For People on the Fringe of the American Industrialized Diet.

Regarding Bowel Movements

Posted: August 11th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alternative Health | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

 Irritable Bowel Syndrome SymptomsIBS candidate                  

The piece below, by Denise Moffat, contains all you ever wanted to know about bowel movements (and were afraid to ask).

The point I hope you walk away with is that many maladies and conditions occur because of an improper diet.  Regardless of whether you think you eat well -if you suffer, your diet needs improvement.

The safest way (without prescription meds) for restoring your digestive health is through the use of probiotics supplements.

Whole Food Nation offers a sophisticated supplement (called Pop-a-Green & Pop-a-Purple) containing scores of natural whole foods (fruits & veggies), probiotics, metabolic boosters, digestive enzymes and much more. They are designed to get you healthy and keep you that way.  My family has been on them for 5 years and we have never been in better health, generally.  We also watch our diet.

 What, exactly is in those Pops? 

Something else that may be of interest as a more focused fix, if in distress, is the  Bowtrol probiotic supplement.

*****

With every new exam I ask the same question. . .

‘How many bowel movements do you have each day? Do you see any mucous, blood, diarrhea or constipation?’

Feces, crap, stools, shit, poop, manure, BM, #2, dung, droppings, and bowel contents are all the same thing. I use all these terms as sometimes my clients don’t know what feces or stool is. If I can’t communicate with my clients, I can’t help them.

Feces contains water, indigestible fiber, undigested food, sloughed off intestinal cells, living and dead bacteria, bile, and worn out red blood cells. A normal stool should be brown to light brown, formed but not hard or too soft, cylindrical but not flattened on any side, fairly bulky and full bodied but not compact, easy to pass, and it shouldn’t have an extremely foul smell. Each bowel movement should be in one piece, about the size and shape of a banana being tapered at the end. Sometimes this will not be discernable if the feces breaks up in the toilet. Some people feel that if the body is absorbing all the minerals from the food that the stool will float. Others believe that the stool should sink. I think the important thing is that there are no air bubbles in the stool and that it doesn’t drop like a brick in the toilet. It should be somewhere in between.

An occasional deviation from this pattern is acceptable. Any chronic deviation from the above pattern is not healthy and should be dealt with.

It’s amazing how many people don’t even look at their stools in the toilet. It’s so important. Stools can reveal a lot about your health if you learn to read them. Digestion happens. It’s a shame that few of us are unable to talk about them without embarrassment. For instance:

Air or bubbles in the stool can mean that we have a gut or flora imbalance and that gas producing bacteria are overgrown and competing with the healthier flora.

Alternating bouts of diarrhea and constipation can be cause by irritable bowel syndrome, food allergies, red meat, spices, sugar, alcohol, stress, lack of fiber, irregular bowel habits.

Color: Stools are usually the color of the food.

Constipation can occur leading to impaction–the presence in the rectum of a mass of feces too large to pass. Fecal impaction is usually the result of poor bowel habits, a diet with too little liquid and roughage, too much protein and inadequate physical activity.

Diarrhea, whether acute or chronic, can disrupt the bowel’s normal rhythm and lead to irregularity. It can mean that your large intestine is not functioning properly. The large intestine is in charge of removing excess water from the feces. Rule outs can include food poisoning, lactose intolerance, anxiety, stress, too many antacids, antibiotics, parasites like Giardia or Coccidia, Balantidia, Coccidoidiomycosis or other parasites, viruses, bacterial overgrowth, inflammatory bowel disease and irritable bowel syndrome. A healthy bowel will take about a quart and a half and condense it down to 1 cup of stool. That’s pretty amazing.

Frank red blood (obvious bright red bleeding) can be a sign of hemorrhoids, colitis, Crohn’s disease, irritable bowel syndrome, colon cancer or be caused from impacted stools passing through the rectum telling us we need to drink more water.

Horrible smelling stoolstoo much protein, flora imbalance.

If the stools are black, tarry and sticky (called melena), this can mean that there is bleeding from the small intestine. These types of stools usually have a distinctive bad odor. If you’ve ever smelled a dog with Parvo, corona or rotavirus, you know what I mean.

Light green stoolsToo much sugar, fruits or vegetables and not enough grains or salt (or in the case of animals, too much grass)Mucous can reveal diverticulitis and gut inflammation due to allergies or parasites.

Oily or greasy looking stools that usually float and can be large can mean that your pancreas or small intestine are not functioning well enough and not releasing enough digestive enzymes. Normal stools are about 1% fat. When this percentage increases to about 7%, the stool will look oily and greasy. This is called steatorrhea. High fat meals can cause this to happen but should be temporary.

Pale or clay colored stools can mean that your gallbladder or liver is not working correctly.

Pencil thin or ribbon-like stools can mean you have a polyp or growth on the inside of the colon or rectum.

Presence of food: If the stool breaks up easily and you can see bits and pieces of the food you ate, maybe you are not chewing your food thoroughly enough. This can cause GERD, acid reflux, abdominal bloating and diarrhea.

Red or magenta stools– ingestion of beets.

Very dark stools: Too much red wine, too much salt in the diet, not enough vegetables. Blueberries, Pepto Bismol (the bismuth in it) and iron pills can also be responsible for dark stools.

Normal bowel habits not only improve the quality of life, they help prevent several common diseases–for example, diverticulitis and fecal impaction. Gall stones, appendicitis, colon cancer, hiatal hernia, diabetes, and heart disease have also been related to the quality of bowel movements and the foods that affect them.

Number of bowel movements: Healthy bowel activity is considered one or two movements of moderate size every day. Every other day or once or twice a week bowel movements can harm you because the bowel contents release toxins back into the body through the mucous membranes. You’ve got to keep that waste moving!

Fecal incontinence (uncontrollable diarrhea) should be dealt with by a professional. Often with this particular symptom (and irritable bowel syndrome) I will pick up a bowel parasite. A bottle or two of Bowel Pathogen Nosode drops does an awesome job most of the time in clearing up these cases.

Healthy bowel habits:

There is usually a time of day when bowel movements are more likely to occur. In anticipation of this time, the patient should participate in activities that stimulate a normal bowel movement. It is also important for the patient to recognize the urge to defecate and to respond right away to that urge. The longer stool sits in the rectum, the more water the rectum will absorb from it, making it harder and more difficult to pass.

The urge to defecate is often strongest in the morning: Just getting up triggers the movement of the large intestine. The stomach also sends a signal when it expands after a meal. This gastrocolic reflex is the reason many people, and especially children, need to go to the bathroom soon after eating. The reflex gets weaker with age, which is one source of constipation problems and the reason why good and consistent bowel habits are helpful.

Laxatives: Some patients are so convinced they need daily laxatives that they are afraid to do without them. It takes time for a changed diet to affect the bowels and for the bowel to regain its normal rhythm. Be patient. Enemas are a better solution.

Healthy bowel movements require ingestion of a large amount of liquids and bulk foods. The patient should drink two to three quarts of liquids every day. Bulk comes from unrefined foods. Oat bran, wheat bran, brown rice, green vegetables, apples, and pears are a few examples of high residue, high fiber foods.

Some patients will benefit from adding bulk preparations of psyllium, but others find that psyllium will cause extreme amounts of gas. For these people, the addition of WHOLE flax seeds (eat without chewing them) and bran will help. And one single 8-ounce cup of coffee in the morning often helps people get a regular bowel movement.

Natural Laxatives include:

Anti-Constipation Paste

Coffee

DSS (dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate)

Glycerine suppositories

Nature’s Sunshine LBS II (excellent)

Oil enemas

Prune juice

Saline purges

Fleet enemas are used only for people and dogs. They are very toxic to cats and can kill them. These are OK to use occasionally, but the other enemas we are talking about are better for healing purposes.

Soap suds enemas can be a little harsh to the intestine. Use these only occasionally if necessary

Some Notes on Intestinal Bacteria Replacement: Inside a healthy lower intestine are billions of beneficial intestinal bacteria or microflora. These bacteria are of the Lactobacillus acidophilus and Lactobacillus bifidus strains and were transferred by breast-feeding into our intestines as newborn infants. The body uses L. acidophilus and L. bifidus in the final stages of digestion reproducing themselves as necessary to keep in total harmony with the body.

When the good bacteria can’t keep up, bad bacteria overpopulate the gut to give a gut flora imbalance resulting in lower bowel diseases, gas, diarrhea, IBS, and Crohn’s. The devitalizing effect caused by harmful bacteria in the intestine is rarely diagnosed near the beginning of this imbalance. Headaches, skin infections, weakness and constipation can also be symptoms of depleted intestinal bacteria.

What Causes A Gut Flora Imbalance?

Toxins, especially drugs such as antibiotics and narcotics.

Severe diarrhea can damage or destroy these beneficial bacteria, allowing harmful bacteria to take over producing by-products like ammonia, purines and ethionine, which can eventually cause colon cancer.

Fasting can also deplete the beneficial bacteria because large quantities of toxins are dumped from the lymph glands into the colon at the time of the fast. Also during a fast, with certain diets and with eating disorders, there is an absence of foods that the good bacteria thrive on.

Using enemas also depletes the beneficial bacteria, especially if chlorinated water is used.

To reestablish intestinal bacteria, do a couple enemas with liquid acidophilus or live acidophilus. These products should be stored and purchased refrigerated. Off-the-shelf products are not so effective for replacing gut flora. You can also mix a couple tablespoons of active plain yogurt to your enema mix along with a tablespoon of the liquid acidophilus. Add some warm water, but do not heat the mixture or use chlorinated water. After blending the mixture, pour it into the enema bag. Use less water for these types of enemas (only 1-2 cups) and try to retain the liquid within the colon for ten minutes to allow the beneficial bacteria to pass up through the intestine. This procedure will ensure that a healthy culture will propagate within the intestines.

You can also start adding L. acidophilus and L. bifidus to your foods a day or two before you break a fast. Use repeat dosages as per bottle instructions once a week for about 5 weeks.

FOS (Fructooligosaccharides) are also good for reestablishing gut flora. These are long-chain sugars that feed friendly flora. You can purchase this in concentrated pill form or eat lots of apples, Jerusalem artichokes, or pears. These foods have high amounts of FOS in them.

Well . . .That’s the scoop on poop. (Some people take things so seriously.)



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Perspective on Benefits of Probiotics Supplements

Posted: August 3rd, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alternative Health | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

yogurt probiotics  

Benefits of Probiotics

The presence of probiotics in the colon is a natural phonomenon -that is, if one eats a natural diet.  -which Americans have gotten away from in recent decades.  More common now is the industiralized diet of processed food-like substances -offered to us by the food industry.  Our health is not foremost on their mind.  It needs to be on our minds.  Restoring your digestive health and maintaining colon health are linked to probiotics and nutrition.

A diet rich in fruits and vegetables and high in fiber goes a long way toward maintaining health for longevity.  It’s been called "Food for Damage Control."

Whole Food Nation is ahead of the curve on that -with their "Pops."  Pop-a-Green and Pop-a-Purple Whole Food supplements contain 50-something ingredients.  Fruits, veggies, metabolic boosters, Probiotics and more.

What’s really in those Pops?

The folowing piece elaborates on probiotics benefits.

Perspective on Benefits of Probiotics Supplements 

I bet you never thought you’d actually WANT bacteria in your gut, now did you? Yet now that probiotics and probiotic supplementation have taken center stage in the fight to maintain vibrant health, more and more people who may have never even heard the word ‘probiotic’ before are starting to pay attention - close attention.

But how can you know which are the best probiotics to take? And what’s more, where can you find them?

Just in case you don’t happen to know what probiotics are, or what the benefits of taking probiotics supplements can be, let’s cover a little of the background first. (If you’re already familiar with the benefits of probiotics, you can scroll on down to the bottom of this article where I’ve provided a couple great links that will help you choose the best probiotics for you.)

What Do Probiotics Do?

I like short answers and short explanations, so let’s address the basic question of what probiotics do this way… Probiotics keep you healthy. Period.  According to many studies as well as a recent story on CNN, scientists have been aware of the connection between probiotics and vibrant health for decades.

If you’re old enough, you may remember those old Dannon yogurt commercials featuring a town in the former Soviet Union where many of the inhabitants were over 100 years old — and attributed their longevity to the fact that they ate lots and lots of yogurt-probiotics yogurt, thus getting millions of beneficial probiotics into their bodies every day.

Today, we’re a bit more sophisticated about it. Yes, yogurt — at least the ones that contain those "live and active cultures" you see on the label — do contain probiotics. But many times there aren’t enough, or the right kind, for us to truly get all the benefits.

In fact, many people take probiotics supplements that contain many different "strains" of probiotics to get the full effect. For example, some probiotics will help restore your body’s balance after a course of antibiotics (a well-known killer of the good bacteria that lives in your gut), but will do nothing for your overall immunity.  So, probiotics are beneficial to restore digestive system health and your natural immune system.

I could go on and on about which probiotic is best for every specific symptom or problem you may be experiencing — as well as which ones are best to give your overall health a giant boost — but to avoid repeating myself, you are encouraged to poke around the many articles and links found on this website to access further information about various conditions that are known to benefit from probiotics.  I dare to say -if probiotics were present in the first place, many of these maladies would have been prevented.

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Keeping the Balance -Probiotics with Antibiotics

Posted: July 13th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alternative Health | Tags: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

 fiber rich legumes

The following from Olwen Anderson highlights some reasons for probiotics supplements

when using antibiotics, as well as, making probiotics a part of your daily habits.  If you are looking to buy probiotics, Some links can be found there to a couple of products we trust.  Follow the link to information for your review process.

If Taking Antibiotics, Don’t Forget the Probiotics

We are all carrying some extra passengers in our intestines: Friendly bacteria, over 400 species in fact. As we have evolved, these bacteria have evolved with us to create a mutually beneficial relationship.

These friendly bugs help us absorb vital minerals and nutrients, and boost our gut immunity. They compete with pathogenic (bad) bacteria for space and resources, and actually produce substances which help keep the population of bad bacteria in check. If you’re stressed or run down, your gut environment changes, making it easier for pathogenic bacteria to take over.

Antibiotic medication will kill the good bacteria in your gut as well as the pathogenic ones. You can often tell when the bad bacteria have taken over; they produce lots of toxic gases, bringing on abdominal bloating, discomfort and some very anti-social levels of flatulence. The toxins they produce can inflame your gut wall too, which makes it harder for you to absorb nutrients from your food. Sometimes they’re active enough to bring on feelings of queasiness too, as your liver struggles to cope with the high level of toxic byproducts from their intestinal party antics.

If you are taking antibiotics, here are some important steps you can take to re-populate your intestines with good bacteria and improve your well being at the same time.

- Start taking probiotics supplements, and continue for a few weeks after you have finished the course of antibiotics. Buy a small bottle, and choose a different brand every time as each brand will supply a different blend of friendly bacteria. You can buy probiotics at your local health food store.

- Take your probiotic supplement in the evening, with a fibre-based food like fruit or legumes, as more bacteria will survive the trip to your intestines when they can hitch a ride on fibre. Ever noticed that advertisements for probiotics boast of the high numbers of bacteria in each dose?  That’s because some of the bacteria won’t make it past the very acidic environment in your stomach.

- You should take your probiotic supplement in the evening, as your gut is more active overnight.

- If you are not dairy intolerant, 100g of plain yogurt every day is a great natural probiotic supplement, and has been used in many cultures for centuries, along with other fermented foods, to promote bowel health. Make sure the yogurt is young (fresh) and enjoy several different brands for the best effect.

The probiotic bacteria will start to elbow out the bad bacteria, and help calm any bowel inflammation they have caused.  Now that you know how important those good bacteria are, remember to buy a bottle of probiotics when you pick up your antibiotic prescription.

Author: Olwen Anderson

Olwen Anderson is an accredited naturopath based on the north coast of New South Wales, Australia. Visit her web site for free health information, subscribe to her monthly Health e-News for up to date natural health information; and read more articles that can help you take control of your health.

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About Us

Posted: July 4th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: General | Tags: , | No Comments »

ProbioticsSupplements.net is dedicated to providing quality information on the topic of Probiotics for general health improvement and maintenance.

It is for people who are disenchanted with the food-like substances offered up by the American Food Industry at large, like we are.

Here you will find helpful reviews, informative information and tips and much more.  The site is in the format of a weblog so that each time I post new information, it will come to the top of the front page.  This means you can check back here frequently to see new updates to the information found here.

You can navigate through the site by using the menus on the side of the page.  Also, don’t forget to follow the links  you see in BOLD through out each post to learn more about the product being spoken about.

I hope you find the information we provide valuble and helpful.

Best regards,
Your "ProbioticsSupplements.net" Team

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Privacy Policy

Posted: July 4th, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: General | Tags: , | No Comments »

Privacy Policy

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