Guest guest Posted July 29, 2004 Report Share Posted July 29, 2004 No problem asking questions! That's how to get answers. >>>> Could I get a basic overview of what enzymes are and do.. where I can get them, etc. You can look here: www.enzymestuff.com If you start with the list of links under Enzyme Basics on the left hand side of the screen, it will walk you through the basics in a logical order. There are many other links, including on some supplements, diets, various conditions, etc if you are interested in certain things. >>>>Due to prematurity had a lot of oral motor, feeding issues and docs advised not doing elimination diet because they'd starve. Right. This can happen when a person's neuro-feedback system isn't working right. Although the line, " he will eat when he gets hungry enough " may work for neuro-typical kids, it doesn't work for all the non-neuro-typcial ones. >>>>I am waiting (should be in the next couple of days) to get the book Enzymes and Autism I think it's called... From what I've seen on > this group... There are two things my sons could be taking - > Peptizyde and HN-ZYme prime - is that correct? Peptizyde is the product that is effective enough to allow many, many families have used over the past 3 years to leave or replace a GFCF diet, including mine. Some people still need diet particularly in the beginning. If you just want to supplement for trace amounts of casein and gluten, there are several other products as well. I just assume start with the most effective one first, but that's me. Zyme Prime isn't for use instead of GFCF. It is a broadspectrum product to help breakdown all types of food (carbs, sugars, fats, proteins). There are many broad-spectrum products around. One thing to consider is that it is often helpful to give a strong protease product separately than or in addition to a broad-spectrum product. The reason is that proteases can do many other types of pro-active healing (immune system, healing gut tissue, fighting pathogens, reducing inflammation and pain, etc). And if the gut if really injured, the person might not be able to tolerate a lot of proteases. Being able to dose the proteases separately can be a great success to enzymes. >>>> Is their basic function to make the GFCF elimination happen quicker or be more effective? For Peptizyde, yes. What is interesting is that just about everyone on GFCF sees more improvement when enzymes are added. And some people even see the most improvement when Peptizyde is given OFF GFCF. That is, they child does best with casein and gluten foods in the diet plus Peptizyde. Don't really know the reason for this but it probably has to do with something nutritious in the casein/gluten foods that was lacking on GFCF. >>>>I read a study that talks about the results, but I'm curious as to the basis/logic - what do they do. Are they taken in conjunction with the B vitamins and anti-fungal. Also are they prescription or over the counter. Digestive enzymes are proteins made up of the same amino acids that other proteins are made of. Their job is to breakdown foods. Different enzymes work on different foods and have different jobs. This means that you get the nutrition and energy from the food you eat. The premise of the GFCF diet is that 2 partial proteins are insufficiently digested. So instead of taking all the food out of the diet, if you take an enzyme that can sufficiently break down the foods, you have replaced the diet. Other diets are built on other premises. Depends on the person as well but that is the short-answer. Enzymes are not nutrients in themselves and so good food or nutrition (like vitamins/minerals) are needed in the system. Put good nutrition in the body and then the enzymes digest and assist with absorption of that nutrition. Without enzymes, you body can't really use anything you put in it. So any food, supplements, or meds might be just passing on through and out the other end. Digestive enzymes are mostly over the counter, but some are sold prescription. They are considered a safe food. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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