Guest guest Posted December 17, 2001 Report Share Posted December 17, 2001 I know that this board is basically for the HNI enzymes, and I believe that these enzymes are probably the most beneficial because they are specifically formulated for our kids. But, I am curious to know if anyone uses the Peptizyde but also uses a different brand of enzymes along with it other than the Zyme Prime. From what I understand so far, ZP is mostly an all-around enzyme for good digestion. So, would other all-purpose enzymes work just as good? I found a brand at a health food store that is in tablet form. They are gluten-free/casein-free and the person I talked to said I could get a tablet crusher and use the enzymes the same way I would if it were a capsule. The tablets have a variety of enzymes in them including 2000 mg. of Pancreatin USP (400 mg.), 200 mg. of Amylase, 200 mg. Protease, some Lipase, Bromelain, Papain, etc. I don't know how to figure the differences between milligrams and USP units. Can anyone help? --Vicky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2001 Report Share Posted December 17, 2001 >>But, I am curious to know if anyone uses the Peptizyde but also uses a different brand of enzymes along with it other than the Zyme Prime. I was using the bottle of Vital Zyme Forte for awhile and then the EnzyMedica Carbo, which as also comparative broad-spectrum enzyme products. Truly, for us I didn't see any difference. We do not have any known food sensitivities such as tomatoes or potatoes or chocolate that a broad-spectrum product might particularly target. So for us, it was good enough and I wouldn't have a problem using them. The Vital Zyme Forte has a nice inexpensive price and it is in gel caps. I like having that around in case I miss the 30 minute wait time, and it is just another alternative to mixing the enzymes or putting them in a gel capsule myself. The Carbo for activity and price equals the Zyme Prime, but it is like 2 Zyme Prime capsules in one, so I would need to use only half a capsule each time (mixing or transfering again). So this is a convenience/laziness factor. Other broad-spectrum products that haven't been mentioned much and I have looked at include a new one (brand new in November) from the company that makes Primal Defense called OmegaZyme: http://www.vital-nutrients.com/omegazyme.htm I haven't seen it in the stores yet, but it is brand new. This has a ton of things in it plus some gut healing herbs and probiotics. Here is the profile, the last ones don't have numbers on the site: Protease HUT 65,000 Amylase DU 20,000 Lipase FCCLU 3,000 Cellulase CU 1,500 Lactase ALU 750 Alpha-G YES Glucoamylase YES Invertase YES Malt Diastase YES Pectinase YES Xylanase YES Bromelain YES Papain YES Probiotics YES Botanicals YES It also contains hemicellulase, mannanase, phytase, beta-glucanase, arabinosidase, ginger extract, turmeric, barley grass, cat's claw. Looks like a good one for someone with celiac. There is PrepZymes sold all over the internet. Here is one spot: http://www.purplemountainproducts.com/aim_prepzymes.html. Health food stores sell KidZyme and ParaZyme (good for stomach health because of good gut bug support). As for the tablet crushing, I don't know if that " releases " the enzymes better or if some enzyme activity is lost in the tableting process. There basically isn't a conversion between milligrams and USP units. One is weight and one is activity level and there is no standard every manufacturer must follow. So you have to always go by activity. With enzymes, you can have 50 mg of " dead, inactive " enzymes which won't do anything - just like probiotics. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 17, 2001 Report Share Posted December 17, 2001 > As for the tablet crushing, I don't know if that " releases " the > enzymes better or if some enzyme activity is lost in the tableting > process. There basically isn't a conversion between milligrams and > USP units. One is weight and one is activity level and there is no > standard every manufacturer must follow. So you have to always go by activity. With enzymes, you can have 50 mg of " dead, inactive " > enzymes which won't do anything - just like probiotics. > > . , are you saying that, if the bottle says milligrams on it, then it is probably not active enzymes? The active enzymes will have HUT or USP or something like that??? --Vicky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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