Episode 12: The Headache Nutritionist with Susannah Juteau, M. Sc. RD.
Many of our speakers have alluded to the effects that nutrition has had on their recovery. If you’re like us, you want to learn more but don't know where to turn. This. Episode. Is. It! Susannah Juteau, the Headache Nutritionist, schools us on dietary approaches to headaches, migraines, post concussive syndrome, and mental health. Do you think this means that you need to follow a super, restrictive elimination diet?? Susannah teaches us a different approach and gives practical advice on how to improve our diets. Listen and learn with us!
Topics covered:
Susannah’s survivor story and path to nutritional approaches for migraines
Solving headaches requires focus on 3 pillars:
Sleep
Stress
Nutrition
Nutrition is only part of the solution
“A healthy diet doesn’t mean a headache free diet”
Anti-inflammatory diet to treat migraines and headaches
Migraines are an inflammatory condition
It’s not a quick fix. Migraine and headache treatment requires an interdisciplinary approach. Work with your practitioners on what they specialize in, advocate for the right people on your team
What to expect when seeing Susannah, the headache nutritionist
Micro-nutrient assessment
Timing of eating, what are you eating
Diagnostic test: the mediator release test, tells the specific foods that cause inflammation in YOU
Goal of treatment is to calm the immune system
Typical approach is to have an elimination diet which is very restrictive. Susannah offers something different. Her approach using the mediator release test allows you to target specific foods to remove rather than whole categories of foods
Elimination diets can take a year and may not hit the nail on the head as well as using a mediator release test
How do you know that inflammation is a problem?
Migraines
Chronic headaches
IBS
Indigestion
Mood, irritability
Poor sleep
High stress
Females’ hormones and stress response make females more susceptible
Most common food culprits for inflammation
Processed foods
Dyes
Chemicals
MSG
What to eat:
Focus on brightly colored whole foods
To make this easy: Frozen vegetables and fruits are oftentimes more fresh than what’s in the produce section meaning they are more healthy. They are easy to grab, already cut up, and make a great addition to any meal.
Fish: omega-3 fatty acids are essential. Fish is quick and easy to make, bakes in 20 minutes!
Anchovies
Cod
Oysters
Mackerel
Sardines
Salmon
Clams--canned is good too!! Great source of iron.
Big bad wolves in nutrition: dairy, gluten, sugar. You might not need to cut them or eliminate every food in each category!! The mediator release test will guide what needs to be removed.
Common elimination diets cut all gluten, sugar, and dairy as they are often reactive for people. With Susannah’s approach you cut these for the 14 days while waiting for the mediator response test results. This calms the immune system and inflammation. Once results are back, you can cut the specific culprits for you and see how you feel. This approach is more sustainable because you don’t need to cut whole groups of food.
Nutrition is highly personal. See a nutritionist that can do the mediator response test
5 nutrients for chronic headaches and migraines
1. Omega-3. Fish at least 2 times a week. Fish more than meat. Eating fish is best as it primes the digestive system to be able to break down the fatty acids. Supplementation may not work as well if you are not eating fish because your gut is not primed.
2. Vitamin D: This is one that you need to supplement. Shiitake mushrooms and fortified milk are food sources but don’t contain enough.
Don’t assume that since you live in a sunny area that you get enough. Most of us are covered up when we are out in the sun and get little, if any vitamin D from the sun.
Take in the morning. Taking vitamin D at night can negatively impact your sleep because it binds with melatonin
3. Vitamin B-2: nutritional yeast, meats, supplementation
Nutritional yeast tastes a little like cheese. Sprinkle on vegetables or kale chips
4. Magnesium, type matters; both of these types are good:
Magnesium glycinate--better for stress or anxiety, calms the nerves
Magnesium citrate--cheaper, easier to digest. Good overall.
Migraine prone brains don’t absorb magnesium as well
Make sure to get food sources of magnesium and supplementation. The combo approach is best:
Pumpkin seeds, hemp seeds, spinach (especially cooked)
Epsom salt baths give an extra boost but we are not sure how much you absorb this way. Should always include nutritional sources
5. Co-enzyme Q10: especially researched in heart disease.
Supplementation: 400 mg daily is usually enough
Dietary sources: organ meats
Look for supplements that are third party tested so that you are sure that you are getting what you pay for.
5 Nutrients for Post Concussive Syndrome: focus is on brain healing and getting enough energy through food. The brain requires high energy to heal especially in the first few months.
1. Omega-3
2. Vitamin D
3. Polyphenols
Brightly colored fruits, vegetables, herbs, spices. Any plant sourced food that is really bright likely has some.
Turmeric, blueberries, dark grapes, all berries, peanuts
Goal is to includes something at least everyday
The more color on the plate the better. 8-10 servings a day
Tip: look at your plate, aim for 4 different colors on each plate every day
4. Creatine: very important for brain function and neuroprotection: think cognitive fatigue and brain fog. It helps with energy stores in the brain. Found as supplements.
5. Probiotics and prebiotics
Yogurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha (look at the labels for low sugar/low cane sugar options. If it tastes like juice it's probably too sugary)
Kombucha is a nice fizzy drink that can substitute for alcohol in social situations
High fiber foods have prebiotics
Leaky gut
“The gut is a direct cable from the brain to the gut” and visa versa via the vagus nerve
If our gut is off our brain is off and visa versa
If we aren’t eating a diverse diet than our gut is not healthy
Need to get more plant foods and color on the plate (fruits and vegetables) to increase gut health
Leaky gut: what is it? At least 70% of the population (up to 90%) are dealing with this. The connections in our gut become loose with leaky gut. Diet helps get those junctions tight back together. Inflammation is the culprit for loose connections. Need healthy eating, diversity in the diet, and the nutrients above.
Skin rashes are also an inflammatory condition caused by leaky gut
Smart eating tips for mental health.
Fruits and vegetables
Have lots of color on the plate
Use lots of herbs and spices in your food
It’s ok if you have a down day with food. It’s more about the overall picture
Omega-3s
When you’re having a good day, write down all your favorite fruits and vegetables. On low motivation days and days your diet is in a rut, look at this list for ideas of what to add. Sometimes we get out of the habit.
Have frozen and prepared vegetables at the ready to make it easy and quick. You can freeze squash and kale. Canned pumpkin can be added to oatmeal
Key takeaways: Eat the rainbow and Eryn is going to try a sardine :). Tailor a solution to you. Work with a qualified nutritionist to figure out what you need (you probably don’t need to take a million supplements and your body can’t absorb them all if you are)
Find Susannah Juteau on Facebook and Instagram: @headachenutritionist
Her website is https://headachenutritionist.com/
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