Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 In a message dated 5/30/2004 5:50:03 PM Eastern Standard Time, weinert@... writes: > Is there a good place to look to understand enzyme units better? Honestly, I would just get the Houston's and be done with it. So many people do better on them than Kirkman's. If they don't help you can always try the others. Nell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 Hi, Me again. Still trying to compare Houston and Kirkman enzymes. I looked at this site: www.enzymestuff.com It recommends FCC units. Only a few of the Houston's enzymes and none of the Kirkman's seem to be in these units. I did discover that 150 FCCLU = 1,267 LU for lipase. Is there a good place to look to understand enzyme units better? I realize there are other factors to consider, but I would like to understand how the ingredients compare. Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2004 Report Share Posted May 31, 2004 Email Houston directly or call and ask questions. Pam > Hi, > > Me again. Still trying to compare Houston and Kirkman enzymes. > > I looked at this site: > > www.enzymestuff.com > > It recommends FCC units. > > Only a few of the Houston's enzymes and none of the Kirkman's seem to > be in these units. > > I did discover that 150 FCCLU = 1,267 LU for lipase. > > Is there a good place to look to understand enzyme units better? I > realize there are other factors to consider, but I would like to > understand how the ingredients compare. > > Thanks, > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2004 Report Share Posted May 31, 2004 >>>> It recommends FCC units. Yes, you need FCC units. Otherwise it is a free-for-all and you don't know if there are any active enzymes in the product at all. >>>> Only a few of the Houston's enzymes and none of the Kirkman's seem to be in these units. Which ones are you interested in? I think they are there but maybe aren't that obvious. >>>>Is there a good place to look to understand enzyme units better? I realize there are other factors to consider, but I would like to > understand how the ingredients compare. You are wise to do so. In the Enzymes for Autism book there is a list in the Reference section (pages 318-321). However, here is a quick list here. I have added every conversion I could find from every source I come across. ======================== For microbial and plant derived enzymes: 1 FCC LU = 8.4 LU (units for lipase) 1000 FIP = 10,000 LU (units for lipase) 1 GAL = 2 AGSU (units for alpha-galactose) 10 GDU (gelatin digesting units) = 15 MCU (milk clotting units) 30 DU = 1 AG (units for amylase) 100 BTU = 1,956,522 FCC PU (units for protease) 100 HU = 88 HUT (units for protease) 160 SU = more than 20 IAU (units for sucrase) chymotrypsin 1 mg = 1000 USP units trypsin 1 mg – 25,000 USP units papain 1 mg = 6000 USP units ======================== For pancreatic (or animal) derived enzymes: The U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP) helped by establishing a standard for the pancreatic enzymes (animal-derived) by which you can compare other enzyme supplements, such as plant- and microbial-derived. This standard is called `X' and contains an equivalent of: 25 USP units of amylase, 2 USP units of lipase, and 25 USP units of proteolytic enzymes If a supplement contains 5X pancreatic enzymes, it would provide five times the amount of each of the enzymes in this standard, or 125 USP amylase, 10 USP lipase, and 123 USP protease. There is no direct conversion between USP units and FCC units, because they are produced from different sources, using different methods. ======================== A footnote: If you have a product that lists one enzyme with multiple units, this means that the one enzyme was assayed by different methods, and all the measure types are listed for you. It does NOT mean that you add all the measurements together and thus get one enzyme in several different quantities. For example, Tyler Similase lists: Protease I, II, III, IV at 30,000 USP 48,750 PC 82,000 HUT This means the protease listed was measured in USP, PC, and HUT units. You get one quantity of protease and pick the measurement you prefer for evaluation for your convenience. It does not mean you get three different quantities of protease: 30,000 USP AND 48,750 PC AND 82,000 HUT. If you run across any units or 'zymes you can't figure out, please post those and I will see if it can't be located somewhere. . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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