Saturday 24 September 2016

FODMAPs 01 – Data collection

There’s something in my diet that ain’t sitting right. It makes me feel bloated, fatigued and just damn uncomfortable. It’s been like this for years, though it’s been tolerable. Recently I went to a dietitian/nutritionist to learn more about what I should and should not shove down my mouth.

After describing my general diet, I received advice that will sound obvious to most. I need more fruits, vegetables, fibre and water.
“How many fruits and veges am I supposed to eat?”, I asked.
“Two serves of fruit, three serves of vegetables a day.”
“Oh, so the recommendation hasn’t changed since kindergarten?”. I was really hoping that it had been scaled back to two fruits per day. Or one magic fruit pill.

I took the advice as best as I could manage (who has time to eat five serves of vegetables a day? Takes so long to chew). There were marginal improvements. I felt less bloated and fatigued, so my decisions were leading me in the right direction. Similarly, I had stopped drinking coffee back in March and noted improvements. Each dietary change added an improvement.

However, I still feel uncomfortable. Years ago I attempted to rectify my dietary issues with data. I recorded what foods I was eating and what symptoms I felt day to day with the intention to analyse my way to a remedy. I planned to “net” what foods caused upset. I never got around to the analysis.

I’m getting around to it now. I have the right tools.

The nutritionist said I should try a low FODMAP diet. FODMAPs are a group of carbohydrate that are poorly digested. After a FODMAP diet of at least 6 weeks, I’ll gradually reintroduce different FODMAP groups and note my tolerance. I can identify my problem foods then avoid them. But not ice cream. If ice cream is a problem food, I’ll just take lactase beforehand.

I need an app that collects my food intake. I’ve used myfitnesspal in the past. When I Googled for instructions on exporting my data, I couldn’t find a clear guide, or it was a paid option. I can log foods with the Fitbit app, however retrieving the data is also not easy. The Fitbit R scraper I use does not retrieve food data. I would have to access my data via an API.

Instead I’ll use the Memento Database app. Memento Database allows users to customise fields for data capture then easily export the data as CSV. My “Food” library captures the foods or ingredients I consume with the current datetime captured upon entry. I will use short general labels for foods and ingredients as possible since I’d like to group the foods for analysis.

My “Symptoms” library captures a symptom with the datetime. I used to enter detailed symptom descriptions. I want to keep it brief. I'll include feelings of "Fatigue" or feeling "Bloated". The symptoms will be placed in a single-choice list. I expect that these symptoms will decrease as I persist with the lower FODMAP diet. The symptoms will increase when I reintroduce the problem FODMAP groups. Ice cream will totally be fine. Totally.

I will combine this food and symptom data with Fitbit data, namely calories burned, weight and sleep. I’m curious to see if my weight changes with the diet (assuming little change in the calories burned day-to-day) or if my sleep improves. 

In say, 6 weeks’ time, I’ll have data to wrangle then analyse.

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