HOW TO TREAT HYPERKINETIC SYNDROME: THE TIMING OF RESPONSES IN THE DIET VARIES
The timing of responses in the diet varies. Most children recover within a week or two on the initial stages of the diet, but others take up to three weeks. Foods should only be tested once there is a noticeable and sustained improvement. If this does not occur, then revert to the normal diet and consider other options. It may be that your child has chemical sensitivities – reading Chapter Nine should help you to assess this possibility. Be prepared to reconsider the likelihood of emotional stresses and strains.
The procedure for testing foods is slightly different for hyperkinetic syndrome. Although a few may take up to a week of daily feeding with the culprit food before they respond, this is probably fairly unusual. The response time for most is between 15 minutes and four hours. Reintroduced foods should be fed in the morning, and again in the afternoon, if there was no reaction, or only a slight reaction, to the first feeding. A normal-sized portion should be eaten, except in children who have asthma or urticaria, where a very small amount should be tried first, in case there is a severe reaction. If, by the morning after, there is no reaction to the food, then it can be incorporated into the diet, and testing begun on a new food. As always, in an elimination diet, it is important not to eat too much of any one food.
Assuming the diet is effective, and you discover what foods or additives cause the problems, then you have to decide on a plan of action. Again, you should discuss this with your doctor. Avoiding the foods in question may be quite difficult, especially at school or with friends, and you may wish to reconsider other options, especially if your child is not affected all that severely or if he reacts to a great many foods. Drugs are one option, and you should discuss the pros and cons of these with your doctor. Another, more controversial form of treatment, is neutralization therapy. Although this is not accepted widely among the medical profession, there are many reports of it being used successfully for the treatment of hyperactive children. If you decide on avoidance of the food, bear in mind that the child’s sensitivity may disappear in time. The culprit foods should be retested at one- or two-yearly intervals, to see if they still produce the same symptoms.
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