Guest guest Posted August 28, 2003 Report Share Posted August 28, 2003 My only personal experience was high proton pressure readings (82+) and not being familiar with the clients health history asked for an explanation. " I take medication to reduce stomach acidity and help digestive problems" Why stomach problems? (no injury or surgery, etc.) " Oh I have had stomach/digestive problems since I was three" Pharmaceuticals treating symptom, which actually whacks pH balance. Stomach needs pH balance for proper digestion. Real cause of problem (in this case unexplained development of digestive problems) needs to be worked at emotional/NLP level. Hope this helps. Barry at www.quantumwellnesscenter.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2003 Report Share Posted September 1, 2003 Tricia wrote: Does anyone know how we can determine this or if a person's hypo reactivity could be "masked" as high gastric acidity--reacting positively to Tagammet, Zantac, etc. HYPERchloryhydria is less common than HYPOchlorydria, but the former can indeed mask the latter. Hyper in itself can be caused by gastritis (inflammation of stomach lining without peptic ulceration - many causal factors including psychological stress) or duodenal ulceration. So check for inflammation or ulceration on the QX. Hypo is more common especially with age and nutrient deficiency. There will be lots of symptoms you can check against - poor protein digestion, putrefaction, halitosis, high load of acid-fast bacteria in the bowel, slow emptying of stomach, pernicious anaemia (in the long run), bloating etc. etc. You should find many indications on the QX if she is lacking in HCl. Use the simple lemon juice test for HCl. Be well, Azizah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 3, 2003 Report Share Posted September 3, 2003 Thanks for the dialogue on the above issue. Here is what we found: the stomach ring shown in the eyes shows she is hypo, but she just was tested positive for H-Pylori (causing hyperchlorydia). The hypo is a chronic condition. Before her doctor tested her, QX showed high reactivity for campylobacter but not H-Pylori. An interesting case. Thanks for the help! Tricia > > Does anyone know how we can determine this or if a person's hypo reactivity > could be " masked " as high gastric acidity--reacting positively to Tagammet, > Zantac, etc. > > HYPERchloryhydria is less common than HYPOchlorydria, but the former can > indeed mask the latter. > > Hyper in itself can be caused by gastritis (inflammation of stomach lining > without peptic ulceration - many causal factors including psychological stress) > or duodenal ulceration. So check for inflammation or ulceration on the QX. > > Hypo is more common especially with age and nutrient deficiency. There will > be lots of symptoms you can check against - poor protein digestion, > putrefaction, halitosis, high load of acid-fast bacteria in the bowel, slow emptying of > stomach, pernicious anaemia (in the long run), bloating etc. etc. You should > find many indications on the QX if she is lacking in HCl. > > Use the simple lemon juice test for HCl. > > Be well, Azizah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 3, 2003 Report Share Posted September 3, 2003 Showing my ignorance here - what is the simple lemon juice test please? Celia, UK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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