| Digestive
Health
Healthy Digestion—Your
Key to Overall Good Health
"You're only as young as your digestive tract."
I'm not sure who first said this, but surely no truer words have
been spoken. I have seen first hand the need to maintain a healthy
digestive system. Less than optimal digestion limits our ability
to properly absorb and assimilate what we eat, in turn reducing
the amount of fuel available for our cells to use as energy.
More embarrassing and uncomfortable are the outward
affects—occasional bloating, flatulence, and irregularity,
to name a few. It’s no surprise that digestive discomfort
can be a source of anxiety for many women.
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How to Keep Your Digestive
System Running Smoothly
Even if you’re eating healthy foods, exercising,
and taking supplements—it doesn’t matter unless your
body can use what you’re putting into it. That’s where
your digestive system comes in—it’s the only way your
cells can get the vitamins, minerals, and nutrients they need from
the food you eat.
Unfortunately, age, environment, and lifestyle
all take their toll. But the good news is—you can keep your
digestive system running smoothly and efficiently by doing these
two things:
- Maintaining the proper amount of digestive enzymes,
and
- Balancing your intestinal flora with health-promoting,
live bacteria.
This is an area where nutritional
supplementation really shines. But you need to be careful about
the supplements you choose. First, very few digestive formulas provide
the full range of digestive enzymes you need; second, there’s
questionable delivery systems used for probiotics (the healthy live
bacteria); and third, it’s nearly impossible to find a solution
that combines the two—digestive enzymes and probiotics.
Click
here to learn about an advanced solution that gives
you all of the above. Whichever digestive supplement you choose,
be sure it offers the following digestive enzymes and healthy live
bacteria.
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Get the Full Range of
Enzymes You Need
When your digestive system is working properly,
enzymes break down the three key types of foods for specific nutrients:
carbohydrates for glucose; protein for amino acids; and fats for
fatty acids. Each type of food requires its own enzymes to work
in different areas of the digestive tract—it’s a very
sophisticated process.
For carbohydrate digestion:
- Alpha-d-galactosidase
for complex starches in legumes, cruciferous vegetables and some
nuts, and grains
- Alpha amylase
to break down starch molecules for simple sugars
- Malt diastase
to reduce starches by removing the maltose units
- Glucomylase
to break down the maltose into glucose for fuel
For protein digestion:
- Protease 4.5
to help break down larger protein molecules in the stomach
- Protease 6.0
works in the intestines to further break down complex protein
chains
- Peptidase
for the final stage of protein digestion
For fat digestion:
- Lipase
to break down saturated and unsaturated fats found in nuts, oils,
meats, and dairy products, and to help increase the absorption
of fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K).
And while I advise women to avoid dairy products
whenever possible, I know that it can be difficult and, in some
cases, you may not even realize that what you’re eating contains
dairy. That’s why I also recommend two additional enzymes:
- Lactase
is the only enzyme that digests milk sugar (lactose)
- Protease
3.0 to help break down the milk proteins casein and whey
Enzymes are measured differently than vitamins
and minerals. Instead of grams, milligrams, or international units,
they should be measured by their effectiveness in breaking down
the food you eat in a certain amount of time. For example,
2,200 HUTs (hemoglobin unit tyrosine base) of Protease 6.0 will
break down the proteins found in three ounces of chicken in thirty
minutes.
You should look for natural, plant-based
varieties of digestive enzymes in dosages based on the amounts needed
to digest carbohydrates, proteins, fats, and dairy from average
meal sizes.
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Support the Healthy
Bacteria in Your Digestive Tract Intestinal
flora is just a pleasant phrase used to describe the bacteria that
live in your intestines. There are over 400 different species of
bacteria and their existence is natural, normal, and necessary.
Most of these bacteria are harmless and some strains
play an integral part in healthy digestion and the absorption of
nutrients. They help break down hard-to-digest foods, promote healthy
bowel movements, and fortify the walls of your digestive tract,
keeping out unwanted bacteria.
But much like digestive enzymes, this healthy population
of bacteria declines as you age. In addition, antibiotics and other
medications, alcohol, and everyday stress often upset the delicate
balance of flora in your digestive tract.
I believe one of the most effective ways to get
the beneficial bacteria you need is with a probiotics supplement.
While there are hundreds of bacteria, the two that stand out as
the hardest-working and most beneficial for women, in my opinion,
are L. acidophilus and B. longum.
The L. acidophilus
belongs to the Lactobacillus species, the predominant and
most important bacteria in the small intestine. L. acidophilus
work along the walls of the small intestine to do three key things:
- Promote a healthy balance
of bacteria
- Increase the integrity
of the intestine’s walls, helping to ensure nutrient absorption
- Help support immune system activity1
The second strain, B. longum,
belongs to the Bifidobacteria family which lives along
the walls of your colon. It produces beneficial lactic acid to keep
the large intestine acidic (instead of alkaline) and promote proper
pH levels, discouraging the growth of other less beneficial bacteria.
B. longum is also one of the most common strains found
in the digestive systems of adults. It helps the body break down
carbohydrates more effectively and it scavenges and neutralizes
many of the everyday toxins found in the gut, including those produced
during digestion.
If you take a probiotic supplement, make sure it
includes both of these crucial strains of beneficial bacteria. And
please, make sure they’re delivered in such a way that they
actually get to your intestines—a major challenge with probiotics.
Getting all this in one supplement may sound impossible,
but it’s not. To make it easier for you, I developed an advanced
formula called Probiotic Answer. It combines health-enhancing
probiotics with digestive enzymes—all in a quick-dissolving
mini-beadlet. Click here
to learn more.
Whatever digestive supplement you choose, you should
feel noticeable results—improvements in your bowel movements,
less bloating, and better overall digestion. Plus, with the right
supplement there are things you won’t even realize are happening,
like the balancing of flora in your intestines, vagina, and urinary
tract; the neutralization of toxins; and the support to your immune
system. This means stronger overall health, being able to get more
pleasure from food, and feeling comfortable wherever you are.
You can stay up to date with the latest information
on digestive health (and other important health topics for women)
with my monthly newsletter, Women's Wellness Today. For my complete
advice on digestive health, including specific recommendations on
how and what to eat to maximize digestion, read my special report,
The 21- Day Enzyme Miracle, which you’ll receive
when you subscribe. Click here
to learn more.
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