Probiotics are the beneficial bacteria found in foods such as yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, kombucha, and kimchi. If you have a compromised digestive system due to food allergies and/or inflammatory
bowel disease, you may have heard that adding a probiotic supplement to your diet can greatly improve your health.
In my 30 years of clinical experience, I have found this largely to be true. However, with the emergence of the new probiotic trend going around for the past decade or so, it's important to offer a reminder never to overdose on probiotics (or any natural
supplement).
If you're currently supplementing with probiotics to treat a digestive disorder, especially short bowel syndrome or carbohydrate intolerance, I strongly caution you never to use more than what is directed by your doctor or the label on the bottle.
Probiotics are Beneficial When Taken as Directed
When taken as directed, probiotics have been shown to ease gastrointestinal distress, improve digestion, treat hay fever, ease depression, relieve the symptoms of allergic skin disorders, eliminate chronic
candida, and even improve mental cognition.
D-Lactic Acidosis Caused by Overdose on Probiotics
Supplemental probiotics are generally well-tolerated by most. However, there are some
conditions which make it difficult to properly metabolize excess D-lactate found in L. acidophilus.
If you have short bowel syndrome, carbohydrate intolerance, or have had gastrointestinal surgery, you may develop D-lactic acidosis.
Symptoms of this
physiological condition include:
Nausea and pallor
Headaches
Weakness
Slurred speech
Carbohydrate cravings
Concentration difficulties
Impaired motor coordination
Gait disturbances
Involuntary eye movements
Unusual behavior (agitation/irritability)
Teeth grinding
Extremely painful muscle spasms (rigidity)
Hyperventilation
Unfortunately, this condition often
goes unnoticed by new probiotic users because they believe what they are experiencing are die-off symptoms; the worsening of symptoms in response to the "die-off" of bad bacteria in the body.
If you notice some of the above-mentioned symptoms, discontinue use of your probiotic to see if symptoms improve. If they do, you may have been experiencing the beginning stages of
D-lactic acidosis.
Try adding more naturally-fermented foods to your diet as your main probiotic source instead. Also, avoid any probiotic supplement that has only L. acidophilus as this strain is the most common to cause D-lactic acidosis.
The best
probiotic supplement should offer varied strains of beneficial bacteria so your digestive system will receive the most benefit. Not only will this cut down on the likelihood of a negative reaction, it will also ensure your digestive system doesn't acclimate to just one strain, which renders it useless.
Diamond Nutritional's Probiotic Formula contains 6 active cultures designed to work together to optimize your digestion. These strains include lactobacillus plantarum, lactobacillus acidophilus,
bifidobacterium lactis, lactobacillus salivarius, lactobacillus casei, and bifidobacterium bifidum.
Unlike the popular commercial formulas that have been emerging over the past couple of years, this formula contains no unnecessary additives, preservatives or fillers. Just one pill each day is enough.