Originally posted by Dr. Davis on 2017-10-24
on the Wheat Belly Blog,
sourced from and currently found at: Infinite Health Blog.
PCM forum Index
of WB Blog articles.
Witchcraft
or simply the adverse effects of consuming rye?

Rye has the unique potential
to be infected with a parasitic fungus, Claviceps
purpurea, that produces a human toxin called ergotamine.
When ingested via, say, a loaf of rye bread, it exerts
a range of hallucinogenic effects on humans, partly
because it is converted to lysergic acid diethylamide,
commonly known as LSD.
History is filled with
fascinating and terrifying stories of humans exposed
to rye and ergotamine. Because some victims afflicted
with contaminated rye experienced an intense dermatitis
(skin inflammation), the condition became known as
St. Anthony’s Fire, named after the early 11th-century
sanctuary operated by monks to treat victims of ergot
poisoning. During the Middle Ages, writers described
hysterical outbursts afflicting previously normal people,
including thrashing and writhing while shouting,
“I’m burning!” The afflicted would eventually
collapse, after which their bodies would blacken. And
at least one observer has ascribed the madness of the
Salem witch trials to ergotamine poisoning after
determining that many of the 19 young women accused
of being witches lived near a rye field.
A “witch cake” made of rye flour was fed to
a dog to confirm a “bewitching” effect. The rye itself
was, of course, entirely innocent, since it was the
common parasitic infestation of the grass that was
to blame. But, as with so many other matters
surrounding the relationship between the seeds of
grasses and the hapless humans who try to consume
them, it should come as no surprise that it is a
relationship fraught with danger.
The history of rye consumption
dates back to the early days of wheat consumption, when
humans first experimented with consuming einkorn (the
ancient predecessor of modern wheat). Rye, was another
grass that grew as a weed in fields of wheat. This is
a prefect example of Vavilovian mimicry, or the ability
of a weed to mimic a cultivated plant. This weed came
to be recognized by humans as yet another seed of a
grass that could be consumed, and farmers often
harvested both wheat and rye with the same sickle or
thresher without bothering to separate them. Rye has
gained some blessings in nutritional circles because
compared to wheat, it has less potential to trigger
insulin, despite identical potential for raising
blood sugar.
Rye and wheat share a high
content of gliadin protein, with all its potentially
toxic effects. Rye gliadin is called secalin, although
the structures are nearly identical. The secalin
protein has similar potential to do bad things as its
gliadin counterpart. Likewise, the lectin of rye is
nearly identical to wheat’s destructive lectin, wheat
germ agglutinin, and therefore shares its potential
for causing intestinal toxicity, clumping red blood
cells, provoking abnormal growth of immune system
lymphocytes, and mimicking insulin. Rye shares with
wheat a peculiar and only recently recognized
phenomenon: the formation of acrylamide, a compound
believed to be a carcinogen and neurotoxin. Rye and
wheat contain a high content of the amino acid
asparagine, which, when heated at high temperatures
during baking or deep-frying, reacts with the plentiful
carbohydrates present to form acrylamide. (It also
forms in French fries.) Modern reliance on
nitrogen-rich synthetic fertilizers also boosts the
asparagine content of rye and wheat, increasing
acrylamide formation further. For all practical
purposes, given the crossbreeding that has occurred
via natural Vavilovian means as well as the breeding
efforts of humans, the differences are minor,
meaning that they are virtually one and the same.
Being wheat-free should also mean being rye-free.
