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Chronic pain, Toxicity, Oxalates, Diet Anita Teigen Chronic pain, Toxicity, Oxalates, Diet Anita Teigen

A discussion on oxalates, inspired by Toxic Superfoods, by Sally Norton

The effects of oxalate overload on the body was the topic of Red Clover Clinic’s July/August 2021 Newsletter. Now comes a new, comprehensive resource, Toxic Superfoods: How Oxalate Overload is Making you Sick – and How to Get Better by Sally Norton, published at the beginning of the year. I recommend Norton’s book to anyone who wants to learn more about what oxalates are, what effects they have on health, how to address issues associated with oxalate overload, and how to prevent this issue in the first place.

The effects of oxalate overload on the body was the topic of Red Clover Clinic’s July/August 2021 Newsletter. Now comes a new, comprehensive resource, Toxic Superfoods: How Oxalate Overload is Making you Sick – and How to Get Better by Sally Norton, published at the beginning of the year.  I recommend Norton’s book to anyone who wants to learn more about what oxalates are, what effects they have on health, how to address issues associated with oxalate overload, and how to prevent this issue in the first place.

Briefly, oxalates are a crystalline substance found in plants and matabolically produced by our bodies. They can accumulate in our tissues, causing pain and dysfunction. The list of symptoms caused by oxalate overload is long. Besides pain, a partial list includes inflammation, arthritis, insomnia, chronic fatigue, muscle spasms, urogenital pain, brain fog, diarrhea, constipation, reflux, autoimmune disorders, rashes, eczema, bruising from within, headaches, heart arrhythmias, blood pressure irregularity, cold intolerance, depression, anxiety, inflamed gums, eye/eyelid irritation, and tinnitus. 

Not everyone has an issue with oxalate overload, but I do frequently see evidence of oxalate damage in my clients. At the very least, it is important to educate yourself about the harm you could cause to your health if you drink a spinach smoothie every day, or drink almond milk, snack on almonds, and bake with almond flour. 

I highly recommend that you reread the July/August 2021 Newsletter or take the time to read Sally Norton’s well-researched book. I found the following excerpt particularly interesting, explaining why so few people and practitioners know about oxalate overload:

No field of science is charged with (or even interested in) developing a “whole body” theory of what excessive dietary oxalate does to us, so it is especially difficult to recognize dietary oxalate overload as a unified problem with a common cause. The early signs and symptoms of oxalate poisoning are not well known, can be quite common and diverse, can appear gradually and intermittently, and are dissimilar from person to person. Most important, we don’t notice the gradual erosion of tissues and their lost function until metabolic reserves are depleted and the disease process interrupts our lives. (p. 88)

Urine tests of oxalate excretion levels are the only laboratory tests available. Unfortunately, they aren’t particularly accurate, or as Norton puts it,  “Urine testing is akin to taking a still photo of a moving target.” She describes a study that was done by the VP Foundation, in which nearly 4,000 women with vulvar pain were researched. Each woman’s individual urine void for three consecutive days was analyzed for oxalate content. “The study revealed that oxalate handling occurs in cycles, appearing as two or three brief but very steep peaks of elevated excretion occurring at the same time on each day in each subject, but at different times for each subject. For many subjects, their symptoms also occurred in cycles. Interestingly, despite the toxic elevations in urine oxalate, 24-hour urine level totals were normal in all the subjects.” (p. 99)

I also found Norton’s discussion of why oxalate accumulations start to be interesting. Oxalates, in general, tend to accumulate in tissues that are injured, inflamed, stressed, or undernourished. In other words, they settle into the weakest areas, which don’t have the health to repel them. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (Motrin, Advil, for example), she says, can distress the gut lining and kidneys, which in turn can lead to oxalate damage and accumulation. 

I would be happy to discuss the possibility of oxalate issues with you at your next appointment.

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Stress, Toxicity, General health Anita Teigen Stress, Toxicity, General health Anita Teigen

How full is your rain barrel?

While pondering what to write about for this issue of the newsletter, I realized how exhausted and overwhelmed I’ve been feeling. And, come to think of it, my clients have been feeling similar versions of fatigue. I think the combination of normal personal challenges, world news, hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes, political strife, and, of course, the raging Delta variant has us all in a state of shock and overwhelm. While wondering how we will feel and manage if one more thing gets added to the above list, I remembered writing a newsletter a few years ago called “How full is your rain barrel?” I think this is the perfect time to share it again.

While pondering what to write about for this issue of the newsletter, I realized how exhausted and overwhelmed I’ve been feeling. And, come to think of it, my clients have been feeling similar versions of fatigue. I think the combination of normal personal challenges, world news, hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes, political strife, and, of course, the raging Delta variant has us all in a state of shock and overwhelm. While wondering how we will feel and manage if one more thing gets added to the above list, I remembered writing a newsletter a few years ago called “How full is your rain barrel?” I think this is the perfect time to share it again.

Adapted from the November/December 2016 issue

I recently gave a talk about German auricular acupuncture at a health fair. Afterwards, a couple of people came up to me saying they could relate to a certain phenomenon that I had described. 

The phenomenon that I described goes something like this. You’re humming along, relatively healthy, body functioning normally, until a distinct moment when everything falls apart. For example, you bend over to pick a pen off of the floor, your back seizes up, and it hasn’t been the same since. Or you experienced a stressful event like a car accident, then developed fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, or an autoimmune condition. I hear stories like this from my clients all the time.

Have you experienced something like this?

This phenomenon is explained by the rain barrel theory. Imagine that we each come into this world with an empty rain barrel, which represents our capacity for healing. As we go through life and experience stress, illness, injury, toxic exposure, poor diets, and more, our rain barrel starts to fill up. As the contents of the barrel reach the tippy top, all it takes is one more drop for the barrel to begin to overflow. When this happens, we begin to experience a whole host of symptoms, because the body is out of energy neededto heal and adapt to what life presents us with on a daily basis.

What can you do if your rain barrel is overflowing? 

You have two obvious choices: you can make your barrel bigger, or you can drain it. To make your barrel bigger, you can reduce stress, get plenty of sleep, clean up your diet, exercise, meditate, and take more breaks. These are important tactics to halt the cascade of symptoms and thus improve and maintain your health, but there is a limit to how big you can make your rain barrel.

When it comes to draining your rain barrel, I know of only two methods: clearing blockages from the body’s memory bank and identifying, then treating by detoxifying, chronic stressors.

Clearing blockages

Our body and brain retain memories of stresses and traumas that we have experienced throughout our lifetimes. Sometimes it’s big events. Other times insignificant injuries and illnesses consume the body. When a blockage develops, there is little energy left to heal new injuries or illnesses. German auricular acupuncture can identify what and how severe these blockages to healing are. The blockages can be treated with acupuncture needles and low-level laser therapy, which can drain your rain barrel significantly.

Identifying and treating/detoxifying chronic stressors

Over our lifetimes, our bodies are exposed to many stressors, such as toxic substances and foods that are less than nutritious. The most common body stressors include food sensitivities, immune challenges, chemicals, heavy metals, and scars. These exposures can gradually stress and assault an organ, a gland, a joint, or any part of our body.

When someone comes to the clinic with a particular complaint, it is important to identify whether or not their complaint is being caused or exacerbated by a particular stressor. If it is, they won’t heal completely without avoiding exposure, detoxifying, and/or treating that stressor. Using Nutrition Response Testing, the exact source of body stress can be identified. Treatment methods include avoiding certain foods, nutritional supplementation, herbal/homeopathic therapy, as well as low-level laser therapy for the treatment of scars. By detoxifying the tissues of heavy metals, chemicals and immune debris, and treating scars, your rain barrel can be drained even further.

Imagine the state of health that is possible if you not only adopt the health-supporting methods that increase the size of your rain barrel, but also piece together the puzzle of causative factors and get the appropriate treatment to help you drain your rain barrel!

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