Guest guest Posted December 11, 2001 Report Share Posted December 11, 2001 I spent a good couple hours tonight looking at stuff. Many sites on enzymes continued to say that proteases should be started s-l-o-w-l- y especially with person have gastritis, inflammation, and probably entercolitis (not specifically stated but entercolitis means " inflammed gut " ). Two places gave the time-line of starting other enzymes first to help heal the gut and then slowly adding in proteases over the course of 4 weeks. This may correspond with some of the folks having to introduce the Peptizyde or other strong protease very slowly whereas other people don't have to. Also, the Zyme Prime and most general all-purpose enzyme products do contain some protease. Now, the next question is....how to you determine if you or your child happens to be one of the people in this group??? Any one have any ideas? The test I saw was a gastoscopy which seems kind of invasive: " you may be given a sedative (or narcotic) to relieve anxiety and discomfort before the test. A local anesthetic is sprayed into the mouth and throat area. Then a flexible fiberoptic tube is passed through the mouth and down the esophagus and enters the stomach. The tube may pass through to the duodenum if necessary. The tube allows the health care provider to see the various parts and take a biopsy (sample) and to suction off secretions. The sample is taken to the laboratory to be examined.: All the references for yeast control say to add enzymes, especially proteases, to help counter it. . 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.