, some people can't tolerate any magnesium (it goes right through you).  Carolyn Dean's Invisible Minerals Part I book talks about that.  So if you're one of those people, get that book and read  up!

Added benefit -- my heart flutter/palpitations also went away and my blood pressure stabilized!!!