Terry Wahls on Taking Control of Chronic Conditions
Dec 30, 2020 11:05AM ● By Sandra Yeyati
Twenty years ago, University of Iowa Clinical Professor of Medicine Terry Wahls was
diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS). Conventional treatments didn’t
work, and her health deteriorated to the point where she was
wheelchair-bound and facing a progressively grim future. Through
rigorous scientific study and clinical trials, she developed a
groundbreaking diet and lifestyle protocol that allows people to take
control of their health, reversing many chronic disease states,
including her own. She is the author of The Wahls Protocol: A Radical New Way to Treat All Chronic Autoimmune Conditions Using Paleo Principles, as well as an accompanying cookbook, The Wahls Protocol Cooking for Life.
What is your personal journey with multiple sclerosis?
In
2000, I had problems walking, which led to the MS diagnosis. After
consulting the best doctors and taking the newest drugs, I went downhill
anyway. At my lowest point, already in a tilt-recline wheelchair, I
realized that conventional medicine wasn’t going to stop my decline into
a bedridden, possibly demented state with intractable face pain due to
trigeminal neuralgia.
My physicians introduced me to the work of Loren Cordain,
who developed the paleo diet, so after 20 years of being a vegetarian, I
went back to eating meat; gave up grains, legumes and dairy. I also
studied the basic science for animal models of multiple sclerosis,
Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and ALS, and decided that mitochondria—the
organelles that generate the energy that cells use to run the chemistry
of life—were leading to my early loss of myelin and brain cells. I also
discovered The Institute for Functional Medicine and took their course
in neuroprotection. Based on the science, I devised a supplement program
to support my mitochondria. My decline slowed.
Then
came my “Aha!” moment: What if I redesigned my paleo diet, combining
ancestral health with functional medicine principles, relying less on
supplements and more on food to support my mitochondria? I did that, and
my pain, brain fog and fatigue resolved. I began to get stronger,
started walking. In three months, I was able to go for a bike ride with
my family around the block for the first time in six years. It felt
miraculous.
It changed the way I think about disease
and how I practice medicine. I now talk to patients about diet,
lifestyle, exercise, toxics exposures and stress management, and I’m
able to stabilize, reverse and greatly improve their blood pressure,
blood sugar, pain and chronic diseases that I was struggling to manage
using the latest drugs.
What have you learned about resilience?
People
who maintain a sense of control have more robust immune function and
are generally healthier. Many of my patients say that their diagnosis
ended up being a tremendous gift because it allowed them to take stock
of their lives and understand their priorities. That’s true for me. If I
eat gluten, dairy or eggs, or I’m exposed to too much stress or toxins,
my trigeminal neuralgia will turn on and I’ll have horrific facial
pain, but I consider it to be a tremendous gift, because that’s my
barometer for the inflammation levels in my brain, which reminds me to
look at my triggers and recommit to my self-care. We teach patients how
to track their biosensors.
Are you cured of MS?
No.
I still have the genetic vulnerability and lesions in my spinal cord,
and will always be sensitive to gluten, dairy and eggs. If I become
severely stressed or don’t sleep, I’ll probably have a problem again. I
caution all of my patients: If you go back to your previous diet and
lifestyle, your disease states will return.
Isn’t it easier to just take a prescription drug for symptoms?
It’s
a smaller level of effort, but they’re not cures, either. The
underlying disease state progresses, so people typically need higher
doses of their medications. They also develop co-morbid diagnoses that
require new medications. Conventional medicine is effective for some
symptom improvements, but it has never been evaluated for improving
global health, whereas studies have shown that improving diet quality
and incorporating exercise and meditation will improve multiple chemical
pathways in the body, gene expression and your microbiome, and
dramatically improve health outcomes across many disease states.
For more information, including diet protocol guidelines and online courses, visit TerryWahls.com.
Sandra Yeyati, J.D., is a professional writer. Reach her at [email protected].