What Are Effective Treatments for Addressing an Autoimmune Disease that Affects the Skin?
Video Transcript:
Our next question comes from Sam. Sam asked, “What is effective in tackling autoimmune problems like psoriasis?”
Okay, that’s an excellent question, Sam. A lot of individuals suffer from psoriasis. There are multiple types. Sometimes women and men deal with it on their scalp and sometimes we know that as dandruff. Other times, individuals are dealing with psoriasis and even eczema on their elbows, their knees, and patches of scaly, itchy, irritated skin. With psoriasis and eczema, those two I link together. But one or the other, what you need to deal with, how you heal it and tackle it naturally, is to look at healing your gut.
Healing the Gut is Key to Healing Autoimmune Skin Issues
So your digestive process is … and when I say digestive process, it’s the internal lining of your small intestine and your large intestine. That mucosal membrane is a direct mirror of our skin. And so when individuals, when my patients are presenting with skin-related irritations or autoimmune disorders of the skin, we need to look at the internal skin. We need to go in and go deep into healing the gut. The likelihood is that you’re probably also dealing with some IBS-related symptoms as well, but maybe haven’t bridged that gap or made the connection that the IBS or digestive imbalances, constipation, bloating, gas is linked to the psoriasis. So let’s dig into what you can do to heal your skin by healing your gut.
Start with an Elimination Diet
So the first most important thing is to address your diet. So this is really critical. What’s coming in has to be very much healing-focused. So there are three kinds of elimination items that I recommend overall. Eliminate gluten. So this tends to be bread, pasta, items that are very much comforting foods for a lot of folks and very common in our standard American diet. So gluten is one.
The second one is dairy. Eliminate all dairy. And we have to be really kind of sleuthy with dairy. Dairy is not just milk or yogurt that you’re getting that’s pasteurized or grabbing in the dairy aisle, but it also falls into the packaged products, whey protein. So a lot of fitness enthusiasts that are grabbing protein shakes or trying to be healthy and grabbing protein bars, whey protein is dairy-oriented. So be aware of whey protein as well as milk additives in a lot of the items that you’re buying in the box. So that’s really critical and just be kind of sleuthy when you’re purchasing and shopping.
The other thing that I recommend is to eliminate soy. A lot of my patients have irritations to soy and soy is as invasive, if not more invasive than some of those dairy-related products. Soy lecithin is a very common kind of binding agent and sometimes preservative that we’ll find in merely every packaged, shelf-based product. We even see this in some of our liquid products. So read your labels. That’s really key.
Those three items, soy, dairy, and gluten, are very much oriented with inflammation product particularly the way many of these items are harvested or grown. There’s an abundance of pesticides, herbicides, and insecticides. Those are very irritating to our digestive process and can cause inflammation. Long-term inflammation we will see skin eruptions. So that’s critical.
Add Probiotics and Fiber to Your Daily Regimen
Second thing that you can do, add on to your Organixx is to grab the ProBiotixx+™ . This has one amazing probiotic and it is built as one of the most comprehensive gut-repairing digestive-process-rebuilding probiotic. There’s a multitude of probiotics. And you can add in probiotic-rich foods like kefir or kimchi or some of the fermented foods like sauerkraut or beet kvass. Those are all going to be beneficial, but I recommend definitely adding ProBiotixx+™ to your mix.
Similarly, when you take a probiotic, we need the food for the probiotic to support that. That includes individuals that might be making their own nut yogurts or nut kefirs or adding in probiotics like this here at Organixx. What you need to do is add in fiber, but there’s a special fiber called inulin, or chicory root is what we call it. You can drink chicory root tea. It’s a powder that you can add in. We sprinkle it into a lot of our gluten-free baked products that I make here for our family. I add it into sometimes my coffee and I will add it into teas and liquid items that I’m consuming, soups and things like that. So fiber is really key.
Support Your Liver through Detoxification
Now, the other thing that is really, really essential for your gut is we need to help support your liver’s production of bile. Bile is one of the most important byproducts of the liver and it is a healing sensing type of liquid, very based in nature, but it has this amazing capacity to heal and protect the single-cell lining of your small intestine. Often with psoriasis and eczema or any of the autoimmune disorders apart from skin, so Hashimoto’s, RA, Sjogren’s disease. These are all, we look back into the small intestine and the lining of the small intestine being irritated, inflamed, and we call it leaky gut, it’s often common.
One of the most important ways to help support your body’s healing of that irritated small intestinal lining is to add in liver detoxing, particularly dandelion. So eating dandelion greens in your salad, juicing dandelion, you can add in dandelion tea. I love dandelion tea because if you’re a coffee drinker, you can make a great switch and drink dandelion tea. It’s very rich and rooted, but it’s very powerful and invigorating the liver’s bile production. The more bile you have, the greater the healing you’re going to employ by also reducing the anti-inflammatory and the allergens of dairy, gluten, and soy. And then by adding the ProBiotixx+™, you are going to really, really fortify your gut healing.
Apply Topical Anti-Inflammatory to Irritated Skin
The other thing that is common is that we’ll see inflammation. So that skin-related inflammation, you might have kind of a red patch, it’s inflamed. It might be itchy and painful at the same time. What I like to recommend is a cellular-based anti-inflammatory, and the Joint & Muscle Care here at Organixx is one of my favorites. This has a trio of the gifts of the Magi and they are equally beneficial internally. And then you can also apply topically the oil to the area or areas that are inflamed. And I recommend using, mixing a carrier oil or even an almond or even olive oil. You can mix a few drops in and apply topically. That’ll ease the topical inflammation, but you can also take the supplementation. I love pairing those up. So I hope that’s helpful. Please try that out and let us know how it goes.
D says
How much inulin or chicory root do you recommend per day for psoriasis?
Customer Service says
Hello D, thank you for your question. Unfortunately, we are unable to provide or recommend a dosage because we are unfamiliar with your medical history or tolerance levels. I was unable to locate any published clinical guide for dosage on it. However, looking at various supplements it seems the dosages provided were 3-5 grams per day in general. Please make sure to consult with your doctor before starting any supplement. Wishing you continued good health always! :)