Fermented Food and Athlete’s Foot

A few weeks ago I went away for a 3-day weekend. It was my first trip away from home since I became enamored of fermented food. I did not plan well and took along only 2 cups of yogurt.

When I got home — and resumed my usual high fermented-food intake — I seemed to have a very mild cold. That was unusual; I almost never get detectable colds. Even more unusual was that I had a small case of athlete’s foot. Uh-oh. I planned to but some anti-fungal cream. I forgot, however. The next day, to my surprise, my athlete’s foot was almost gone. The following days it cleared up completely.

I had not had athlete’s foot for a long time. In the past, however, it did not go away by itself. I had had to use antifungal cream. Now, apparently, my immune system was working much better.

My interpretation is that during that weekend away, my immune function took a sudden dip. Perhaps part of the reason was that I did not sleep as well as usual but I suspect most of the reason was the decrease in my fermented-food intake.

Whatever the reason I got athlete’s foot that weekend, the fact that it went away without any special treatment suggests that all that anti-fungal cream in the drugstore implies that many Americans have suboptimal immune function. The Wikipedia entry for athlete’s foot says nothing about good immune function as a means of prevention. As if the hundred-odd people who wrote the article had no idea that what happened to me — it went away on its own — could happen. We are in the pre-John-Snow era here. The most basic practical point about athlete’s foot — you won’t get it if your immune system is working well — isn’t widely understood.

If you read Example 5 of my long self-experimentation paper, you will see that I used to get ordinary colds at an ordinary rate but after I started sleeping much better they stopped. Which points to the same conclusion as the incident I described here: A large fraction of Americans have suboptimal immune function. Some people will say: “Of course!” But they will go on to say, “The average American eats so much junk!” And I think that’s wrong. I think the problem is 1. Poor sleep. 2. Too little fermented food. The self-confident nutritionista will never mention either one.

9 thoughts on “Fermented Food and Athlete’s Foot

  1. If your immune system can not withstand 3-day lack of yogurt then the immune system was not optimal to begin with.
    Suggest cut out flax seeds.

  2. I would be very worried if my immune system was so dependent on fermented food intake. Maybe you need to slowly cut back on the amount and frequency going forward.

  3. I am thinking that frequency and amount of fermented food intake should be random – similar to exercise frequency and intensity as described by Arthur De Vany (Evolutionary Fitness).

  4. I would like to make a comment that you may be jumping the gun on a weak immune system and athlete’s foot. While my immune system is quick to respond to other illnesses- i have been– in the past– subject to getting fungal problems on my feet. Here is a list of reasons why problems could have occured:

    1: old shoes— fungus has had a chance to gain a foothold.
    2: wearing the same sock and shoes all day when you are active. (more sweating– the fungus likes warm areas of low oxygen)
    ——-wearing tight shoes or socks would possibly be a problem!
    3: have you changed the type of soap you wash with

  5. noticed that certain soaps that dry my feet out make it more likely for a fungal infection to gain a foothold– so i have to be careful about what products I use.
    4: how much do you sweat? I’m postive that people who sweat more have a higher risk of athlete’s foot. the question is, would you have this problem if you were barefoot?

  6. As an aside, i have also noticed that my chance of athlete’s foot has actually gone up (!!) when I’ve consumed a lot of fermented products (natto, alcohol, probiotic supplements)

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