One of the common foods of the 1979 Lancet study of food intolerance and migraine identified active sugar cane (1) was.
The correlation between migraine and cane sugar or refined sugar consumption is covered at length in many forums and migraine sugar remains in the top ten most sought after triggers for migraine. A German biochemist says migraines completely relieved in themselves and have many friends, by simply removing the tube from sugarDiet (2).
Migrane
Sugar-sensitivity is not always strictly an allergy - in fact, many migraines are actually associated with more sugar together on low or high blood sugar. Diabetics reported cases of severe migraine into a sugar "landfill" in the system, supporting the fact that migraines can be triggered by sugar, although not a "sensitivity" as the term is often used. Hypo-glycemic patients also report several cases (3).
An Italian study compared the insulin sensitivityin 30 patients with migraine with 15 healthy control subjects. After drinking a high sugar drinks, participants were monitored to detect changes in blood sugar levels previously stable. Levels in patients with migraine were higher than in the control group for 3 hours after the test, other indicators have shown that insulin sensitivity was impaired in the group of migraine.
An interesting point to make the sensitivity of sugar cane refers to the relationship of migraine caused by MSG.The meat tenderizer and flavor enhancer, widely present in many foods, but more often with the "Chinese Restaurant Syndrome," associates, has long been hypothesized that a culprit in triggering migraine family. Too many people do not know that MSG is commonly from sugar cane, so it is quite feasible for a trigger migraine (5) be.
When sugars are removed from the diet for a period of 2-4 weeks, then back to a control test, then it might be possible to identify ifcauses a problem. Record levels of sugar in the blood and plotting against the attacks of migraine might be an interesting exercise. How gets them food sensitivity, which often triggers the desire, and headaches rebound is also a possibility.
References:
(1) food allergies and migraines. Grant ECG, Lancet, 5, 1979, 966-969. 37 344
(2) migraine R. Low. New York: Henry Holt. 1987
(3) Byers, JA, and Dexter, JD, hypoglycemic headaches, Mo Med, 72, 194, 1974
(4) Source: Headache,August 2005.
(5) MSG is the cause of your headaches? C. Young, life script, Pub. June 23, 2008
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