Guest guest Posted September 24, 2006 Report Share Posted September 24, 2006 You may have acid reflux otherwise known as GERD. Tell your doctor. shefy7 <shefy7@...> wrote: Hi all... Does anyone else burp right after waking up ? Without drinking water or eating anything. Just upon rising...? I have this every morning...Very weird and sometimes it gets uncomfortable in my chest when it gets stuck.... Anyone? thoughts? Shefy Hope all is well! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2006 Report Share Posted October 5, 2006 Glutamine and glutamic acid are similar. Glutamic acid is what you're thinking about for preventing reflux. You'd take three or four capsules of that or betaine HCl with meals. Glutamine is often used to quickly regenerate bowel lining; undenatured whey contains more than five grams of glutamic acid per 36 gram serving, so it does provide glutamine, and those using whey probably don't need extra glutamine for the bowel lining. I think the thing to remember Shefy is that glutamic acid by itelf is to incease stomach acidity; the whey is most important for the glutathione increase although the glutamine in it has a secondary value. I think you should take them seperately. might have input or observation on this. Duncan > I have to say that the inulin and undenatured whey, along with a lot > of glutamine, a mostly organic low glycemic veggie diet (with fish), > no gluten or casein, has all worked wonders for me. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 5, 2006 Report Share Posted October 5, 2006 I seem to have an ulcer, or at least constant nausea that the doc thinks is an ulcer or gastritis - are you saying that the whey will help heal it? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2006 Report Share Posted October 6, 2006 Well, like you say , neither we nor your doctor knows if it's damage or just nausea. If it's not an injury but nausea, try betaine HCl and/or digetive enzymes. If you have H. pylori eroding your stomach lining, coconut oil and colloidial silver will kill it. If it's an injury, whey will help heal it. Use about 35 grams of udenatured whey powder morning and afternoon. Duncan > > I seem to have an ulcer, or at least constant nausea that the doc thinks is an ulcer or gastritis - are you saying that the whey will help heal it? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2006 Report Share Posted October 6, 2006 i have a question on this...i also get nausea after eating (lemon or acv helps relieve it) but lately i've been getting a lot of pain on each side of my sternum, like at the side of the breasts... it doesn't feel muscular or in the bones and i know my hearts good...i'm guessing it's either my food or breathing tube or my lungs..? it hurts more on exhalation or when i move a certain way...i dont have trouble swallowing or anything but sometimes i can feel my throat get swollen... i haven't done anything much different except taking lemon water in the mornings and apple cider vinegar 2 or 3 times a day...i wonder if that's causing my esophagus to erode...yeh rite...i duno...i just don't like it..it hurts... any thoughts? shefy Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: Well, like you say , neither we nor your doctor knows if it's damage or just nausea. If it's not an injury but nausea, try betaine HCl and/or digetive enzymes. If you have H. pylori eroding your stomach lining, coconut oil and colloidial silver will kill it. If it's an injury, whey will help heal it. Use about 35 grams of udenatured whey powder morning and afternoon. Duncan > > I seem to have an ulcer, or at least constant nausea that the doc thinks is an ulcer or gastritis - are you saying that the whey will help heal it? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2006 Report Share Posted October 6, 2006 another question...sorry! can you have h.pylori that doens't show up on blood or stool work? my gastro wants to do another endoscopy (had one 6 years ago...everything ok but inflammation..) to get a biopsy to check for h. pylori. i've had about 5 blood tests for it in the past year and 2 stool tests, all negative. he thinks i may have it bc of my symptoms of fullness and bloating after eating just a few bites... thanks! shefy Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: Well, like you say , neither we nor your doctor knows if it's damage or just nausea. If it's not an injury but nausea, try betaine HCl and/or digetive enzymes. If you have H. pylori eroding your stomach lining, coconut oil and colloidial silver will kill it. If it's an injury, whey will help heal it. Use about 35 grams of udenatured whey powder morning and afternoon. Duncan > > I seem to have an ulcer, or at least constant nausea that the doc thinks is an ulcer or gastritis - are you saying that the whey will help heal it? > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 6, 2006 Report Share Posted October 6, 2006 Shefy, lemon water and cider vinegar are many times more alkaline than your stomach contents; that's enough to undermine your attempt to lower your stomach pH with the betaine HCl. Duncan > > i have a question on this...i also get nausea after eating (lemon or acv helps relieve it) but lately i've been getting a lot of pain on each side of my sternum, like at the side of the breasts... it doesn't feel muscular or in the bones and i know my hearts good...i'm guessing it's either my food or breathing tube or my lungs..? it hurts more on exhalation or when i move a certain way...i dont have trouble swallowing or anything but sometimes i can feel my throat get swollen... > > i haven't done anything much different except taking lemon water in the mornings and apple cider vinegar 2 or 3 times a day...i wonder if that's causing my esophagus to erode...yeh rite...i duno...i just don't like it..it hurts... > > any thoughts? > > shefy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 On 10/5/06, Duncan Crow <duncancrow@...> wrote: > I think the thing to remember Shefy is that glutamic acid by itelf is > to incease stomach acidity; the whey is most important for the > glutathione increase although the glutamine in it has a secondary > value. I think you should take them seperately. > might have input or observation on this. If by glutamic acid for stomach acidity you mean glutamic acid HCl supplements, I would use betaine HCl instead, out of concern for the excitotoxic potential of glutamic acid supplements. Moreover, elevated blood levels of glutamic acid prevents the transport of cystine into cells, which is necessary for glutathione synthesis, so too much glutamic acid supplementation might undermine the whey treatment. Glutamic acid will not, however, suppress cysteine entry into cells (for those not in the know, notice that cystine and cysteine are two slightly different things, and the former is missing an " e " before the " i " ), and you would know better than I which form (cystine or cysteine) predominates in the whey. Nevertheless, when you take the whey you sort of assume that you're are also getting other dietary cystine, getting cystine from proteins within your body that you're recycling, and getting cystine diverted by vitamin B6 from the homocysteine/methionine cycle, so even if you aren't directly depressing the activity of the whey (if it contains mostly cysteine), you're still decreasing the total available intracellular pool of glutathione precursors if you supplement with too much glutamic acid. 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...
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.