Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Eyes.....

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Often dry, itchy eyes is allergies and coconut oil does help that.

Also I would add good enzymes (I like the brand enzymedica) a good

probiotic (Primal Defense, Nature's Biotics, Healthy Trinity--I've

tried all of those with great success! If you like kefir grains is

also another excellent idea! If you decide to purchase a probiotic,

when you look at the price remember--you usually get what you pay

for. A bottle for $7.99 is simply not going to give you the

results...and if it is a live probotic and not refrigerated on the

way to the health food store it is a waste of money. Be sure and ask,

you'd be amazed at how many of them are not. Healthy Trinity is

always. The other two are not live but SBO's, so no need for

refrigeration.) and MSM. If you have any kind of ailments my top two

choices would be coconut oil and MSM! And I also think everyone,

especially our children, should be taking a good probiotic and

getting good omega 3 essential fatty acids in conjuction with a

healthy diet--which of course includes coconut oil. :) Best to you,

Caitlin Lorraine

>I sometimes have dry, itchy eyes. Would CO help, do youthink?

>Sharon

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Sharon

I have tried using vcno on my eyelids when my eyes got itchy, specially near the

tear ducts. I f irst wash my eyes. I did not put it directly inside the eyes

thoough. It did remove the itchiness. It is normally the eyelids that itch and

not the eyeball.

Eyes.....

I sometimes have dry, itchy eyes. Would CO help, do youthink?

Sharon

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> Often dry, itchy eyes is allergies and coconut oil does help that.

> Also I would add good enzymes (I like the brand enzymedica) a good

> probiotic (Primal Defense, Nature's Biotics, Healthy Trinity--I've

> tried all of those with great success! If you like kefir grains is

> also another excellent idea!

If your good gut bacteria are only 50 per cent out you might easily

require 250 capsules of probiotic daily to provide the other 50% of

your natural fecal bifidobacteria! Interesting concept. Here's the

calculation: http://zeek.ca/4u/article.php?op=Print & sid=173

The journal Gastroenterology questions the wisdom of supplementing

bowel bacteria that are not native to the human bowel (such as Primal

Defense). Also, continuing to supplement with transient soil-based

bacteria when you really need permanent bowel flora in your gut

doesn't make a lot of sense.

Besides, hardly anyone needs to " seed " their bowel culture; that's

already done. It makes more sense to simply feed your native culture

an inexpensive prebiotic that we only get at about 1/5 of historic

levels and let nature take its course. This has been working for more

than 5,000 years and it's still a reliable way to correct bowel

flora. Where they used to use whole food broth to do it, we also have

the option of using just the food component that does the work --

inulin.

Duncan Crow

> If you decide to purchase a probiotic,

> when you look at the price remember--you usually get what you pay for.

> A bottle for $7.99 is simply not going to give you the results...and

> if it is a live probotic and not refrigerated on the way to the health

> food store it is a waste of money. Be sure and ask, you'd be amazed at

> how many of them are not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...