Guest guest Posted October 14, 2001 Report Share Posted October 14, 2001 1. I said I thought you got a cute little measuring scoop with the bottle of EnzymAid Complete powder. You don't. What I saw on the display table must have been for a different product. 2. I previously point out that in Kirkman's new supplement catalog on page 51 it has this statement, " Dr. Pangborn (in conjunction with Dr. Bernard Rimland) formulated the first digestive enzyme specifically designed to meet the needs for degrading opiate peptides resulting from the incomplete digestion of casein and gluten. " Okay, I am confused. If they are referring to EnzymAid, this could be formulated by Dr. Pangborn, but I thought that SerenAid was the first enzyme product designed for autists and the opiate problem. If they mean SerenAid was the first enzyme product, I think it was Dr. Houston who FORMULATED the product. Dr. Pangborn, Dr. Rimland and others had the idea and worked on the product/project, but Devin formulated it and got it to finally work. Either way, this sentence is problematic. The web site and literature that comes with the DPP IV Forte analog now reads: " Dr. Pangborn, in conjunction with Bernard Rimland, Ph.D. (Founder of the Autism Research Institute) directed the DAN! research project on the very first digestive enzyme with high peptidase and DPP-IV activity. " So although Dr. Houston is still not credited with his contribution in formulating the first digestive enzyme product for autists (SerenAid), this sentence has been " fixed. " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
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.