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Diet change gives hyperactive kids new taste for life in Norway

by Nina Larson Sun Feb 24, 1:52 PM ET

Tears streak Rita's cheek as she recalls what it was like trying to figure out

what was wrong with her son more than a decade ago, but she breaks into a smile

when she explains how changing his diet made all the difference.

"I could tell something was wrong with him as soon as he began eating solids as

a baby. It was if the food was draining him," says Rita, 50, describing how her

son Christoffer had yoyoed between passive and hyperactive behaviour until she

had removed several staples from his diet including milk and grains.

Christoffer, today a normally developed 14-year-old, is one of 23 children

suffering from hyperactive disorders who were put on milk-free diets in

1996-1997 and whose development has been tracked ever since by a small group of

educators and researchers in the southwestern Norwegian town of Stavanger.

The group set out to prove a theory by Oslo-based scientist Karl Ludvig

Reichelt that a metabolic disorder making it difficult to break down certain

proteins, including casein (the protein in milk that makes it possible to make

cheese), could cause mental problems like Attention Deficit Hyperactivity

Disorder (ADHD).

"One of the kids I worked with started on the diet on Wednesday and by the

weekend his parents said they saw a huge positive change in his behaviour,"

says special educator Magne Noedland, who helped spearhead the diet project.

All 23 children, who were between four and 11 years old when the project

started, were suspected of having ADHD and had been shown to have abnormal

levels of peptides in their urine.

The accumulation of peptides, which are short compounds containing two or more

amino acids, is an indication that the enzyme needed to fully break down

certain proteins is inhibited or missing, and can have an opium-like effect on

the brain, according to Reichelt.

Much international research has been done linking such protein disorders to

cases of autism and schizophrenia, and a growing number of studies also hint

that some cases of ADHD are connected with the digestive problem.

There is however a lot of scepticism to the theory in medical circles, with

many doctors believing medication like Ritalin is the best way to treat the

condition.

Noedland acknowledges the Stavanger project does not meet all scientific

standards, claiming the main problem is the lack of comprehensive studies on

how many ADHD children suffer from peptide abnormalities.

"There is no reason to put everyone with ADHD on a diet if only 10 percent of

them have protein imbalances," he says.

The children in the Stavanger project all followed a strict casein-free diet

the first year, and the results were overwhelmingly positive, Noedland says,

pointing out that 22 of the 23 families reported clear improvements in their

child's behaviour and attention-span.

A number of the children have since stopped following the diet for different

reasons and some were put on medication, but after eight years six were still

strictly avoiding all milk products and several had also cut out gluten, which

is found in wheat, rye, barley and to some extent oats.

"We see a clear difference between those who stopped and those who stayed on

the diet," Noedland says.

"Seeing these kids going from one day not being able to learn a thing to the

next day being receptive; as a teacher that's a wonderful feeling," says

Kristine Fosse, one of the educators involved in the project.

To illustrate her point, Fosse pulls out a writing test by a six-year-old boy

who took part in the project.

The boy was asked to write his numbers after involuntarily breaking his diet

and ingesting milk on September 22, 1996. The result was a confused and jumbled

mess of squiggly lines. Just two days later, again strictly steering clear of

casein, he repeated the exercise, this time writing four clearly legible

numbers in an even line.

"It's incredible. We've seen intelligence tests that had gone steadily down

suddenly turn around and go back up" after a change of diet, says Ann-Mari

Knivsberg, who covers the research end of the Stavanger project.

One of the children who still avoids milk and gluten, 17-year-old Sigbjoern,

says any lapse in his diet affects his performance in school.

"I can tell right away when I've eaten something I shouldn't. It's really hard

to concentrate. I'm always careful before tests," he says, taking a big bite of

gluten and milk-free carrot cake.

Considered a hyperactive problem child with retarded development in nursery

school, Sigbjoern today ranks among the best students in his class.

"He had a slow start and a lot of trouble learning to begin with, but by

secondary school he was really doing well," says Sigbjoern's mother Grete, 52.

Both Grete and Rita asked that their families' last names not be used for fear

of stigmatisation.

"It is considered shameful to have ADHD," Grete says. "When they're on a diet

they're just like everyone else. Just look at them. We have two normal, great

kids. I'm eternally grateful that Sigbjoern was included in the project."

Hundreds of other Norwegian children with ADHD, mainly in and around Stavanger,

have in recent years been put on milk-free diets to help deal with their

condition, but Fosse complains many doctors don't inform parents of the option.

"We want to get the word out that this can be an alternative. Parents have to

do a lot of searching before they get this information," she says.

"The scepticism is infuriating. I'm glad I have a good education and can stand

up for myself when I meet doctors who ridicule what I'm doing," says Grete,

putting her arm around Sigbjoern's shoulder.

"I mean, as a parent, wouldn't you want to at least try switching your child's

diet before medicating him?"