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Candidal Spores of the Fungus, Candida Albicans.

Candidal Spores of the Fungus, Candida Albicans.
`As a small child Jason was plagued with ear infections which led to many courses of antibiotics,’ Hannah Mitchell recalls. ‘Eventually he started to get symptoms such as an upset stomach, itchy bottom, flu-like symptoms and extremely itchy eyes. The GP prescribed eye drops and when I put them in Jason screamed his head off. In the morning every single eyelash had fallen out. Jason’s health deteriorated and a few months later his eyebrows started to itch. Within two days every single eyebrow hair had fallen out. His eyes were worse and I was offered steroid eye drops again. Reluctantly I accepted.’
‘Putting the drops in caused Jason extreme pain. The red patches of skin around his eyes spread and the itching increased. I was at the end of my tether when I came across a book in the library about food-related illness…
What Hannah discovered from her reading was that, for many with diarrhoea, bloating, wind and an itchy bottom, the cause can be an overgrowth of yeasts in the gut, caused in part by repeated courses of antibiotics which kill off friendly gut bacteria in the gut flora (see p. 204) and allow yeasts to flourish. This is not mainstream medicine, which is why none of the doctors who had seen Jason mentioned the possibility of yeast overgrowth.
Yeasts are microscopic fungi, so anti-fungal drugs are needed to kill them. However, reducing the intake of sugar in the diet is also very effective because yeasts living in the gut thrive on sugar. Hannah took matters into her own hands, and tried out a diet containing no sugar and no yeast. (The reason for avoiding yeast in food is discussed below.) There was some improvement and, encouraged, she went back to the doctor and asked for anti-fungal drugs.
The doctor agreed, and to Hannah’s immense relief, the combination of diet and drug treatment worked for Jason – it cleared the diarrhoea, wind and itching, and eventually allowed his eyelashes and eyebrows to grow back. (Note that few other patients with yeast problems suffer hair-loss – this is a very exotic symptom – but yeast overgrowth can produce some other quite unusual reactions.)
The elusive culprit
So far, you will notice, I have not mentioned Candida. Among those doctors who study and treat this condition, this particular yeast was once considered the prime suspect. Indeed, the disease itself was called ‘candidiasis’. But the role of Candida is now considered doubtful by many.
Researchers such as Dr John Hunter, of Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, have tried to find Candida in their patients without success. ‘I think now we have to reject the idea of Candida causing the symptoms,’ says Dr Hunter. ‘But I do believe that there is an imbalance in the gut flora – the micro-organisms that live in the gut. I believe that’s at the root of so-called “candidiasis”.’ This new evidence has not yet affected beliefs about candidiasis’ and ‘Candida’ in the complementary health field.
The fact remains that anti-fungal drugs have proved very helpful to many patients with the typical cluster of symptoms –diarrhoea, wind, bloating and an itchy anus – that were previously attributed to Candida. Given the effectiveness of these drugs, it seems probable that yeasts of some kind are playing a large part in this condition. So the term ‘yeast overgrowth’ is being used, rather tentatively at the moment, as a label for this condition. The yeasts concerned have not, as yet, been identified.
The facts about Candida
This box is about Candida as understood by conventional medicine, rather than ‘Candida’ and ‘candidiasis’ as understood by alternative medicine.
The yeast known as Candida lives naturally in the gut, usually causing no trouble. Problems are usually caused by Candida only when it sets up home in the throat, vagina or penis (’thrush’ infections). Such localised infections have well-defined symptoms and, in most cases, are easily treated with anti-fungal drugs. Patients with damaged immune systems, caused by anti-cancer drugs or AIDS, often develop more widespread Candida infections, but this never happens to people with a normal immune system.
Inhaling steroids and not rinsing out the mouth afterwards can make asthma sufferers more susceptible to Candida infections in the throat (see p. 145).
Other symptoms that have been linked to yeast overgrowth are:
• fatigue
• poor concentration
• irritability, depression and confusion
• headache or migraine
• severe premenstrual problems
• recurrent cystitis
• skin rashes
• aching muscles
• chronic urticaria.
Sometimes there is constipation rather than diarrhoea. Recurrent thrush – a genuine Candida infection in the vagina – can also be a feature of this problem. Occasionally allergic symptoms such as asthma seem to get worse with yeast overgrowth.
Is there an allergic reaction to the yeast?
Those with symptoms typical of yeast overgrowth may give a positive skin-prick test to Candida, but what this means is debatable. For one thing, not everyone with this condition gives a positive test. For another, some entirely healthy people give a positive skin-prick test to Candida. To complicate matters, there are a lot of cross-reactions (see p. 14) between different kinds of yeasts and moulds, due to similarities in their chemical constituents. So the positive skin-prick test does not mean that Candida itself triggered the original IgE-response.
The question of whether some kind of sensitivity reaction to yeasts is occurring in those with yeast overgrowth, and contributing to their symptoms, is an interesting one. The benefits from avoiding yeast in food (see Diagnosis and treatment) suggest that it may be – but this is a question that cannot be answered at present.
Diagnosis and treatment
Unfortunately, this is one of those ’suck-it-and-see’ conditions, where diagnosis and treatment are the same – you try the treatment for yeast overgrowth, and if it works you assume that the disease is, or was, yeast overgrowth. This is far from satisfactory, but is the best that can be done at present.
It is only worth trying this treatment if you have quite a number of the symptoms listed. Bowel problems and an itchy anus are characteristic, and if you have neither of these it is unlikely the treatment will help you.
A key part of the treatment is a no-yeast-no-sugar diet (see p. 205). This diet has been developed on a largely pragmatic basis, and seems to work – but why? The rationale for cutting out sugar is clear – it feeds yeasts in the gut. But why avoiding foods containing yeast should help is uncertain. Possibly the yeasty food supplies some special nutrient that benefits the yeasts living in the gut. Alternatively, there might, for some people, be a sensitivity reaction to the yeast in food (see left).
If it seems that you are on the right track, because there is some improvement with this diet, ask your doctor for anti-fungal drugs. You should take these in addition to the diet. Nystatin (see box below) is very safe for most people, since it is not absorbed from the gut. Bacterial replacers (see p. 205) may also be useful.
You may need a referral to a doctor who is knowledgeable about yeast overgrowth but try to avoid those doctors and alternative therapists who are part of the ‘Candida’ craze, and think that ‘candidiasis’ explains a huge variety of illnesses. You may not have yeast overgrowth at all, so you need someone with an open mind.
Eczema and yeasts?
Doctors have found that some children whose eczema looks very red, and is not responding to treatment, have IgE in the blood against a range of yeasts and other fungi (Candida, Trichophyton, Saccharomyces and Pityrosporum). Given the tendency to cross-reactions among fungi (see main text) it is not clear exactly what these reactions indicate. A proportion of these children get much better on anti-fungal drugs, including a drug called nystatin, which is not absorbed through the gut wall – so cannot reach the skin. The eczema improves, and at the same time there is a fall in levels of anti-fungal IgE in the blood. In other words, a treatment that can only affect fungi living in the gut benefits the skin. Exactly what is going on here is unknown, but the important point is that the treatment seems to work. This is a controversial topic, but since nystatin is an extremely safe drug, your doctor may be prepared to try it out. A course of 3-4 weeks is the minimum needed.

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