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General Discussions
Healthful Living / Natural Treatments
Foods for Bipolar/ODD
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<blockquote data-quote="HaoZi" data-source="post: 418924"><p>A lot depends on the kid, so you'll have to experiment. Mine does better with less nitrates/nitrites (in hot dogs and most other processed meats) and with more Omega-3s in her diet. We also use organic milk and some other organic products. We recently discovered Morning Star veggie corndogs are not all that terrible tasting, so she can still get her "hot dog" fix while avoiding a lot of stuff. </p><p></p><p>Others have luck with girlfriend or girlfriend/CF diets, dye-free foods, non-processed foods, etc. Be sure to get really good guidance if you start cutting foods to make sure you're not losing needed nutrients, and a good number of girlfriend processed foods have more calories/sugar/fat than their gluten counterparts (as well as missing out on key nutrients that you have to make up elsewhere), so there's a lot of research and label-reading involved.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HaoZi, post: 418924"] A lot depends on the kid, so you'll have to experiment. Mine does better with less nitrates/nitrites (in hot dogs and most other processed meats) and with more Omega-3s in her diet. We also use organic milk and some other organic products. We recently discovered Morning Star veggie corndogs are not all that terrible tasting, so she can still get her "hot dog" fix while avoiding a lot of stuff. Others have luck with girlfriend or girlfriend/CF diets, dye-free foods, non-processed foods, etc. Be sure to get really good guidance if you start cutting foods to make sure you're not losing needed nutrients, and a good number of girlfriend processed foods have more calories/sugar/fat than their gluten counterparts (as well as missing out on key nutrients that you have to make up elsewhere), so there's a lot of research and label-reading involved. [/QUOTE]
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