Parasites and Body Odor
Parasites and Body Odor
Parasites and Body Odor
Although sufferers and their families have been shown to gain considerable
benefit from sympathetic counseling, and while learning to deal with the
stress this condition causes is certainly important - long-term strategies and
approaches which deal with underlying causes of increased body odor are
probably a lot more important.
Certainly the answer does not lie in antiperspirant and deodorant sprays
which at best only mask the problem, although safe forms of these might
well prove useful in the short-term - as long as they are not adding to the
person's problem - for example by increasing exposure to and absorption of
aluminum - now implicated in Alzheimer's disease.
Some people with systemic yeast conditions (Candida) carry a 'beer' smell since yeast can turn sugar into alcohol in their body's very rapidly.
Fortunately safe natural anti-yeast dietary and herbal methods exist which
can bring such conditions under control. One recommend product that may
help is Mycozil.
Medical tests at Imperial College in London has shown that some people
with body odor have imbalances affecting the 'friendly bacteria' which live
inside all of our digestive systems. If these vital micro-organisms are
unbalanced through use of medication (antibiotics and steroids in particular)
or a high fat, high sugar, high red-meat, low fiber diet the vital role they play
in detoxification of the bowel and in manufacturing important nutrients is
impaired and this can lead to aggravation of Body Odor, as well as to
numerous other health problems.3 Taking a probiotic supplement will help
balance it out.
Anyone with body odor - of any type - should supplement daily with good
quality Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacteria in order to boost their
intestinal flora quality.
In addition, detoxification via a one day juice or water or fruit only day, two
or three times a month (all day Saturday for example) is a useful strategy
(but not for people on prescription medication, diabetics or people with
eating disorders without supervision by a qualified health care professional).
There are many detox foods that can help.
A balanced diet is also called for if Body Odor is a problem, ideally one in
which 20% of the diet comes from protein (fish, poultry or vegetarian
combinations of pulses and grains), 20% of the diet can come from oils and
fats (avoiding animal fats as much as possible) with the balance from
vegetables, fruit, pulses and grains.
Researchers emphasize that apart from diet this form of Body Odor will be
aggravated during menstruation, when there is a fever or when the person
is under stress.
When Body Odor has this fish-like smell increased care is needed over food
selection because studies in London2 have shown that diet irritates this
usually inherited condition.
Foods rich in the amino acid carnitine are known to leave residues in the
intestines which have to be worked on by the natural flora (friendly
bacteria). If very specific enzymes (known as flavin monooxygenases) which
break the residues down to an odorless state ready for excretion are in poor
supply or are missing (or if the bowel flora are disturbed) the characteristic
fish-like odor appears.
For people with this particular 'fish odor form of Body Odor the following
foods which are rich in lecithin or choline or carnitine/lysine should be
avoided or kept to a small part of the daily diet.
Although true 'Fish Odor Syndrome' is probably the worst sort of Body Odor it fortunately affects a relatively small number of people - and the strategies
outlined above can usually deal with its worst aspects.
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References
1.Bryce-Smith D Hodgkinson L The Zinc Solution Century Arrow 1986
2.Ayesh R et al The Fish Odour Syndrome : Biochemical, familial and clinical
aspects. British Medical Journal 1993;307pp655-657
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