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zinc, etc. and diet

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I got liquid zinc from Kirkman's but one of the ingredients is

propylene glycol. Does anyone know what that is?

Also, my son has been on gfcf diet with not much success for six months. He

continues to be as picky as he was before pre-diet. He eats pancakes, fried

fish and chicken gfcf, raisins, cookies I make but have been able to go

beyond that.

Please help if you can. Any new food I show him he refuses to eat.

Lana

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All I know about it is that the airline industry uses it to de-ice

their airplanes! My brother-in-law was a mechanic for Continental, my

husband worked the ramp, and my sister and I also worked for them, so this

is a FACT, not just hear-say.

As for getting your son to eat new foods -- what I sometimes do, is get

a 6-hole muffin tin and put small amounts of a variety of foods in it. My

boys love the different " plate " and they have plenty of choices, so even if

they don't touch some of the stuff, they eat something.

zinc, etc. and diet

> I got liquid zinc from Kirkman's but one of the ingredients is

> propylene glycol. Does anyone know what that is?

>

> Also, my son has been on gfcf diet with not much success for six months.

He

> continues to be as picky as he was before pre-diet. He eats pancakes,

fried

> fish and chicken gfcf, raisins, cookies I make but have been able to go

> beyond that.

>

> Please help if you can. Any new food I show him he refuses to eat.

>

>

> Lana

>

>

>

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Jim is correct. It is used to de-ice planes because the freezing point of

propylene glycol is -59 degrees C.

In addition, proylene glycol is a safe, effective pharmaceutical excipient

which acts as a humectant and solubilizer. Without the proylene glycol in

the zinc liquid, the zinc would fall out of solution.

Propylene glycol is listed in the United States Pharmacopeia as a

pharmaceutical aid. It must meet strict purity standards to gain the USP

designation.

The Merck Index defines propylene glycol as a viscous, harmless liquid when

taken internally. It is actually considered safer than glycerine when

ingested.

The American Pharmaceutical Association describes PG as a humectant,

solubilizer and stabilizer of vitamins.

This ingredient has been used safely for decades in pharmaceuticals and

nutritional supplements. Kirkman would not use an unsafe ingredient.

The grade of PG used to spray airplane wings is a commercial, unpurified

grade. Pharmaceuticals utilize the USP grade.

Re: zinc, etc. and diet

All I know about it is that the airline industry uses it to de-ice

their airplanes! My brother-in-law was a mechanic for Continental, my

husband worked the ramp, and my sister and I also worked for them, so this

is a FACT, not just hear-say.

As for getting your son to eat new foods -- what I sometimes do, is get

a 6-hole muffin tin and put small amounts of a variety of foods in it. My

boys love the different " plate " and they have plenty of choices, so even if

they don't touch some of the stuff, they eat something.

zinc, etc. and diet

> I got liquid zinc from Kirkman's but one of the ingredients is

> propylene glycol. Does anyone know what that is?

>

> Also, my son has been on gfcf diet with not much success for six months.

He

> continues to be as picky as he was before pre-diet. He eats pancakes,

fried

> fish and chicken gfcf, raisins, cookies I make but have been able to go

> beyond that.

>

> Please help if you can. Any new food I show him he refuses to eat.

>

>

> Lana

>

>

>

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