Suffering from Fibromyalgia?
Feeling tired, bloated, achy or run down?
Is Your Food Making You Sick?
You may have food sensitivities and not know it. Frequent headaches or migraines, chronic digestive problems like IBS, chronic fatigue, and a number of other common health complaints can often be caused by reactions to the foods and chemicals in our diet. For those who want to feel better there is a simple and very effective treatment plan for food sensitivity related illness.
LEAP or Lifestyle Eating and Performance is a program that will help you overcome any food sensitivity problems you might have. Here’s how:
- LEAP allows you to quickly identify what foods, additives, and chemicals are likely provoking your symptoms, and, more importantly, which foods have the highest probability of being safe.
- LEAP uses a patented, proven blood test named MRT (Mediator Release Test) to isolate a safe foods diet for you. MRT eliminates the guesswork to give you definitive answers.
- Once the test is performed, an eating plan is developed and tailored to the needs of each individual client. You will be assisted by Angela Moore, MS, RD a certified LEAP therapist to implement your new eating plan.
The LEAP program has helped thousands of IBS, Migraine, Fibromyalgia and other food sensitive clients quickly overcome their food sensitvities and find lasting relief, even to the point of feeling completely healthy again after years of suffering. All without the ongoing cost and potential side effects of prescription medicine that never even address the underlying root of the illness. In fact, most patients see marked improvements within 1-2 weeks on the program.
Call Angela Moore, MS, RD at 720-201-1128 or email at
angela@fitlifeofcolorado.com for current pricing for the MRT test and nutritional consultations.
Fibromyalgia Treatment: Different Approaches
Dietary Approaches to Fibromyalgia Treatment:
Some people believe that changing dietary fat intake and/or consuming plant foods that contain anti-inflammatory agents can help ease pain by limiting inflammation. A mostly raw vegetarian diet was found helpful for some people with fibromyalgia, but this study was not randomized and was without a control group. One study of women with premenstrual symptoms suggested that a low-fat vegetarian diet was associated with decreased pain intensity and duration. Weight loss achieved by a combination of dietary changes and increased physical activity has been shown to be helpful for people suffering from osteoarthritis.
Still, further research is needed to determine the effectiveness of dietary modifications as a pain treatment. These are all treatments for Fibromyalgia that may be a shot in the dark. However, a new dietary plan and MRT testing program maybe able to providet the specifics you have been looking for in Fibromyalgia treatment. Click here to learn more!!
Nutritional Supplements:
There is solid evidence indicating that glucosamine sulfate and chondroitin sulfate are effective for knee osteoarthritis. These natural compounds were found to decrease pain and increase mobility of the knee and were well tolerated and safe. Other dietary supplements, such as fish oils, also show some evidence of benefit, although more research is needed. The MRT test combined with the immnuno calm diet maybe the Fibromyalgia treatment for you!!
Herbal Remedies:
It has been difficult to draw conclusions about the effectiveness of herbs for Fibromylgia treatment. If you decide to use herbal preparations to better manage your pain, it is of critical importance to share this information with your doctor. Some herbs may interact with drugs you are receiving for pain or other conditions and may harm your health and not the best method of Fibromyalgia treatment.
Things to Consider
Alternative therapies as Fibromyalgia treatments are not always benign. As mentioned, some herbal therapies can interact with other medications you may be taking. Always talk to your doctor before trying an alternative approach for a Fibromyalgia treatment and be sure to tell all your doctors what alternative treatments you are using.
(information for this artcle obtained from WebMD)