Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Hi ; My inulin is inexpensive AND I get credit for it Here's the link to the inulin and the science: http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/inulin_prebiotic_probiotic.html Lung mucus, restricted airway and bathing difficulaty points to toxin load all right, and paticulaly glutathione depletion. You can find the science for glutathione in asthma and lung on the list on this page: http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-refernces.html Like said, vitamin b6, selenium and cold-procesed whey. I've reduced COPD with a program that included that plus vitamin C and vitamin E (the b6 was in b-complex) Duncan Duncan > > Hi all: > > I'm still trying to figure out what is causing my chronic lung > mucus/throat-clearing. I've considered everything from candida to LPR > (silent reflux) to allergies to intestinal dysbiosis.. or some > mixture of the above. I'd like to know if there would be some way of > diagnosing dysbiosis without getting an indican test? I'd be > interested to hear how much it costs, if anyone has had it, just for > interest's sake. I'd rather save the money and spend it on inulin and > probiotics, since I'm assuming that's the " fix " anyway... > > I would think, for example, that if you have bad dysbiosis, you'd > have maybe a rash (I never get rashes) or bad (poorly-formed) b- m'rs > (mine are pretty good since I've been chelating and taking Cortef)? > > I'd appreciate any comments or help in sorting this out, as it's > really beginning to drive me NuTz! Maybe I should " spring " for some > allergy tests ($400-600)? Can someone recommend a good source/brand > of inulin (as it's one of the FEW things I have NOT tried over the > past 15-20 years... > > Thank-you in advance, > -michael > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Hi Duncan, My daughter (3 1/2) has a chronic wet cough, with an occasional spiking of symptoms with an acute asthma attack that lasts for about 48 hours. She is anaphalactically allergic to casein, even in trace amounts. How would you recommend that I increase her levels of glutathione? Thanks! Marla Lung mucus, restricted airway and bathing difficulaty points to toxin load all right, and paticulaly glutathione depletion. You can find the science for glutathione in asthma and lung on the list on this page: http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-refernces.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 In a message dated 10/10/2006 12:28:49 PM Central Daylight Time, yoonit@... writes: .. I'd like to know if there would be some way of diagnosing dysbiosis without getting an indican test? I'd be What is and indican test? How is it done? <>kathy<> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Cystine or N-acetylcysteine will also increase glutathione levels, but NAC at least must be taken every four or five hours due to its very short half life in the body. A little kid might do with 50-100 mg every four hours. As usual the selenium is necessary too, in the baby's case about 50 mcg daily (and a b-complex) would be ballpark, depending on whether and how much selenium is present in your drinking water in amounts that will also offset the arsenic in the drinking water. Arsenic is known to be a huge problem. Another area of prime concern pertains to bad information on the list with regard to selenium dosage. Although Bee maintains that there is adequate selenium in Celtic sea salt to meet one's needs, the manufacturer of Celtic sea salt says on their own website that the selenium traces are so low the lab could not even measure them. An antioxidant pogram should also contain at least vitamin C, E, and as points out, possibly A (or at least beta-carotenes), plus vitamin D3 to make up for the " not milk " rule. Duncan > > Hi Duncan, > > My daughter (3 1/2) has a chronic wet cough, with an occasional spiking of > symptoms with an acute asthma attack that lasts for about 48 hours. She is > anaphalactically allergic to casein, even in trace amounts. How would you > recommend that I increase her levels of glutathione? > > Thanks! > Marla > > > > > Lung mucus, restricted airway and bathing difficulaty points to toxin > load all right, and paticulaly glutathione depletion. You can find > the science for glutathione in asthma and lung on the list on this > page: > > http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-refernces.html > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Marla, > My daughter (3 1/2) has a chronic wet cough, with an occasional spiking of > symptoms with an acute asthma attack that lasts for about 48 hours. She is > anaphalactically allergic to casein, even in trace amounts. How would you > recommend that I increase her levels of glutathione? Not only does pre-formed vitamin A (retinol from animal foods, especially liver and cod liver oil) exert a glutathione-sparing effect, but vitamin A is also important to asthma: asthmatic children have low blood levels of vitamin A in proportion to the severity of their asthma, vitamin A deficiency in animals causes a deficiency in M2R muscarinic receptors which are required for bronchial relaxation, vitamin A inhibits the migration and proliferation of smooth muscle cells in the bronchial airway, and vitamin A can counter allergic reactions by diverting bone marrow cells away from eosinophil differentiation, which is a type of cell that is involved in the allergic asthmatic response. Vitamin K2, which is found in grass-fed animal fats and lacto-fermented foods (and which is a different vitamin from vitamin K1, which is found in green vegetables and does NOT fulfill the functions of vitamin K2), was used in a highly successful placebo-controlled double-blind study to treat asthma in the 1970s. I don't know the mechanism, and there is no later research I've found yet. Chris -- The Truth About Cholesterol Find Out What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You: http://www.cholesterol-and-health.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Duncan, > An antioxidant pogram should also contain at least vitamin C, E, and > as points out, possibly A (or at least beta-carotenes), plus > vitamin D3 to make up for the " not milk " rule. Supplementing with beta-carotene is the LAST thing you want to do under conditions of oxidative stress, because carotenes are oxidized to eccentric cleavage products that induce cellular VITAMIN A DEFICIENCY. Milk can't supply vitamin D3 beyond what prevents overt deficiency; only seafood, pork or bovine blood (as in blood sausage), cod liver oil and daily, summer full-body sunshine (possibly year-round sunshine depending on latitude, but at most latitudes there is a portion of the year where dietary vitamin D3 is essential) can supply sufficient vitamin D3. To get an idea, you can have your 25OHD levels checked (do NOT get the 1,25OH2D test!) and they should be about 40-60 ng/mL. To convert to nmol/L multiply by 2.5 But " optimal " levels of vitamin D are dangerous unless the vitamin D3 is obtained with generous amounts of vitamins A and K2. The vitamin A must be preformed vitamin A from animal foods. Vitamin K2 is found in grass-fed animal fats and lactic acid fermented plant foods, although the form in animal foods is more biologically active. Chris -- The Truth About Cholesterol Find Out What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You: http://www.cholesterol-and-health.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Well done, Chris; thank you for the information that beta-carotene is contra-indicatd in oxidative stress. Howeve, once the kid is on the NAC or cystine ad selenium for even a few hours (NAC) to at most a couple of days (Cystine) there should be no oxidative stress; NAC is used epecially for serious oxidative stress especially in imminent or ongoing life-theatening liver liquefaction precisely because it works in minutes to hours. I agree that milk provides inadequate D3, but due to the " notmilk " clause is this case that won't be a problem, as I suggested a supplement. I use milk ad lib myself, three cod-liver oil gelcaps and a 1,000 IU D3 every day, even though I go outside four times a day, mainly covered up. I live just south of the 49th parallel. Also, I use amimal foods so I'm not concerned about my vitamin A levels, I get betacarotenes from vegetables and because vitamin K2 is also made by bacteria in the intestinal tract, like most of us without dysbiosis I'm OK there too. In this case with the kid all this information might be superfluous; we haven't established anything beyond toxic/oxidative stress, yielding asthma symptoms, exists at this point, although certainly we can't rule out other issues at this point either. As usual though your information is generally quite helpful. Duncan > > Duncan, > > > An antioxidant pogram should also contain at least vitamin C, E, and > > as points out, possibly A (or at least beta-carotenes), plus > > vitamin D3 to make up for the " not milk " rule. > > Supplementing with beta-carotene is the LAST thing you want to do > under conditions of oxidative stress, because carotenes are oxidized > to eccentric cleavage products that induce cellular VITAMIN A > DEFICIENCY. > > Milk can't supply vitamin D3 beyond what prevents overt deficiency; > only seafood, pork or bovine blood (as in blood sausage), cod liver > oil and daily, summer full-body sunshine (possibly year-round sunshine > depending on latitude, but at most latitudes there is a portion of the > year where dietary vitamin D3 is essential) can supply sufficient > vitamin D3. > > To get an idea, you can have your 25OHD levels checked (do NOT get the > 1,25OH2D test!) and they should be about 40-60 ng/mL. To convert to > nmol/L multiply by 2.5 > > But " optimal " levels of vitamin D are dangerous unless the vitamin D3 > is obtained with generous amounts of vitamins A and K2. The vitamin A > must be preformed vitamin A from animal foods. Vitamin K2 is found in > grass-fed animal fats and lactic acid fermented plant foods, although > the form in animal foods is more biologically active. > > Chris > -- > The Truth About Cholesterol > Find Out What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You: > http://www.cholesterol-and-health.com > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Duncan, > Howeve, once the kid is on the NAC or cystine ad selenium for even a > few hours (NAC) to at most a couple of days (Cystine) there should be > no oxidative stress; NAC is used epecially for serious oxidative > stress especially in imminent or ongoing life-theatening liver > liquefaction precisely because it works in minutes to hours. That's a good point, but we really have no idea to what extent beta-carotene tends increase or decrease cellular vitamin A because all that has ever been studied is blood levels, which are sort of irrelevant to the cellular picture; we only know that oxidative stress makes the situation worse. Ferrets given beta-carotene supplements develop vitamin A deficiency-induced precancerous changes in their lungs when they are not subjected to any type of abnormal oxidative stress. We know that beta-carotene dissolved in an oil matrix can remedy severe vitamin A deficiency, but there is no convincing evidence that beta-carotene is a net positive vitamin A source rather than a drain on cellular vitamin A levels in individuals who are not severely vitamin A deficient. Either way I think the various carotenes are beneficial, but one needs to get true vitamin A as an insurance against the possibility that those carotenes are in some capacity depleting vitamin A. I would rely on the mixed carotenes in vegetables and grass-fed egg yolks and milkfat personally, and I also use palm oil, which is an excellent source of vitamin E (tocopherols and tocotrinols both) as well as mixed carotenes.. > I agree that milk provides inadequate D3, but due to the " notmilk " > clause is this case that won't be a problem, as I suggested a > supplement. Right -- I guess what I meant is that the supplement would have to supply more than what would be in milk. > I use milk ad lib myself, three cod-liver oil gelcaps and a 1,000 IU > D3 every day, even though I go outside four times a day, mainly > covered up. I live just south of the 49th parallel. Going outside covered up will do practically nothing for vitamin D levels, especially in Canada, so the cod liver oil, milk and D3 supplement must certainly be doing you a good bit of benefit. Personally, I find I do best on 1-2 tablespoons of high-vitamin cod liver oil. Each tablespoon supplies close to 4,000 IU of vitamin D, and somwhere around 40,000 IU of vitamin A. I don't think most people need this much in general, but for whatever reason I do. > Also, I use amimal foods so I'm not concerned about my vitamin A > levels, I get betacarotenes from vegetables and because vitamin K2 is > also made by bacteria in the intestinal tract, like most of us > without dysbiosis I'm OK there too. According to the current vitamin K researchers, it is near universally regarded as disproven that intestinal bacteria are a significant source of vitamin K. I have not read the primary research myself, but I have come across this opinion in the introductions and discussions of all the vitamin K studies I have read and I have not seen contrary opinions. > In this case with the kid all this information might be superfluous; > we haven't established anything beyond toxic/oxidative stress, > yielding asthma symptoms, exists at this point, although certainly we > can't rule out other issues at this point either. Well, for oxidative stress, I think preformed vitamin A is an important part of any program. But more importantly, vitamin A and vitamin K2 are probably essential asthma treatments, for the reasons I stated in my other email. Also, almost everyone is deficient in vitamin D, and it should be routinely tested since we have a better idea of what an optimal blood level is than we have for any of the other vitamins, and since vitamin D-associated parameters appear to be a direct function of 25OHD levels. Since deficiency is so common, and since status is so easy to assess, it's a sensible for everyone to address it for any problem, or even in the absence of an obvious problem, in my opinion. > As usual though your information is generally quite helpful. Thanks. Yours too. Chris -- The Truth About Cholesterol Find Out What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You: http://www.cholesterol-and-health.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Hi Duncan: The 1st link worked, but not the 2nd.. So you're sure this sounds like dysbiosis? I've never had asthma or breathing difficulties, just lots of mucus which causes me to clear my throat. SOme people say I might have silent reflux. There must be some way to differentiate this stuff? Why would I have dysbiosis? I've been a health nut for years. I eat more veggies than anyone I know. Never any junk. The only theory in support of it might be that I was a 100% bottle baby, which I've read can mean that my intestinal tract may have never properly developed.... -michael > > > > Hi all: > > > > I'm still trying to figure out what is causing my chronic lung > > mucus/throat-clearing. I've considered everything from candida to > LPR > > (silent reflux) to allergies to intestinal dysbiosis.. or some > > mixture of the above. I'd like to know if there would be some way > of > > diagnosing dysbiosis without getting an indican test? I'd be > > interested to hear how much it costs, if anyone has had it, just > for > > interest's sake. I'd rather save the money and spend it on inulin > and > > probiotics, since I'm assuming that's the " fix " anyway... > > > > I would think, for example, that if you have bad dysbiosis, you'd > > have maybe a rash (I never get rashes) or bad (poorly-formed) b- > m'rs > > (mine are pretty good since I've been chelating and taking Cortef)? > > > > I'd appreciate any comments or help in sorting this out, as it's > > really beginning to drive me NuTz! Maybe I should " spring " for some > > allergy tests ($400-600)? Can someone recommend a good source/brand > > of inulin (as it's one of the FEW things I have NOT tried over the > > past 15-20 years... > > > > Thank-you in advance, > > -michael > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-references.html > The 1st link worked, but not the 2nd.. > > So you're sure this sounds like dysbiosis? I've never had asthma or > breathing difficulties, just lots of mucus which causes me to clear > my throat. SOme people say I might have silent reflux. There must be > some way to differentiate this stuff? Why would I have dysbiosis? You can guess dysbiosis by analysing prebiotic content of your diet. Commercial veggies don't really provide all the inulin you need to reverse dysbiosis but do provide enough to maintain health because a healthy bowel ecology is resilient. Dysbiosis is in many people a key source of toxin load, and glutathione and antioxidant depletion. We know it aggravates oxidative stress diseases, asthma iritation and mucus production included. GERD is a product of hypochlordydria, which can result from dysbiosis through malabsorption and subsequent malnutrition. It isn't necessarily a connection but it does seem like a good bet, doesn't it? And it's pretty cheap to find out. Duncan > I've been a health nut for years. I eat more veggies than anyone I > know. Never any junk. The only theory in support of it might be that > I was a 100% bottle baby, which I've read can mean that my intestinal > tract may have never properly developed.... > > -michael Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 > > http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-references.html > > > The 1st link worked, but not the 2nd.. > > > > So you're sure this sounds like dysbiosis? I've never had asthma or > > breathing difficulties, just lots of mucus which causes me to clear > > my throat. SOme people say I might have silent reflux. There must > be > > some way to differentiate this stuff? Why would I have dysbiosis? > > You can guess dysbiosis by analysing prebiotic content of your diet. > Commercial veggies don't really provide all the inulin you need to > reverse dysbiosis but do provide enough to maintain health because a > healthy bowel ecology is resilient. > > Dysbiosis is in many people a key source of toxin load, and > glutathione and antioxidant depletion. We know it aggravates > oxidative stress diseases, asthma iritation and mucus production > included. GERD is a product of hypochlordydria, which can result from > dysbiosis through malabsorption and subsequent malnutrition. It isn't > necessarily a connection but it does seem like a good bet, doesn't > it? And it's pretty cheap to find out. > > > Duncan Yes...it's cheap to try. It will be quite an experience to taste something as sweet as sugar after avoiding sweets for years. I also wanted to try some good whey again. Can you recommend a source or brand (I'll bet you can -ha). I'll also give NAC another try -this time split doses. By the way (not that it matters) but I eat mostly organic and homegrown veggies, not " commercial. " But as I seem to have malabsorption, I'm probably still low in some nutrients.. Thanks alot Duncan..I'll let you know what happens -michael Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 Just thought of something --that being perhaps only marginal dysbiosis combined with marginal antioxidant, epecially glutathione, depletion. Arsenic in the drinking water, not enough selenium, and the precusors for glutathione being inadequate to meet the task of arsenic and toxin load, could still produce the lung effect even though overall toxicity is fairly low. Glutathione is supposed to be plentiful in the lungs, and as people age they produce less of it anyway. Glutathione precursors are in raw food, and certainly, babies' milk. Most people eat nearly all of their veggies cooked so the glutathione precursors are pooched. So, maybe a meeting of two marginal conditions applies. Perhaps Chris can suggest the appropriate tests. Duncan > > http://members.shaw.ca/duncancrow/glutathione-references.html > > > The 1st link worked, but not the 2nd.. > > > > So you're sure this sounds like dysbiosis? I've never had asthma or > > breathing difficulties, just lots of mucus which causes me to clear > > my throat. SOme people say I might have silent reflux. There must > be > > some way to differentiate this stuff? Why would I have dysbiosis? > > You can guess dysbiosis by analysing prebiotic content of your diet. > Commercial veggies don't really provide all the inulin you need to > reverse dysbiosis but do provide enough to maintain health because a > healthy bowel ecology is resilient. > > Dysbiosis is in many people a key source of toxin load, and > glutathione and antioxidant depletion. We know it aggravates > oxidative stress diseases, asthma iritation and mucus production > included. GERD is a product of hypochlordydria, which can result from > dysbiosis through malabsorption and subsequent malnutrition. It isn't > necessarily a connection but it does seem like a good bet, doesn't > it? And it's pretty cheap to find out. > > > Duncan > > > I've been a health nut for years. I eat more veggies than anyone I > > know. Never any junk. The only theory in support of it might be > that > > I was a 100% bottle baby, which I've read can mean that my > intestinal > > tract may have never properly developed.... > > > > -michael > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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