Diseases

Digestive Disorders

Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Crohn's Disease, Celiac Disease, and More

NOTE: The purpose of the All Wholesome Herbs project is to gather the best information available in scientific research and clinical practice to enable every individual to manage their own healthcare. The information provided on this website is for informational purposes only and is subject to individual interpretation and discretion. All Wholesome Herbs is not responsible for individual medical decisions based upon the information provided.

Digestive Disorders

When there's a problem with digestion, we should consider what we're digesting.

What We Digest Affects Our Digestive Health

A strange phenomenon in our day is the pattern in “healthcare” to separate what we eat from our health. This is most bizarre in digestive disorders. Considering the nature of digestion – that it is the body’s interaction with food – our primary consideration should be our food, not our genetics. If we are to properly treat digestive disorders, we must first start with the fundamental truth that what we eat affects our digestive health.

Healthy Food, Healthy Bowels

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases are complex, and include immune response, microbiome, hormones, and more. But although the many dimensions of disease may seem perplexing, digestive diseases themselves are not as complicated as we might think. Inflammatory bowel diseases are, predictably, highly treatable and responsive to diet. It is, after all, our body’s interaction with food that is causing the digestive disorder. If we want the body to respond differently, we must change its environment – meaning, we must change our food.

So what foods are good for our bowels? Digestive health, with all its dimensions (including above-mentioned immunitymicrobiome, and hormones) are all most effectively treated with whole plant foods. Eating fruits and vegetables heals inflammatory bowel diseases, whereas animal-based foods and processed foods aggravate inflammatory bowel diseases (Lewis et al; Grosse et al). Trying to identify exactly which nutrient in plant foods provides the healing – whether it’s the fiber, the antioxidants, the vitamins and minerals, or other phytochemicals – is wholly unimportant. Likewise, trying to decide whether it’s the fat, the protein, the heavy metals, or other toxins in animal-based foods that causes the problem is equally futile. The fact is that whole plant foods (vegetables, fruits, and nuts) heal and nourish the bowels, and animal-based foods (meat, eggs, and dairy) harm and inflame the bowels.

Cooking with oil also has significant implications in digestive diseases (Grootveld et al). Oil is unnecessary in cooking and is easily replaced with water. For additional information about replacing oil, butter, and other fats in cooking, see the All Wholesome Herbs recipe book.

Celiac Disease and Gluten Sensitivity

Celiac disease and other sensitivities to gluten have an additional dietary component of difficulties with certain grains, especially wheat. Interestingly, there is strong anecdotal evidence that wheat sensitivity is specific to genetically modified (GMO, meaning genetically changed) wheat varieties, as part of modern conventional farming. In other words, people who have even serious sensitivities to gluten from GMO wheat often have no problem with heirloom (non-GMO) wheat. Still, it is important to remember that grains are nutritionally inferior to all wholesome herbs (vegetables, fruits, and nuts) and are unnecessary for a healthy diet. Rather than spending significant resources (time, money, and effort) trying to replicate bread with other grain flours, it may be easier, cheaper, and healthier to skip the grains and eat all wholesome herbs instead.

Research

Grootveld M, et al. Health Effects of Oxidized Heated Oils. Foodservice Research International, 13(1); 41-55, 30 June 2006.

Lewis JD, et al. Diet as a Trigger or Therapy for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases. Gastroenterology, 152(2): 398-414.e6, Feb 2017.

Grosse CSJ, et al.  The Role of a Plant-Based Diet in the Pathogenesis, Etiology and Management of the Inflammatory Bowel Diseases. Expert Review of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 14(3): 137-145, Mar. 2020.

Yoo W, et al. High-fat Diet-Induced Colonocyte Dysfunction Escalates Microbiota-Derived Trimethylamine N-Oxide. Science, 373(6556): 813-818, 13 Aug. 2021.

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