The Best Diet for Ulcerative Colitis Treatment

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  • čas přidán 25. 04. 2021
  • Plant-based diets can be 98 percent effective in keeping ulcerative colitis patients in remission, blowing away other treatments.
    New subscribers to our e-newsletter always receive a free gift. Get yours here: nutritionfacts.org/subscribe/
    If you missed the previous video, see Preventing Inflammatory Bowel Disease with Diet (nutritionfacts.org/video/preve..., and stay tuned for The Best Diet for Crohn's Disease Treatment (nutritionfacts.org/video/the-b..., coming up next.
    Here are some older videos on IBD that may be of interest to you:
    • Titanium Dioxide and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (nutritionfacts.org/video/tita...)
    • Preventing Crohn’s Disease with Diet (nutritionfacts.org/video/prev...)
    • Preventing Ulcerative Colitis with Diet (nutritionfacts.org/video/prev...)
    • Bowel Wars: Hydrogen Sulfide vs. Butyrate (nutritionfacts.org/video/bowe...)
    • Treating Ulcerative Colitis with Diet (nutritionfacts.org/video/trea...)
    • Striking with the Root: Turmeric Curcumin and Ulcerative Colitis (nutritionfacts.org/video/stri...)
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Komentáře • 312

  • @NutritionFactsOrg
    @NutritionFactsOrg  Před 3 lety +12

    If you missed the previous video, see Preventing Inflammatory Bowel Disease with Diet (nutritionfacts.org/video/preventing-inflammatory-bowel-disease-with-diet), and stay tuned for The Best Diet for Crohn's Disease Treatment, coming up next.

  • @gomezfriesen
    @gomezfriesen Před 3 lety +95

    Having UC and going through all the immune suppressing expensive drugs but non of them working, my doctor wanted to remove my colon. With my quality of life plummeting, I found out about eating a plant based diet. I switched immediately. My UC didn't go into remission right away, but other health issues started getting better. I had to temporarily go on a plant based diet high in soluble fiber for about 2 weeks. I went into remission and starting bringing back all other plants into my diet. It hasn't been an easy road. But I would highly recommend this to anyone with really bad UC. I've been in remission for over a year and a half. No more drugs.
    In addition to the diet, things that have helped me has been, once in remission for a bit, is exercise. I am now running 3 times a week. Also intermittent fasting, giving your gut time to heal. And cold showers really seem to boost my immune system by calming it down.
    Great video. So glad some research is finally coming out!
    Good luck all with UC. You can go in remission. I did.

    • @uj8719
      @uj8719 Před 3 lety +6

      I'm really happy to hear you're doing better. Cheers man.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +5

      Even better logically, long term water only fasting of at least one week which help tremendously.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +4

      @@lisalouise999
      Well cooked vegetables dont have insoluble fibers, they are broken
      "We are just not sure how to get his diet more healthy without causing more symptoms"
      By eating diet based only on soluble fibers soft foods, low fat, low protein that are known to allow the gut to heal completely in 3 to 6 months like this
      czcams.com/video/OJj0N2NJQYU/video.html
      or "high carb health" protocol.

    • @gomezfriesen
      @gomezfriesen Před 3 lety +9

      @@lisalouise999 I am sorry to hear that. I was plant based for a year and didn't go into remission until I specifically went on a a short term diet of soluble fibers (food like bananas, papaya, yams) it was a hard two weeks, but the key was that your body wants to heal, it CAN heal, you just habe to get out of the way, and let it do its job. Insoluble fibers will scrape the walls and aggravate the symptoms, but soluble fibers will not. It will be a calories deficient diet, so it can't be done for long. I recommend 3 resources. 1. Self Healing Colitis and Crohn's by David Klein (to go in remission). 2. Fiber Fueled by Will Bulsiewicz (for staying in remission, and over all health). 3 @highcarbhealth two brothers who help people go in remission.
      Good luck. It's a hard road. You must be patient. But the other side is there, and it can happen. And believe you'll get there.

    • @gomezfriesen
      @gomezfriesen Před 3 lety +2

      @@Julottt I completely agree. Water fasting is a great way to heal as well. However, I had to continue working, and I needed some calories to keep going. This method does that.

  • @Ronsharo
    @Ronsharo Před 3 lety +131

    Dr gregger you literally saved my life back in 2013 with your video about the Japaneese research on colitis. It took me 2 years to clear the desease and since then Im on a plant based vegan diet with no drugs on a constant remission. So thanks again.

  • @ryanalexharris
    @ryanalexharris Před 3 lety +47

    I think this just proves it is extremely individual (think, bioindividuality. No two people are the same!). Even when considering two individuals with Ulcerative Colitis, one can respond extremely well to a healthy, plant-based diet, while the other may be triggered by the amount of fibre and lectins in the diet. I still think any diet should be primarily "plant-based", but when I'm having a flare, vegetables are the last thing I want to consume as they cause the most havoc. I have heard of people going completely vegan and healing. I have also heard of others going carnivore and seeing the same results. There is no "one cure-all" diet regardless of similar diagnosis. At the end of the day, I think it relies heavily on your confidence in your diet and routine, as well as eliminating any STRESS or trauma you have experienced. What I have noticed from everyone who has healed or entered remission from IBD, it's that they all have incredible attitudes and confidence. So many times I have beaten myself up or entered a depressed-like state when my body is not responding to my treatments or lifestyle. I told myself I simply cannot do that anymore. It's a vicious cycle between the gut and brain when you allow yourself to become stressed by the situation. I do believe it is extremely important to find a diet that works for you. But I have realized, more than ever, that getting the mind right is arguably more crucial.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +5

      You suppress symptoms on a meat based diet because you remove fibers, you dont reverse it by healing the gut and feeding the microbiome, completely different.
      Just like you dont reverse diabetes by avoiding carbs, you only suppress the symptoms and eventually make the problem worse long term.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety

      @@63frogsinahat84 Damn, wondering why we never ever seen a cat eat a different diet than another feline on the whole planet, human must be different make absolutely no sense.

    • @63frogsinahat84
      @63frogsinahat84 Před 3 lety

      @@Julottt do you have ulcerative colitis because if you don't you should just shut up and take a seat. Your analogy makes no sense. I am not a cat and neither are you. Just a rude nameless bully on youtube. And by the way I wasn't talking to you. Everyone has different genetics and life experience. Ignorant much ?

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +2

      @@63frogsinahat84
      I had a CD diagnosis 10 years ago, completely reversed in about a year with a similar protocol like on "high carb health" site/channel or Pam Popper one (pretty similar except brown rice is a bad idea during the healing phase), proven on colonoscopy and bloodwork like the hundred testimonies on HCH channel, you should look into it.
      We are animals and mammals, our basic genetic is the same and biology too, life experience is reversible most of the time, this is the same for the purpose of my argument, every species on 10 millions have all a specy specific diet perfect adapted for its anatomy which is 100% optimal obviously because fire and tools wasnt discovered neither used at the begining for a long time, human cant be an exception, this makes absolutely no sense.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +2

      @@63frogsinahat84 The pilis are easier to take i get it but it is not a magic pill and doesnt cure anything, just make it worse in the long term with plenty of side effects.

  • @tinaanderson433
    @tinaanderson433 Před 2 lety +23

    This is not true in my case. All I eat is grass fed beef and salt. I have UC and auto immune disease. Well I’m 100 percent in remission and medicine free. Interesting how every doctor says do different diets. No one knows. Our body’s are all different. Do what works for you!

    • @nevesbird7880
      @nevesbird7880 Před rokem +1

      how are you doing now?

    • @tinaanderson433
      @tinaanderson433 Před rokem +1

      @@nevesbird7880 I’m still doing amazing. All my tests just came back clear.

    • @user-nn6mq6qn4q
      @user-nn6mq6qn4q Před 7 měsíci

      @@tinaanderson433ماهو نظامك الغذائي ؟

  • @johnrobinson9846
    @johnrobinson9846 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I’ve been suffering with UC for a while now. I was on a plant based diet when I first contracted it . I’m now on the carnivore diet and having amazing results. Maybe it’s not for everyone, but it works for me.

  • @chrisfranco6603
    @chrisfranco6603 Před 3 lety +24

    On Humira since 2016 for UC. Sadly, nothing else seems to work to keep me in remission. I saw what you said at the end of this video and sadly, was not shocked. I would love it if you would dig more into biologics in future videos. Thank you so much for all you. You are a tremendous blessing.

  • @jenniferwulfers2716
    @jenniferwulfers2716 Před rokem +12

    I am on a plant based diet for 24 years now and still got diagnosed with UC.

    • @vladimirshtefan6752
      @vladimirshtefan6752 Před rokem

      Unfortunately(

    • @nevesbird7880
      @nevesbird7880 Před rokem

      need some more context. are you a vegan who eats KFC's vegan tacos? or are you a wfpb vegan?

    • @Jocke_1979
      @Jocke_1979 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Maybe then it’s the fiber. Last year i was also diagnosed with UC. Switched my diet to plantbased. Got worser. Got more stress, got even worser. Now switched to mainly carnivore, still with a little fiber yet. Going full carnivore to rule out any food that gives bad symptoms. When i find out where i react bad on i can go back to more variation on my diet…

    • @Jocke_1979
      @Jocke_1979 Před 9 měsíci

      How is it going now. Just see its already 8 months

    • @dawson0610
      @dawson0610 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Try going carnivore...you will feel better.

  • @brock1550
    @brock1550 Před 3 lety +43

    I have crohn's disease, have been on wfbp diet and it has completely changed my life for the better. Thank you for this video

    • @ChristiePriem
      @ChristiePriem Před 3 lety +4

      Me too, me too!!! I don't even have to take meds. Other than the fact that I have to plan my food very very carefully and spend a LOT of time in the kitchen, I don't feel like I have Crohn's most of the time. Thanks to Dr Greger and PLANTS! 🌱

    • @brock1550
      @brock1550 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ChristiePriem I can relate, I spend alot of time chopping veg! Lol i love it,great work

    • @deliishbyeva
      @deliishbyeva Před 3 lety +7

      Same!! I have a very aggressive form of crohn’s and had all the meds, surgery, nothing worked longterm. 5 years ago I switched to WFPB and I’m in remission since, no meds🙌🏻😍 I did this without the docs approval bc unfortunately they don’t know nothing about food 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @brock1550
      @brock1550 Před 3 lety +1

      @@deliishbyeva that's amazing!!

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety

      @@deliishbyeva nice so you eat bread and others foods like pizza containing nutritional/baker yeast?
      czcams.com/video/x_ZZqRnjyXU/video.html

  • @Tysonbax
    @Tysonbax Před 5 měsíci +4

    Look, seriously, i have ulcerative colitis. I've been through it, okay, and what I've learn from 14 years of this terrible disease is that flare ups can't be fixed by a solely plant based diet. You have intestinal permeability, poor digestion accompanying undigested food particles, and these are making it past the villa entering the blood stream and causing a reaction when is then causing ulcerative, blood etc.
    Doctor, you mean well, but please dont put this information out there willy nilly because some people thrive on a wfpbd. This simply doesnt work for people with this disease outside of a dump truck of pharmaceutical drugs. Carnivore is what you need to do when the disease is present until a resolution of symptoms at which point a SLOW REINTRODUCTION of easy to digest fruit's along with kefir, or a tolerable food that can replenish the gut microbiota.
    Fiber fiber fiber, jesus if i hear another person whos a doctor think they know what theyre talking about with roughly 1 week of nutritional training I'll karate chop hiya! Them.
    If i followed your advice, i qould end up in the emergency room!!
    I think you discuss the solution with people who live with the disease and who have escaped the issue. Literally all you talk about is jow a wfpbd is the solution to everything, and its very closed minded.
    Fiber is important in the instance where your actuaally in remission, there is no intestinal permeability, or sibo, and youre managing a vast arrange of other contributing factors such as stress, diet, excercise, etc..
    Drugs are important, diet is important, stresss management is important, avoiding the fight or flight response is very important, avoiding drinking when eating is important to prevent undigested food from making it past the stomach acid.

  • @thesleepinggirl
    @thesleepinggirl Před 3 lety +31

    My husband has been vegan/plant-based for 16 years, very rarely has UC symptoms since. It’s fantastic. We didn’t expect it would help, we went vegan for ethics reasons.

    • @sensiblegear6049
      @sensiblegear6049 Před 2 lety +1

      How do you get enough calories, fats, protein, or carbs in a day?

    • @wiccapowerify
      @wiccapowerify Před 2 lety +1

      @@sensiblegear6049 I want to know that too

  • @mrslisajckson
    @mrslisajckson Před rokem +1

    I'm recently diagnosed. I am going to try this. Thank you.

  • @robertkerr9527
    @robertkerr9527 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This is such better info than the rubish that was discussed on an episode of Dr. Phil with a representative from Pfizer pharma. That women was just doing one big infomercial for crohns and colitis patients. Can you see any conflict of interest here folks?

  • @shannonbryant2428
    @shannonbryant2428 Před 3 lety +15

    I was vegan (WFPB) for 3 years when I was diagnosed with UC last July. I wish I understood more about why I got it with my risks being so low. That being said, it's a year to date when my symptoms began and I've put myself in remission without any meds. My GI said she's shocked but I'm right - my colon looks perfectly normal and healthy. Compared to only 3 months ago when I was 80lbs and bleeding every day. I've adjusted my stress and mental state which I think played a huge role. That and my vegan WFPB diet has once again put me in good health! Can't agree more. So glad I can stay off the biologic drugs and monthly infusions.

    • @eddierobles2137
      @eddierobles2137 Před 2 lety +1

      Hi and thanks for sharing your story . Can you recommend any books or sites where I can bet guidance and diet recipes? Thanks

    • @m_c_d
      @m_c_d Před rokem

      ​@@eddierobles2137'Self Healing Colitis & Crohns' by David Klein

    • @adams2836
      @adams2836 Před 5 měsíci

      How's it been going. I'm in a flair and have been eating more meat. It's not really going away despite mesalamine and prednisone. Wondering if I should try plants again.

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci

      Hello my mother has Ulcerative colitis. Have you some tips for her? Just plant based or are there also other things that she should be aware of? Alcohol needs to be avoided right? Unfortunately my mother loves to drink wine! 😕
      Thank you very much for your help! 🙂👍❤️

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@adams2836Yes plant based is the way to go! ALL animal foods need to be avoided! A whole foods plant based diet is extremely effective against inflammation! There are also a lot of healing plants that are especially good against inflammation like for example lions mane, Reishi, Coryceps, Amla, ginger, turmeric and so on!
      All plant based foods except for oils are good against inflammations but some are of course even more powerful then others! 🙂👍🌽🥦🍎🧄

  • @adovescry364
    @adovescry364 Před 2 lety +1

    Like how you emphasize your message with the tone of your voice

  • @nerllybird
    @nerllybird Před 3 lety +15

    My son has ulcerative colitis, diagnosed at 16. He has been off meds for 3 years with no inflammation after switching to a wfpb diet.

    • @anniebasit5220
      @anniebasit5220 Před 3 lety

      My son recently got diagnosed with sane only 13 yrs old may I please ask what you did diet etc

    • @TheAnjanisoni
      @TheAnjanisoni Před 3 lety

      @@anniebasit5220 my son is experiencing symptoms. Age 12. Please advise. He’s vegetarian

    • @Amir_jaffar
      @Amir_jaffar Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheAnjanisoni make sure ur kid gets plenty if sleep and exercice every day. Try out other snti inflamatoey treatments like cold showers. Diet wise try to stick to more natural foods and less processed

    • @fizzl3sah
      @fizzl3sah Před rokem +1

      @@anniebasit5220 whole food plant based

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@TheAnjanisoniA whole food plant based diet like Dr John Mc Dougall recommends it! 🙂👍🍎🧄🥦🥔

  • @chrisfranco6603
    @chrisfranco6603 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much

  • @vascoamaralgrilo
    @vascoamaralgrilo Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks!

  • @Jason-Howard
    @Jason-Howard Před 3 lety +15

    Came to see if @VegetablePolice was in the comments 😎.

  • @kathykirby5837
    @kathykirby5837 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Each to their own. My Ulcerative colitis is triggered and exacerbated horribly if i overdo the vegetables.

    • @Livebyfaith117
      @Livebyfaith117 Před 3 měsíci

      That's probably because of the high fiber content. Fibre will trigger the gut to clean itself out. The symptoms of ulceritice colitis is actually the body trying to clear out toxic waste matter in the body. Its trying to heal but needs to be given the right conditions. Many, many people, including myself have managed to come off medications and put their ulceritice in remission by going on a plant based diet. I found out this information from the CZcams channel called "High Carb Health" perhaps you should check them out. :)

  • @oliverobama3279
    @oliverobama3279 Před 3 lety +6

    Sibo normally goes along with ibd due to low stomach acid. The bacteria are normally methane dominant or hydrogen sulphide dominant. Fiber will not fix this but make it worse. So it depends on your specific problem.

  • @kathyheberle3862
    @kathyheberle3862 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I have been eating a plant-based diet for seven years and was diagnosed two weeks ago with collagenous colitis. I am so frustrated I find eating any raw vegetables causes a flareup. I don’t eat gluten or dairy. They want to put me on steroids, but I would prefer a different option. Are there any recommendations for someone in my situation?

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci

      Maybe special health plants like lions mane, Reishi, Coryceps, Amla, ginger and turmeric could help? They are very good for inflammation. And of course a blant based diet based on starch with a lot of vegetables and fruits. Look up Dr John Mc Dougall and the documentation ,,Forks over knives " 🙂👍🍎🌽🥦🥔🍇🧄

  • @MM-qk8eg
    @MM-qk8eg Před 3 měsíci +1

    UC is so tricky. Because on the one hand a plant based diet helps, but on the other hand as soon as I drink kale smoothies for a few days I fall right back to flare up (albeit a mild flare up compared to the stories I hear from other UC patients).
    I’m very sad and disappointed that my attempts to feed my good gut bacteria by feeding it raw fruits and vegetables backfires 😢😭😭
    Some guidelines say you should eat low fiber food during a flare up. But I don’t wanna live like that 😭

  • @tgsavel
    @tgsavel Před 2 lety +2

    I have to say...as a physician ..... simply exquisite video! Thank you!!

  • @analarson2920
    @analarson2920 Před 2 lety +6

    What was included in the plant-based diet? That is pretty broad statement, was it raw or cooked and what types of plants and how was the rest of their health like teeth, skin, eyes and so on? Since their gut was better I would assume many things were better? I would love to know more. Keep sharing and lots of blessings, love all the great info.

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci

      The most healthy diet is based on (a lot of) STARCH foods with a LOT of vegetables and fruits! And yes this diet is healthy for MANY things! 🙂👍🥔🍞🌽🥦🧄🍎

  • @ItsDanielleDarling
    @ItsDanielleDarling Před 5 měsíci +2

    My doctors only want me to have 10 grams of fiber. How do I do a plant based diet with that restriction?

  • @PK-se2jh
    @PK-se2jh Před 5 měsíci +1

    thankyouu

  • @scottinjapan6030
    @scottinjapan6030 Před rokem

    The papers listed in the video. I was wondering do you have links to those papers?

  • @THELEMONMANSSTAND
    @THELEMONMANSSTAND Před 3 lety +1

    Thank God for you Dr Greger

  • @asammahmood5775
    @asammahmood5775 Před 3 lety +1

    Gracias Dr. Greger for sharing this valuable information.
    I really need to shift to a more vegan/plant based diet.

  • @Battery-kf4vu
    @Battery-kf4vu Před 3 lety +1

    How about sulfur containing vegetables? Can it be a problem, how much is too much?

  • @unknownbig9941
    @unknownbig9941 Před 3 lety +8

    I had UC and no matter what the doctors gave me it never lasted for long till I was back on prednisone for the next experiment in medicine that never worked. I went on Whole Food plant based diet, against the advice of the Doctor, and in 1 month I had a normal bowel movement and I haven’t seen a doctor or taken any medicine since August 2000! Not one problem since.

    • @abbreviatedalex2418
      @abbreviatedalex2418 Před 3 lety

      uhhhhh you havent been to a doctor in over 20 years?? you should probably see a doctor sometime for a checkup, you're probably overdue for some screenings...

    • @eddierobles2137
      @eddierobles2137 Před 2 lety

      Awesome . Thanks for sharing your story . Very inspirational

  • @medinabello19
    @medinabello19 Před 3 lety +2

    I watch for his humour as much as anything else lol

  • @janetknowles2193
    @janetknowles2193 Před 3 lety +3

    Can you offer any advice for someone with UC who has also lost one third of her upper bowel to cancer 10 years ago? She seems to struggle with beans, and she needs extra protein due to age (86). Any advice or comments would be most welcome. Thank you

    • @smudge8882
      @smudge8882 Před 3 lety +2

      Soy milk or pea milk might be a bit of help! Both these plant based milks have a good protein content (~8g per cup). Other than that, I know with me personally, I do well with getting a good chunk of my protein from oats. 1 dry cup of oats has 10g of protein. Peanuts are also good sources of protein, with 2 tbsp of peanut butter yielding 7-8g of protein. Pumpkin seeds also have 8g of protein per 1/4 cup. Quinoa is another grain with a good protein content (I think ~8g per cooked cup? I forget exactly the numbers on that one). There's also various vegan protein powders or protein shakes that could work. I use the Orgain plant-based one (I go with the chocolate flavor). Another option is using seitan. That has a pretty high protein content. Really a lot of products made with wheat have a good protein content, although seitan is the most concentrated/protein dense. I hope this helps!

    • @MSchipper
      @MSchipper Před 3 lety +2

      In addition to @S Mudge , millet has an ever higher protein profile than quinoa. Aside from that, all plants have protein. If she is struggling to eat enough calories and therefore might not get enough protein, then add some plant protein powder to smoothies or deserts.

    • @ludicrousone8706
      @ludicrousone8706 Před 3 lety +3

      Lentils would be better than beans, especially red lentils. Or go to an Indian food market and try out the dhals. Dhals are shelled beans and lentils. Mung bean dhal and pea dhal (good dhal) are easy to digest.
      As for recipes I would try a Middle Eastern lentil soup with red lentils, or different dhal preparation where you can adjust the spices to her liking. Vegan Richa is a website/ instagram with many Indian and Western recipies

    • @ludicrousone8706
      @ludicrousone8706 Před 3 lety +1

      And of course tofu

  • @ChaiJung
    @ChaiJung Před 3 lety

    Although getting fiber shouldn’t be a problem for PBD, would you recommend taking a psyllium supplement to assure reaching that goal of 30mg per day?

    • @cryptelligence
      @cryptelligence Před 3 lety +2

      He has a video from a few years ago called “The Five to One Fiber Rule” which talks in depth about fiber types. TL;DR is that psyllium husk doesn’t give you the protective benefits of fibers found in whole foods, like beans & legumes.

  • @mariambaker7233
    @mariambaker7233 Před 2 lety +1

    Dr Gregger, I have been plant based now for 4 years. I stopped taking meds for my Ulcertive Colitis at least the last 4 yrs. However just in the last month or so i have been getting bloating, flatulence really bad. It seems to happen after the evening meals. Even when I tried to keep it simple such as maybe rice with a few veggies I am suffering badly. Any clues to give me.
    My breakfast is around 10-11am with green juice, Lunch sometimes smoothie or fruit, Dinner either salad which really gives me a bad tummy ache and wind, rice made into fried rice, plain rice with raw veggies such as Pak Choy, carrot, asparagus. Any help would be great as I am really suffering :(

    • @vladimirshtefan6752
      @vladimirshtefan6752 Před rokem

      Hi. I’m not a doctor but how are you doing?

    • @adams2836
      @adams2836 Před 5 měsíci

      @@vladimirshtefan6752 Also not a doc but wondering how you are doing?

  • @thesnooby3148
    @thesnooby3148 Před rokem

    Good day my son has Ulcerative colitis , he is 15 years old. Can he eat everything in the book on how not to die cook book like legumes? He has been put on Hectic medication.

  • @ki5ngau
    @ki5ngau Před 3 lety +7

    WOW. I love this vid. But the audacity of phama companies selling us the crap that does not work and would kill us that pissed me off.

    • @MichelleVisageOnlyFans
      @MichelleVisageOnlyFans Před 3 lety +2

      It's not audacity. It's a free market, demand and supply. If people weren't stupid, ignorant and lazy, the Big Pharma would have no one to sell their useless crap to. But people abuse their bodies and eat, drink and smoke all kinds of dangerous, toxic, carcinogenic crap and then they have no other choice than to start popping those pills when it's too late for them! When the solution is so simple, don't drink alkohol, don't smoke and adopt a Whole Food Plant Based lifestyle!

    • @ki5ngau
      @ki5ngau Před 3 lety +2

      @@MichelleVisageOnlyFans I am all from free market and capitalism. But knowing and willingly sell thing that harm or kill harm people while claiming that it work is simply wrong. Two cases that come to my mind: 1) tobacco. Before 80's, the tobacco industry claim that tobacco is good for you. Now you know what tobacco does to the body. 2) In 90's, the drug companies said the prescription pain killers are not addictive. These pharma are being sue by OUR government now.

  • @hennew164
    @hennew164 Před 3 lety +3

    He had me at easy to open bottle

  • @WispyEmbers
    @WispyEmbers Před rokem +1

    I want to go into a plant based diet so badly but I refuse to put my son through that & there’s not many plants I enjoy eating

  • @ezekielwootton3403
    @ezekielwootton3403 Před 2 lety +1

    I was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and take Humira. I want to go off of my medication because I'm not really happy and just want to travel the world in search of something different. My doctor keeps telling me that if I go off of Humira then it may not work if I decide to go back on. I'm not one of those all-natural guys. I mean, natural remedies are good preventatives but there is a place for medicine. I don't know. Just nervous and don't know what to do.

  • @dodgeball693
    @dodgeball693 Před 3 lety +5

    Classic Greger snarkiness to finish this one out 😂😂😂

  • @dawson0610
    @dawson0610 Před 8 měsíci +2

    So then why do so many on carnivore diet have great results?

  • @danoneill2846
    @danoneill2846 Před 3 lety +2

    What about GMOs vs natural food

  • @edwardkennedy9919
    @edwardkennedy9919 Před rokem +5

    Carnivore diet has worked wonder's for me I've had ulcerative colitis for 18 years,

    • @rodolfogarcia9011
      @rodolfogarcia9011 Před rokem

      What does your daily diet consist of? Thanks

    • @edwardkennedy9919
      @edwardkennedy9919 Před rokem

      @@rodolfogarcia9011 Hi, I fast 16/8 most days, my first meal would be early afternoon, eggs beefburgers, sausages, bacon ribeye steaks, hard cheese, just any animal foods basically, I'd say what I don't eat now like sugar, bread cereal and all processed foods has helped, I also drink Raw cow's milk.

  • @steveszymanski1807
    @steveszymanski1807 Před 3 lety +1

    What is the best diet for someone with a j pouch?

  • @markrice3019
    @markrice3019 Před 3 lety

    Oh! Yeah! 😄😎 The Best!!

  • @stevedaly3421
    @stevedaly3421 Před 3 lety +7

    My father and sister both had ulcerative colitis. Dad would not listen to any suggestion of dietary changes because, "The doctor knows best!" He suffered horribly with UC and the side effects of all his medications all his life. My sister switched to a PBD and no longer shows any signs or symptoms of the disease ... and hasn't for several years!

    • @benredding7080
      @benredding7080 Před 2 lety +4

      My doctors were ignorant as well. They love that commission from big pharma. Plant based it the way to go.

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci

      Thank you very much for your statement! 🙂👍❤️
      Any other tips or just plant based? 🙂

  • @gudnikristinn
    @gudnikristinn Před 3 lety +11

    I stopped eating animals 10 years ago after being diagnosed with UC.
    There has never been any doubt in my mind that meat was always making my symptoms worse.
    Its good that the science is finally starting to be clear for other sufferers to see.
    Oil, sugar and alcohol are also bad, but can be had in moderation.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +4

      Eggs and dairy are high sulfur, casein, lactose, hormones, they are also terrible and possibly worse, fish seems to be the least harmful for this conditions if they arent loaded with antibiotics.

    • @gudnikristinn
      @gudnikristinn Před 3 lety +1

      @Sara Last year i ended up in the hospital for the first time in 10 years. My stress levels shot up due to Covid reasons and on top of that i started eating ginger in a attempt to boost my immune system again for Covid reasons.
      I don't know which change had a bigger effect but i went into a spiral that landed me in the hospital and on steroids for 6 months.
      We have a tricky disease that has triggers that vary a lot between people. I hope you find a way to manage yours.

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +4

      @Sara Many people will need more than vegan/whole food diet during the healing phase:
      No raw vegetables/legumes/nuts/whole grains/herbs and spices/wheat/gluten rich in harsh irritating insoluble fibers, foods rich in soluble fibers are much more smooth like soft ripe fruits, (banana, avocadoes, melon, mangoes, persimmons etc), well cooked vegetables and potatoes are best until the gut and microbiome are healed, soluble fibers are the best fiber to feed the microbiome; salt is not a problem if you dont eat high amount, water only fasting help tremendously.
      "High carb health" protocol on youtube or the site is great, they have more than 100 testimonies on reversing crohn and colitis.

    • @ludicrousone8706
      @ludicrousone8706 Před 3 lety

      @Sara check out the following gastroenterologist Dr Bulsiewicz and Dr Alan Desmond. You can reach via Instagram. They also published books, and are featured on the CZcams channel physician committee and Hench Herbivore

    • @gbekpl6501
      @gbekpl6501 Před 3 lety

      Oil, sugar and alcohol is ok in moderation, but some high quality grass fed meat is worse to have in moderation? I see some neurons deficiency. Eat some meat.

  • @Le_Trouvere
    @Le_Trouvere Před 11 dny

    Im confused. You say to eat a high fiber plant based diet but everything online i read saya high fibre is bad for UC??

  • @willmcgregor7184
    @willmcgregor7184 Před 3 lety +2

    Pharma Marketing I don’t think will be calling with a job offer 😆

  • @michellemmonique
    @michellemmonique Před 3 lety +9

    This doesn’t help because I’ve been on a plant based diet for three years ever since I was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and I still get 3-5 flare ups a year :(

    • @tranquil87
      @tranquil87 Před 3 lety +2

      Make sure you consume DHA or a high amount of omega 3s. Also lots of green smoothies. If you can afford it, Visbiome (De Simone Formula) probiotics. I've only had two flare ups, without medication, both after really bad break ups and lots of stress in my life and where I was eating a lot of vegan junk, in the last 6 years. It's not a panacea but I'm sure I'd be a lot worse off without the plant-based diet. Now I just try to reduce the junk to a minimum and keep the omega 3s high and it's been working good for the past year.

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +3

      do you supplement in b12 are you a junk food plant based, high fat plant based, high sodium plant based, processed food plant based, protein isolated plant based, oil, flour, sugar plant based, flexi plant based, gmo plant based
      or a real WFPB

    • @sungheelee9358
      @sungheelee9358 Před 3 lety +3

      True WFPB will help you. I know many plant based eaters who has many health issues.

    • @ryanalexharris
      @ryanalexharris Před 3 lety +5

      Bio-Individuality. Going completely plant based can work for many but it doesn't mean it will work for everyone! Even two people with a UC diagnosis can respond very differently to a specific diet.

    • @michellemmonique
      @michellemmonique Před 3 lety

      @Peter Rabbit WFPB, I follow Dr McDougall’s recommended diet

  • @decu2137
    @decu2137 Před 3 lety +3

    Hey, 😃 is there any evidence that a plant based diet cures Rosacea? With so many triggers for Rosacea flares, is it possible to eliminate ALL the triggers and still stay healthy on a plant based diet? Thank-you for all you do! ☘️

    • @lawrencelawrence3920
      @lawrencelawrence3920 Před 3 lety

      I would like to know this also, being afflicted with Rosacea.

    • @hellie_el
      @hellie_el Před 3 lety

      Hello. For facial inflammation and redness from eczema, I found two things that were very helpful: Immerse face in tepid water mixed with a good dose of Dead Sea salt. Also, Replenix CF cream - it’s very light. I know rosacea is not the same as eczema, but maybe it could help? I hope so. :)

    • @decu2137
      @decu2137 Před 3 lety

      @@hellie_el
      Thanks hellie el! 🤞

    • @hellie_el
      @hellie_el Před 3 lety

      De Cu, I’m happy to pass on the information. I know how frustrating it can be. I really do hope you get some relief. :)

    • @chandelie4
      @chandelie4 Před 3 lety

      Rosacea is caused by SIBO. I'm treating it successfully with a low starch, low FODMAP, low fat and low sugar diet and 500 mg of berberine 3x a day on an empty stomach a half hour before meals. I also take a variety of mostly human-strain probiotics with meals. It's important to eliminate legumes during treatment (which may take 3 to 6 months) since they are high in starch. Starch is the preferred food of klebsiella pneumonia, one of the main pathogenic bacterial species found to be overgrown in the small intestine of people with SIBO. The only vegan source of protein that works on this diet is firm or extra firm tofu. I also eat a small serving of wild salmon once a week to lower inflammation.

  • @zakiarashad5008
    @zakiarashad5008 Před 2 lety

    Very informative video. What is good food for Chrohns? Please let me know how to contact you. I am in California.

  • @Faithful1
    @Faithful1 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Hi I’m trying a plant based diet but still ended up with a blockage I guess the sugar caused it and I did have kifir (dairy) once it was a small amount and that caused irritation which I think helped lead to a blockage also legumes seem to not be helpful and ripe bananas also cause irritability so even if I didn’t have sugar or dairy I still find it difficult and I can’t eat insoluble food which seems to be something you really want to be able to do and roughage like broccoli and cauliflower isn’t the best for me either it’s a challenge going plant based. certain oils like sunflower vegetable rapeseed cold or cooked are bad and have to have extra virgin olive oil, olive oil, coconut oil, avocado oil and flaxseed oil instead which is healthy and have them cold but if you cook them they also can become an irritant for Crohn’s disease. So avoid sugar cane, Demerara, caster and have natural sugar from fruits instead but not too much because that also causes irritation don’t have meat don’t have dairy don’t have alcohol don’t have certain oils and don’t have table sugar granules cane, Demerara, caster etc

    • @loveistheanswer5924
      @loveistheanswer5924 Před 4 měsíci

      All oils are bad for you. Someone needs to eat like Dr John Mc Dougall recommends it! 🙂👍🍎🌽🥦🥔🍇

  • @maowajannatul4984
    @maowajannatul4984 Před rokem

    Non specific colon ulcer is also IBD.non specific colon ulcer fulfill cured??please answer me.

  • @Wythegoodsense
    @Wythegoodsense Před 3 lety +6

    My grandson has This and has been vegan for 3+ years. He has been told by his doctor that fiber is very hard on his lower bowels. He is a college kid who should not have to plan his meals three times a day, trying to eliminate as much fiber as possible, YET still get a nutrition balanced meal. Help me help him.

    • @theogenerobitaille6006
      @theogenerobitaille6006 Před 3 lety +4

      I have Chohn and fiber is hard but if I steam my vegetables a bit more I can eat much more.

    • @sungheelee9358
      @sungheelee9358 Před 3 lety +3

      Just curious- how can he have nutritionally balanced meals if he is eliminating fiber? What kind of food does he eat...?

    • @Hawkinz
      @Hawkinz Před 3 lety +5

      Try checking out High Carb Health here on CZcams!

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +3

      @@theogenerobitaille6006 No raw vegetables/legumes/nuts/whole grains/herbs and spices/wheat/gluten rich in insoluble fibers during the healing phase for sure, foods rich in soluble fibers are much more smooth like soft ripe fruits, (banana, avocadoes, melon, mangoes, persimmons etc), well cooked vegetables and potatoes are best until the gut and microbiome are healed.

    • @Kayla-ey9oq
      @Kayla-ey9oq Před 3 lety +2

      My husband has found that soups and tofu are a gentle way to get more nutrients while going through a flare. I hope he is able to get some relief soon.

  • @BxoxbxbxyxBxoxy
    @BxoxbxbxyxBxoxy Před 2 lety +1

    also try low fodmap plant based diet. not all plants are equal.

  • @valentine572
    @valentine572 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Doesn’t make sense … I was diagnosed with UC after being vegan 6 years 🙄

  • @gavinkalikapersaud7225

    where are the studies?

  • @juandouek
    @juandouek Před 3 lety

    Please, add spanish subtitles

  • @benz8421
    @benz8421 Před 6 měsíci +1

    How does he feel about eating fish?

  • @ratherrapid
    @ratherrapid Před 3 lety +2

    this seems directly contrary to the many ex vegan vids on U Tube complaining about stuffing themselves daily with veg and whatthis did to their digestive tract.

    • @ludicrousone8706
      @ludicrousone8706 Před 3 lety +3

      Other things ex vegan did:. raw vegan diet, fruitarian, excessive water fasting, unproven restriction like cutting out whole grains, enemas, drinking alkaline water, drinking urine, not supplementing Vitamin B12

    • @ksitigarbha9787
      @ksitigarbha9787 Před 3 lety +1

      They just need any excuse to do what they want

    • @primenumerus
      @primenumerus Před 3 lety +1

      Well many of the ex vegans did a lot of stupid extreme things before their heath issues developed.
      If your gut microbiome is really messed up it can be extremely difficult to build it back up again. If this is the case you get a lot of bad symptoms whens trying to eat whole plant foods.
      The problem is not the diet, but their destroyed guts.
      Litterally all ex vegans never did any testing and worked with a functional doctor, nutritionist or good gastroenterologist to find out what's wrong (for example sibo, digestive enzyme deficiency, stomach acid deficiency, pathogenic bacteria, c diff, h pylori...)

    • @ratherrapid
      @ratherrapid Před 3 lety

      @@primenumerus u could ask the Q re the ex-vegans--are there any that followed Gregor? I am one of those although still mostly vegan. My experience is simple, pure vegan is very far short of being an optimal diet for both health, longetivity and energy. Why? #1 it's necessary to stuff oneself to the gills every single day with pounds of plant matter to keep up calories. Hardly a good prescription for a sound digestive system. #2 Taking in that much plant material carries the risk of too many lectins, too many oxylates, and to much of the other substances in plants that are harmful to the digestive tract. #3 it is a very poor diet for micro nutrition because u simply are unable to ingest enough across the board to provide meaningful doses. #4 Gregor needs to put his money were his mouth is and do some research on the actual harm of small amounts of low fat meat, eggs and occasional dairy. He simply fails to ever address that issue and goes on the assumption that everybody is on lunch meat and milkshakes.

    • @primenumerus
      @primenumerus Před 3 lety

      @@ratherrapid well there is really no research to back up your claims.
      What are you talking about there are lots of calorie dense vegan foods(nuts, seeds, legumes...)
      You can pressure cook legumes, grains if lectins are problem for you (there are a few genetic problems where lectins can be a problem, but thats rare).
      Also if you have leaky gut you likeley have a problem with lectins, but thats fixable.
      You have special bacteria in your gut (oxalobacter formigenes) which degrade oxalates. That why for most people oxalates are no problem. But if you wiped them out with bad diet, or antibiotics, you can get extremely severe reactions when eating oxalates them.
      "Anti" nutrients aren't really a problem if your gut (microbiome) is healthy. (Again thats fixable, doing it myself currenly)
      Many like lectins of phytic acids are actually correlated with health benefits(phytic acid for example has anti cancer properties)
      Why do you think other animals have no problems with anti nutrients? They very often share the same degration pathways as we.

  • @veg0machine
    @veg0machine Před 3 lety +5

    There should be a study done with coffee and UC my diet can keep me in remission for years at a time but every time I introduce coffee it takes a week or two and Im all shitting bleading. blood levels plummet and I have to hide from my UC specialist doctor who believes diet has nothing to do with the condition. Coffee plays a role or is it the lack of sleep that messes up my guts or both.

    • @Kayla-ey9oq
      @Kayla-ey9oq Před 3 lety +1

      Since going plant-based my husband has noticed that coffee and tomatoes, particularly tomato paste, are big flare triggers for him. He can eat fresh tomatoes in moderation, but doesn't even touch coffee anymore as it's a pretty instant problem. We always assumed it was because they are so acidic, but I would love to see more scientific minds put it to the test.

    • @thesleepinggirl
      @thesleepinggirl Před 3 lety +4

      My husband (vegan 16 years) thought it was coffee earlier on, went off coffee for a long time. He introduced coffee again, didn’t have a relapse. He was stressed and not sleeping enough and drinking coffee, still didn’t relapse again... He’s not sure what triggers flare-ups but they’re very rare and minor... Might be catching certain cold or flu viruses affecting immune system responses but we don’t know.

  • @JamesBond-pu6qf
    @JamesBond-pu6qf Před 3 lety +4

    How do the plant based people explain how Elaine Gotschalls no grain diets also show similar remission in crohns and UC? I have seen remission in patients as a dietitian and it is a diet of meat, certain fruit, and vegetables with no grains or starches

    • @BlissBlessHappiness
      @BlissBlessHappiness Před 3 lety +7

      1. Peer reviewed literature? 2. Many changes can affect gut microbiome including belief. 3. Severe intolerance of certain foods may it self cause serious gut damage (removing those foods will cause improvements regardless) 4. The vast majority of available evidence points the extreme superiority of plant, wholefoods (especially a great diversity of and polyphenol rich sources thereof) for the health of the microbiome.

    • @JamesBond-pu6qf
      @JamesBond-pu6qf Před 3 lety

      @@BlissBlessHappiness all CC and autoimmune diets allow most if not all of the phytochemical vegetables and berries and emphasize quality, slow cooked organ meats (something that the vegan diet world has rarely studied to assess safety against their overcooked high fat muscle friends) and CC diets have extensive studies, along with the same testimonies. No one BELIEVES they dont have Crohn's and it magically disappears. The facts are that many diets work for many diseases and are multifaceted but sadly even high level researchers like Greger or prone to cherry picking.

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety

      those are case reports, glorified anecdotes we have to actually put it to the test with rigorous studies (randomize, double blind placebo controlled trial)
      low Fodmap could work sometimes but just for less threatening IBS
      this result is amazing is there anything comparable on pubmed ? i don't think so

    • @BlissBlessHappiness
      @BlissBlessHappiness Před 3 lety

      @@JamesBond-pu6qf I agree with some of what you wrote! You clearly, however, have not studied the nocebo and placebo effect that is for sure; almost anything you can imagine has been "cured" or vice versa by its force, it is in the literature... There is simply no need for organ meats if you have black mulberries, seabuckthorn and goji berries (real fruits that is), for example, as they are comprehensive beyond your wildest fancies in terms of minerals, amino acids (even taurine, in goji berries, look it up!) and much, much more importantly: phytochemicals and especially polyphenols, while you fill your stomach with organ meats; I am having black mulberries, black figs, and Italian kale... And the only peer reviewed studies to reverse autoimmune disorders are likewise plant based (based on high dark greens, some fruits, full on omega 3 (flax, chia), and no grains or animal products at all!), see the work of Dr. Goldner!

    • @JamesBond-pu6qf
      @JamesBond-pu6qf Před 3 lety +1

      @@BlissBlessHappiness I do indeed use plant based therapy for IBD most of the time and it is generally successful depending on commitment (theyre bad about strict diets in Missouri because you cant get those high nutrient foods easily), However, in my experience the lineage of the disease plays a role- those who developed IBD after a viral infection seem to struggle with any kind of remission regardless of the therapy. Those who develop IBD over time do very well with WFPB, and those who are sprue/celiac based IBD patients respond to CC diets but have flares when eating grains even months into plant based diets. Almost all my autoimmune patients respond to high intake of plant based foods, except extreme tube feed cases. My wife is a crohns case that did not respond to plant based but did to CC and I have a child patient who requires 12hour PN elemental tube feed for weeks after eating fibrous foods. You could never give her fiber in her state, yet she can eat mashed meats and a special yogurt without issue. Overall I believe WFPB is the optimal diet for IBD but it has always bothered me that a researcher would wear a one size fits all glass slipper in the face of thousands of people in remission who simply followed a diet against his mantra. In nutrition you find very quickly that care has to be individualized and many guts can eventually move to plant based but some need that high calorie, low impact, no grain to reestablish a solid intestinal membrane.

  • @porchturds8149
    @porchturds8149 Před 3 lety +7

    I cured Chrohns on a high fruit diet. God Bless Dave Klein

    • @ido9966
      @ido9966 Před 3 lety +4

      Same with me

    • @Julottt
      @Julottt Před 3 lety +3

      Same and water fasting, high carb health channel is good.
      David Klein the guy who wrote this nice book died last year tho apparently from inhaling diatomaceous earth which caused a serious pulmonary intoxication.

  • @jakubmachacek4431
    @jakubmachacek4431 Před 3 lety +1

    easy-to-open bottle :-D

  • @mgfatso
    @mgfatso Před 3 lety +1

    Let's save @VegetablePolice. His colon would surely deserve a break

  • @Gleepglurp
    @Gleepglurp Před 3 lety +1

    Quick someone tell @vegetablepolice

  • @miloradvlaovic
    @miloradvlaovic Před 3 lety +1

    When the "common" side effects list is longer than your wish list 🧐🧐🧐🧐

  • @lucivivity1616
    @lucivivity1616 Před 3 lety +7

    I need vegan friends. Please be my friends, vegans D:

  • @holtoncha
    @holtoncha Před 4 měsíci

    My doctor said its not linked with diet its your immune system which is not your fault at all. Everyones different but theyve said dont cut out things from your normal diet to me

  • @BillionairekingBillionaireking

    🤴🤴🤴🤴You are so right🤴🤴🤴🤴

  • @Randywatson34
    @Randywatson34 Před 7 dny

    Brought to you by the vegetable fruit wheat corn growers of America

  • @lindapb6529
    @lindapb6529 Před 3 lety

    💜

  • @marybeck7594
    @marybeck7594 Před měsícem

    How come chrons patients get off medication on the carnivore diet?

  • @brotein3577
    @brotein3577 Před 3 lety +3

    The conclusions also clearly state that N-6 PUFAs are a predisposing factor to UC, which vegetable oils are a large culprit, so a plant based diet wouldn't necessarily get you out of the woods. "A diet high in protein, particular animal protein, may be associated with increased risk of inflammatory bowel disease and relapses. *N-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids may predispose to ulcerative colitis whilst n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid may protect"*

    • @relaxgood512
      @relaxgood512 Před 3 lety +1

      Omega 6LA from whole foods is healthy Omega 6 LA from adulterated oils is very bad because the oils have been processed by using high heat, deodorizers, extenders, additives, etc. The oils you are talking about are packaged and oxidized in the bottle. Our bodies need much more Omega 6 LA than Omega 3 ALA and if you get both from whole foods there is not much to worry about.

    • @MSchipper
      @MSchipper Před 3 lety

      Dr Greger wasn't just talking about a plantbased diet, the studies mentioned a whole-food plantbased diet, in which oils have no place.

  • @GregMeadMaker
    @GregMeadMaker Před 3 lety

    I think Dr Greger's daily dozen should become the baker's dozen and add one more item to the list. Add a daily dose of listening to any Dr Greger's nutritional videos to keep on track of healthy eating with plant-based whole foods!

  • @user-iy2bt6tq6u
    @user-iy2bt6tq6u Před 11 měsíci +1

    If you have too much fiber in calls flare-ups

  • @KizashiX
    @KizashiX Před 4 měsíci

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 🍽️ *Role of Diet in Ulcerative Colitis*
    - Hydrogen sulfide may play a role in ulcerative colitis.
    - Sulfur-containing amino acids in meat linked to increased colonic levels of hydrogen sulfide.
    - Traditional diets, high in animal protein and low in fiber, are associated with increased IBD risk.
    01:52 🥩 *Low Sulfur Diet and Ulcerative Colitis Improvement*
    - Lowering sulfur-containing amino acid intake improves symptoms in ulcerative colitis patients.
    - A shift to a low sulfur diet means moving towards a plant-based diet.
    - Plant-based diets are anti-inflammatory, while Westernized diets are pro-inflammatory.
    02:47 🌱 *Plant-Based Diet Studies for Ulcerative Colitis*
    - Plant-based diets have been used successfully for over a decade in treating IBD patients.
    - Early studies show effectiveness in maintaining remission in Crohn's disease.
    - Lack of suitable diet considered a major issue in current IBD treatment.
    03:40 🏥 *Plant-Based Diet for Ulcerative Colitis Relapse Prevention*
    - Educational hospitalization with a plant-based diet shows immediate improvements.
    - 81% of patients remain in remission for 5 years, with 98% keeping the disease at bay for at least a year.
    - Plant-based diet outperforms conventional medication in preventing relapse.
    04:36 🌿 *Effectiveness of Plant-Based Diet in Ulcerative Colitis*
    - Plant-based diet effective in both active and quiescent stages of ulcerative colitis.
    - Significantly beats conventional drug therapy in severely affected cases.
    - Long-term adherence to plant-based eating observed, preventing relapse.
    05:33 💊 *Comparison with Medications and Side Effects*
    - Plant-based diet is safer, cheaper, and more effective than immunosuppressants.
    - Immunomodulator drugs can have severe adverse side effects, including stroke and cancer.
    - High-cost medications often show lower clinical remission rates and significant risks.
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @AD-eg9cw
    @AD-eg9cw Před rokem +1

    Are eggs and dairy also bad for ulcerative colitis? I'm asking for my mom.

  • @MetrajTvr
    @MetrajTvr Před 7 měsíci

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:28 🥩 Et ürünlerinin tüketimi ülseratif kolit hastaları için risk oluşturabilir.
    01:52 🌱 Bitkisel beslenme ile sülfür içeren amino asit tüketiminin azaltılması, ülseratif kolit semptomlarını iyileştirebilir.
    03:11 🏥 Eğitim hastanelerinde uygulanan bitkisel diyet, hastaların remisyon süresini uzatabilir ve semptomları azaltabilir.
    04:36 💡 Ülseratif kolit tedavisinde bitkisel diyet, geleneksel ilaç tedavisine göre daha etkili olabilir.
    06:03 💊 Bitkisel diyetin yan etkileri yok denecek kadar azdır, bu da geleneksel tedavilerle karşılaştırıldığında büyük bir avantajdır.
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @steelerman5830
    @steelerman5830 Před měsícem

    This sounds so great but unfortunately …most people who suffer from UC for at least 10 years it’s really just luck…some people have great success but many… no change unfortunately.

  • @WaveFin
    @WaveFin Před rokem +2

    Before this CZcams video, I was listening to a person who was on a carnivore diet and her Ulcerative Colitis went into remission.

    • @nevesbird7880
      @nevesbird7880 Před rokem

      don't believe it til she shows the colonoscopies

  • @joecaner
    @joecaner Před 3 lety +9

    I continues to be amazed that people will opt for toxic pharmaceuticals and debilitation surgeries instead of changing their dietary patterns. It's like they believe in the high technology approaches because they've been developed using "Science" instead of selecting lifestyle interventions proved to be safe and effective by actual scientific method. It's like "faith based medicine," but the faith that people have in these treatments are misplaced. I'd rather eat oatmeal, vegetables, fruit and beans and get well.

    • @thecomicalcolon
      @thecomicalcolon Před 3 lety +3

      Unfortunately, diet doesn't work for everyone, and some of us with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's have no choice but to take medications. I myself have severe ulcerative colitis and I'm quite thankful for the biologic that gave me my life back. I also have many friends whose lives were saved by ostomy surgery. It's not that we're "choosing" medications or surgery over lifestyle changes, it's that we are doing what must be done for our unique situations. I am grateful to have medication and surgery as options since there unfortunately is no one-size-fits-all treatment for inflammatory bowel disease.

    • @joecaner
      @joecaner Před 3 lety +2

      @@thecomicalcolon If one has not been able to address their health concerns with dietary intervention, then it is understood that one must do what one must do.
      It is indeed unfortunate if one's condition does not improve with changes in diet and requires drugs and surgery. It is one's unwillingness to make the attempt and going straight to drugs and surgery that I do not understand.

    • @nevesbird7880
      @nevesbird7880 Před rokem +1

      @@thecomicalcolon how long did you try adjusting your diet for? out of curiosity

  • @rajendradhanware3402
    @rajendradhanware3402 Před rokem

    God

  • @habi986
    @habi986 Před 2 lety +2

    Whow it almost looks like a real human CGI is getting TOO REAL

  • @carnicavegirl7214
    @carnicavegirl7214 Před rokem +5

    I would literally starve to death😂 I have UC and I cannot touch vegetables, fruit or grains.. and why does this dude sound like he’s drunk.. it’s super weird

  • @marianomontiel
    @marianomontiel Před 3 lety

    We need spanish subtitles!

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +1

      you can use the auto translate from any provided language feature

  • @danoneill2846
    @danoneill2846 Před 3 lety +2

    Take out GMO corn & soy , then what are the choices . Meat made from plants ??? What plants ? , what is added ??

    • @6681096
      @6681096 Před 3 lety

      No SCIENTIFIC evidence whatsoever that GMO is harmful. But you don't want to eat too much corn anyway.
      He's talking about things like cruciferous vegetables, whole intact grains (not flour or polished grains), and legumes (beans and lentils).
      Also good for you are fungus (mushrooms) and allium vegetables (onion family).

    • @ksitigarbha9787
      @ksitigarbha9787 Před 3 lety +1

      Just eat potatos and fruits for good results

  • @byNetak
    @byNetak Před 3 lety

    Big up from France🤟 Industry makes us eat too meat... I am not vegan but it’s important to have a various diet and reduce bad meats produced. Indeed fiber with plants are essentials 👍

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +1

      lit son livre
      le top 15 des maladies les plus répandus sont dû à la consommation de produit d'origine animal
      source : le livre "Mieux manger peut vous sauver la vie" du docteur Greger

    • @byNetak
      @byNetak Před 3 lety +1

      @@wellthi Le problème c’est qu’il est trop direct, tu peux consommer des produits animaux. Le soucis c’est qu’aujourd’hui la quantité consommée est démesurée

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +1

      @@byNetak ya trop de merde inutile et toxique dans la viande et les produit laitier : graisse trans (maladie cardiovasculaire), cholesterol (diabète), hormone, antibiotique, virus, bccaa (diabète), oxyde de triméthylamine (cancer), nitrite (cancer), phosphate, méthionine (lots), renal acid load...
      la viande transformé est cancérigène certain groupe 1 (le pire) au coté du plutonium et de l'amiante

    • @byNetak
      @byNetak Před 3 lety

      @@wellthi tu oublies que y a certaines bombes nutritionnelles aussi notamment dans le foie par exemple. Et les graisses trans sont minimes si tu abuses pas. Et le cholesterol des oeufs est benefique et y a aussi de la choline avec les oeufs ;)

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +1

      @@byNetak le terme bombe est bien choisi car pour une bonne parti des micronutriment en excess ils deviennent toxique
      seul le cholesterol produit par notre propre corps est bénéfique car celui des animaux augmente le mauvais cholesterol, la choline se transforme en oxyde de triméthylamine qui est cancérigène

  • @nebojsa866
    @nebojsa866 Před 3 lety +3

    Greger is mesiah.!

  • @nabilbogdan
    @nabilbogdan Před 2 měsíci +1

    another plant based propagand crap

  • @ReadingQuran29
    @ReadingQuran29 Před 3 lety +4

    Vegan diet is super high in fiber which makes symptoms worse for people with gut issues. Raw kefir is a superfood for digestive health.

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +3

      did you watch this video ?

    • @ReadingQuran29
      @ReadingQuran29 Před 3 lety +2

      @@wellthi No because this doctor is a vegan cherry picker.

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +2

      @@ReadingQuran29 then you must have tones of studies to support your claims ?

    • @ReadingQuran29
      @ReadingQuran29 Před 3 lety +2

      @@wellthi I'm sure there are studies but there's also plenty of ex vegans who say they had digestive issues caused by eating a high fiber diet.

    • @wellthi
      @wellthi Před 3 lety +2

      ​@@ReadingQuran29 so anecdotes from random youtube losers who simply didn't supplement in b12 are strong evidences and we shouldn't listen to actual science (double blind, randomize, placebo controlled trials)

  • @sooooooooDark
    @sooooooooDark Před 3 lety +1

    i heard 3 week old 7th world country raw chicken/eggs are a CURE for it
    any1 confirmado? 🤔

  • @MT-pi3ct
    @MT-pi3ct Před 3 lety +2

    Terrible advice.

  • @user-yc9xt8ed6u
    @user-yc9xt8ed6u Před 36 minutami

    Is this comedy?
    Why not talk normal?