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ADHD, Autism and dairy?

ADHD, Autism and dairy?2010-12-06T21:33:23+00:00

The Forums Forums Tools, Techniques & Treatments ADHD, Autism and dairy?

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  • #88700

    Anonymous
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    Post count: 14413

    A friend of mine kicked dairy recently and apparently hasn’t had a “bad” autistic day since. It apparently took about a week to actually take effect, and while it hasn’t “cured” her it has apparently helped her symptoms a great deal.

    I’m wondering whether anyone knows anything about this, how it might work and whether it might apply to ADHD as well (given that the two conditions share so many aspects)?

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    #97113

    Anonymous
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    Post count: 14413

    Big ones for food intolerance with many of the neurobehavioural disorders are gluten (wheat) & casein (dairy).

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    #97114

    Saffron
    Member
    Post count: 140

    @drshaelyn, could you give us your references for that association? I’m very interested to see the studies, and to know how many are RCTs. Thanks!

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    #97115

    Anonymous
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    Post count: 14413

    Saffron, I’m about to show my ignorance: What’s an RCT?

    *embarrassed*

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    #97116

    Saffron
    Member
    Post count: 140

    Hey Nim’:)

    No reason to be embarrassed. RCT = randomized controlled trial.

    All studies have some potential for bias, but this kind is seen as the least likely to show results that might have been caused by something else. That’s because (1) the people who get the treatment being tested are chosen at random, (2) a placebo or control group is used for comparison with all other conditions being equal, and (3) where possible, researchers and subjects are kept from knowing who got the placebo.

    Results of RCTs make especially convincing evidence when the test was done on a whole big whack of people at once, when lots of other researchers test the same thing and come up with similar results (i.e., replicate it), AND when the study was “peer reviewed” before publishing (which means other scientists pored over its methods and criticized the hell out of it before deciding that it stood up to scrutiny).

    By the way, good studies are also published with a public declaration of the “competing interests” of the people who did the research. So if, for instance, you’ve submitted a brilliant study that shows evidence for dried asparagus as a treatment for ADHD, and it turns out that you also sell asparagus vitamin-capsules from your website or you’re the white-coated front-woman for Asparag-Focus Inc. Corporation, your study may not appear terribly reliable.

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    #97117

    Anonymous
    Inactive
    Post count: 14413

    Thanks for that :-)

    Sadly, the only thing I have right now is a bit of anecdotal evidence and no idea whether a positive result was expected, so can’t rule out placebo.

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