Struggling with brain fog or fatigue? It could be SIBO...

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 มิ.ย. 2021
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    SIBO playlist:
    • Hydrogen Sulfide SIBO!...
    References:
    1. Wasilewska, Jolanta, and Mark Klukowski. "Gastrointestinal symptoms and autism spectrum disorder: links and risks-a possible new overlap syndrome." Pediatric health, medicine and therapeutics 6 (2015): 153.
    2. Leite, Gabriela GS, et al. "Mapping the segmental microbiomes in the human small bowel in comparison with stool: a REIMAGINE study." Digestive diseases and sciences (2020): 1-10.
    3. Rao, Satish SC, et al. "Brain fogginess, gas and bloating: a link between SIBO, probiotics and metabolic acidosis." Clinical and translational gastroenterology 9.6 (2018).
    4. emedicine.medscape.com/articl...
    5. Rai, Rahul, Vivek A. Saraswat, and Radha K. Dhiman. "Gut microbiota: its role in hepatic encephalopathy." Journal of clinical and experimental hepatology 5 (2015): S29-S36.
    High-quality, peer-reviewed journal articles on bartonellosis:
    1. Giladi, M., Maman, E., Paran, D., Bickels, J., Comaneshter, D., Avidor, B., ... & Wientroub, S. (2005). Cat‐scratch disease-associated arthropathy. Arthritis & Rheumatism, 52(11), 3611-3617.
    2. Maman, E., Bickels, J., Ephros, M., Paran, D., Comaneshter, D., Metzkor-Cotter, E., ... & Giladi, M. (2007). Musculoskeletal manifestations of cat scratch disease. Clinical infectious diseases, 45(12), 1535-1540.
    3. Maggi, R. G., Mozayeni, B. R., Pultorak, E. L., Hegarty, B. C., Bradley, J. M., Correa, M., & Breitschwerdt, E. B. (2012). Bartonella spp. bacteremia and rheumatic symptoms in patients from Lyme disease-endemic region. Emerging infectious diseases, 18(5), 783.
    4. Mozayeni, B. R., Maggi, R. G., Bradley, J. M., & Breitschwerdt, E. B. (2018). Rheumatological presentation of Bartonella koehlerae and Bartonella henselae bacteremias: A case report. Medicine, 97(17).
    5. Breitschwerdt, E. B., Maggi, R. G., Duncan, A. W., Nicholson, W. L., Hegarty, B. C., & Woods, C. W. (2007). Bartonella species in blood of immunocompetent persons with animal and arthropod contact. Emerging infectious diseases, 13(6), 938.
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    6. Kalogeropoulos, C., Koumpoulis, I., Mentis, A., Pappa, C., Zafeiropoulos, P., & Aspiotis, M. (2011). Bartonella and intraocular inflammation: a series of cases and review of literature. Clinical Ophthalmology (Auckland, NZ), 5, 817.
    JOIN our bartonellosis support group on Facebook called BREAKING DOWN BARTONELLA:
    / 1104493829902071
    Understanding Bartonella Webinar with Dr. Mozayeni and Dr. Breitschwerdt: • Understanding Bartonel...
    Podcast with Dr. Bob Mozayeni and Dr. Ed Breitschwerdt:
    tmgmd.com/907-ticks-fleas-mys...
    Best diagnostic testing:
    www.galaxydx.com/
    Mast Cell Activation Resources:
    www.mastattack.org/
    / mcas
    #sibo #siboandbrainfog #bartonellababe #siboandbrainsymptoms #bartonella

ความคิดเห็น • 42

  • @BartonellaBabe
    @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    → SHOP MY MERCH HERE: bartonella-babe.creator-spring.com
    → SHOP MY JEWELRY HERE: www.etsy.com/shop/bartonellababe
    ✩ Thank you for supporting my hard work and my channel! See more ways to support my channel below.
    ✩ 25% of all MERCH proceeds go to the Bartonella Project at the North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine. Link to donate directly to the Bartonella Project:
    securelb.imodules.com/s/1209/giving/plain.aspx?sid=1209&gid=214&pgid=3813&cid=6343&appealcode=LB000278&dids=3869&bledit=1&sort=1&fid=6343
    ✩ OTHER WAYS TO SUPPORT MY HARD WORK: I believe that everyone should have access to affordable, high-quality healthcare and I also believe that people should be compensated for their hard work. If you appreciate my hard work, research, and advocacy, you can also support me via PayPal and Venmo. You can find me on PayPal with my username @bartonellababe or by searching Jake Picker. My username on Venmo is Jake-Picker. No one needs to support me in this way and please do not gift me if you are not in a position to do so!
    ✩Instagram: @bartonella_babe
    ✩Facebook: facebook.com/bartonellababe
    ✩Inquiries: jakethebartonellababe@gmail.com

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Corrections: at one spot it just says "o" what the hell happened there lol and then I meant to say that even those with *diarrhea* have slow small intestinal motility. I wrote "constipation." The perfectionist in me is sad lol

  • @deborahm.6913
    @deborahm.6913 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I’m so glad you do this , it is a bright spot in my day to hear you. Your mom must be very proud.Your dog is pretty cute too!

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Aww thank you for all of that! Piper is also so so sweet! And my mom is definitely proud but we want me to get out of this house and bed so I can do even more!!

  • @denisegirmer4550
    @denisegirmer4550 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You do not need any makeup you are naturally beautiful ❤️

  • @angelapower9570
    @angelapower9570 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    your eyes look AMAZING that’s my fav color

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      thank you!! time to start my beauty channel 😂

  • @SueT55
    @SueT55 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Perfect timing Jake! I was just researching the liver and microbes today! So strange that certain probiotics don’t necessarily raise their specific numbers but feed other gram negative on 16s RNA microbiome testing plus metabolites! Thank you for your humor and dedication.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      ooh if you have a good article on probiotics feeding Gram negative bacteria handy, let me know! Would love to read it. If not, I know how to search but that's very interesting but now that I've done this video, not surprising. Thank you for your sweet comment

    • @SueT55
      @SueT55 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BartonellaBabe I’ll have to look a little later but I have read it at least twice and have witnessed it myself . Basically what I did is searched the name of the gram negative bacteria (or positive cause they can become pathogenic at high levels too) with names of probiotics that I was taking. Blew me away😳The key to my health lately is running those 16s rna testing. I use Biomesight and run them every month or so and watch for patterns. 💞🌷💞

    • @SueT55
      @SueT55 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BartonellaBabe Vacomyacin sent me flying in the wrong direction with others. It didn’t kill everything off so the ones that were left over became pathogenic and then the probiotics fed them even more especially lactobacillus acidophilus.You can get help with the testing and interpretation through “The Gut Club” on Facebook. Lol 😂 I know you hate the word gut!

  • @MegaMusicMuse
    @MegaMusicMuse 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You’re a genius 👏👏👏👏

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      hahaha I will take this complement and run!

  • @lloydh464
    @lloydh464 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    JBoo
    You killing the videos.
    Great job.
    SIBO is horrible.
    For me enteric- coated garlic, oil of oregano and extra probiotic yogurt was very helpful. Game changer was Ileocecal valve massage.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      hahaha thank you!!! And glad you kicked the SIBO. It can be a tough one. Allicin and oil of oregano are good herbal options

  • @AV-fx8kv
    @AV-fx8kv 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    And I've been trying to fix my gut issues sibo and yeast by popping loads of different probiotics smh. I had a gut test done and they found 99.9 % lactobacillus in my gut way too much

  • @kadebostany934
    @kadebostany934 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    hi, do you use any supplements to repair leaky intestine? (You said hate the “gut” word 😂 ) like glutamine?

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hahaha! I tried glutamine a while back when I still had SIBO (and therefore was HIGHLY reactive) and i had a bad reaction. Now that I’m in the repair phase, it may be something to look into again

  • @baffledwaffle
    @baffledwaffle 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hey if I may speculate/share experience: my brain fog is HORRIBLE after eating. I get high off three radishes or four French fries or an ounce of turkey, but not in a fun way. L-Citrulline has helped so much, which makes me conclude...mine is ammonia related? I bought some because I'd been nosing around studies of hepatic encephalopathy so it was exciting to hear you mention it as...not SIBO, but producing brain conditions a bit like SIBO maybe. Wanted to throw it out there because I thought I was going to have to stop driving/quit my job, and now I'm just dumb and sleepy while I treat this BS but am doing much better. Hope it keeps working.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      yes totally could be! And perhaps l-ornithine l-aspartate would help you too? I think it comes in supplement form

    • @AV-fx8kv
      @AV-fx8kv 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BartonellaBabe I cnt take l-ornithine because its part of l-arginine which u cant take if u have shingles , hsv1&2 , or herpes viruses because that's what they need to replicate , this sucks for me because arginine is important for helping with bartonella

    • @kenanmamedov2996
      @kenanmamedov2996 ปีที่แล้ว

      Selam sizdeki sibodan dolayi beyin sisi gecdimi tedaviden sonra?

  • @AV-fx8kv
    @AV-fx8kv 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Ismt molybdenum used for brainfog and to.detox ammonia?! I'm scared to try this as im sensitive to almost everything

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Molybdenum can be extremely helpful in those that have sulfur processing issues. The mozyme forte kind from biotics research, specifically

  • @trsavage9778
    @trsavage9778 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bravo StillJake. Well done. P.S. Nice Earrings. :)

  • @deborahakey9308
    @deborahakey9308 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    ONLY Sea Salt !!!!!! real salt !!! Was on SALT/Vit. C Protocal but had mild heart attack & only take 1000 mg pink Himalayan cap a day. Thank u ❤

  • @MrSlydrums
    @MrSlydrums 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Histamine production of bacteria and less production of DAO enzyme to degrade histamine can explain a part of it I guess 🙂

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      yup agree that histamine could definitely be one of many biochemicals produced that can have systemic effects!

  • @hongchonginternational6348
    @hongchonginternational6348 ปีที่แล้ว

    You should check out so cal chiropractor I think he could help you!

  • @persistentone3448
    @persistentone3448 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Careful on terminology. The Satish Rao study is NOT measuring lactic acidosis. He is measuring D-lactate which creates D-lactic acidosis. The normal form of lactic acid is L-lactic acid, and when people use the term "lactic acidosis" the assumption is that it is always the L form.
    D-lactic acidosis and L-lactic acidosis are entirely different things. They have different causes, different mechanisms, different symptoms....
    Finally, D-lactate is only produced by *some* Lactobacillus. *NO* Bifidobacteria ever produce D-lactate.
    P.S., excellent video. I agree with most of your speculation alert.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So at the 3:56 mark is the first time I ever mention any type of acidosis and I make it clear I am talking about D-lactic acidosis especially because I tie it to short-bowel syndrome but that doesn’t really matter because 9% of the patients in Rao’s study had L-lactic acidosis as measured by a blood test so these patients had both D- and L-lactic acidosis.
      This article (below) refers to both D-lactic acidosis and L-lactic acidosis as lactic acidosis. And Rao’s study repeatedly uses the term lactic acidosis so that’s what I did as well. So perhaps the assumption should not be that lactic acidosis is only referring to L-lactic acidosis considering there are currently two types recognized by medicine?
      acutecaretesting.org/en/articles/l-lactate-and-d-lactate-clinical-significance-of-the-difference/
      According to Dr. Rao and colleagues, some Bifidobacteria do produce D-lactate, including Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis, albeit less than Lactobacillus spp. Link here:
      www.proquest.com/openview/a7b5a3376d5b5d54312c10d50250173f/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=2041958
      And thank you for editing your original comment. I appreciate that and thanks for watching

    • @persistentone3448
      @persistentone3448 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@BartonellaBabe Wow, Rao's study only adds to the confusion, and you are right he is using the term ambiguously as well.
      The problem arises because L-lactate is very common in human physiology. Our cells make L-lactate as the end product of glycolysis. If the body overproduces L-lactate, this can create metabolic acidosis with severe consequences. Diabetics deal with this issue. Every good physician is trained to look for metabolic acidosis. This is so common in humans that L-lactate is frequently measured on blood panels for patients with a high probability of developing metabolic acidosis. Although "technically" this is an "L-lactic acidosis", the medical community just refers to this as "lactic acidosis".
      Most doctors almost never deal with D-lactic acidosis. This is something that is so exceedingly rare that there are many doctors who would not even know what it is without doing some research. How to order a urinary d-lactate test is also not straightforward. That is normally only done by specialty metabolic labs. The human body normally produces only a tiny amount of d-lactate, and the amounts needed to produce symptoms are hugely larger than what we normally produce, so a doctor can go an entire career and never see a single case of d-lactic acidosis. So - just to prevent confusion - it is a good practice to refer to this kind of acidosis as "d-lactic acidosis". It will just prevent people from misunderstanding you.
      Who knows why some patients in the Rao study had high L-lactate. Were they diabetics? He doesn't document the before and after L-lactate values, so we do not know what component of the L-lactate was attributable to the probiotics. This just adds further to the confusion.
      Regarding Bifidobacteria, look at Rao's citation for his point:
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3233071/
      In Table 6 of Rao's "evidence", the Lactobacillus GG strain products 0.68 D-lactic acid versus 12.10 L-lactic acid, so roughly 5% of the combined output is D-lactic acid. The CECT 7210 Bifidobacteria produces 0.06 D-lactic acid versus 2.64 L-lactic acid. That's less than 1/10th the amount of D-lactic acid that the Lactobacillus strain produced. It's very very tiny, and why does Rao waste time making that point?
      In the big picture, many people develop brain fog by taking Lactobacillus supplements. It seems to be common. Very few people react that way to Bifidobacteria.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@persistentone3448 Rao's study says three diabetics were administered a fructose breath test and 9 patients had L-lactic acidosis. Does that mean only three patients were diabetic? Not clear and only a question the authors would have the answer to.
      I don't know why he makes that point but if I were him and someone told me that Bifidobacteria make *NO* D-lactate and that wasn't true, then I would point to the evidence. Wait a minute...that did happen to me 😉
      Anyway, I do want to avoid confusion whenever possible and I am not a doctor so I don't know that it's good practice to say D-lactic acidosis. I just took my cues from the Rao paper and he is a doctor. Are you a doctor or NP or PA or other health professional? I know you can't tell tone over TH-cam so this isn't an attacking question. I am genuinely curious if you are and that's why you think it's good practice to specify D-lactic acidosis

  • @deborahakey9308
    @deborahakey9308 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The speach thing is B&B I have it people think I’m drunk!❤

  • @PCMenten
    @PCMenten 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Azithromycin was a game-changer - my upper gut cleared up nicely.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh that’s wonderful to hear! Do you think it was because it helped motility or something else?

    • @PCMenten
      @PCMenten 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BartonellaBabe Hi, Jake. I had developed SIBO; eat a small, healthy meal and afterward feel bloated, malaise, severe brain fog and more. Also, I have found that oregano oil is very helpful. The Zithromax eradicated the SIBO.

    • @SueT55
      @SueT55 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      How long ago did your gut clear up nicely? Has it been long term? Wonderful news. I’ve taken Zithromax several times but not much progress.

    • @BartonellaBabe
      @BartonellaBabe  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PCMenten yup sounds like SIBO. I’m so glad to hear those things cleared it up for you. Oregano oil is a good one. I’ve also learned from Dr. Allison Siebecker that SIBO that is higher up in the small intestine clears up first and more easily than lower down and I’ve found that to be the case for me which thank goodness. I also wanted to say thank you so much for your support of my channel. I really really appreciate it a lot

    • @PCMenten
      @PCMenten 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@SueT55 It was a year ago. The Zithromax seems to have; resolved a long-running minor sinus infection, cleared an apparently chronic pancreatitis (thank you, God. Steatorrhea gone!), and cured the SIBO.

  • @bobbymichaels
    @bobbymichaels ปีที่แล้ว

    but whats the answer you're very informative but I thin given some help by foods, herbs, lifestyle changes would be encouraging. Go girl