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Absolutely Safe Probiotic?


oceangirl

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oceangirl Collaborator

Hi everyone and super sensitives specifically:

Could you please tell me an absolutely trusted widely available (whole foods, maybe?) probiotic? (no soy,no gluten) I am taking a heavy duty antibiotic much to my dismay (Augmentin) and want to beef up my intestines beyond daily yogurt. I know this has been on here before, so, sorry, but any help is greatly appreciated!

Thank you,

lisa


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burdee Enthusiast

Hi everyone and super sensitives specifically:

Could you please tell me an absolutely trusted widely available (whole foods, maybe?) probiotic? (no soy,no gluten) I am taking a heavy duty antibiotic much to my dismay (Augmentin) and want to beef up my intestines beyond daily yogurt. I know this has been on here before, so, sorry, but any help is greatly appreciated!

Thank you,

lisa

I have diagnosed celiac disease (gluten intolerance)and 6 other delayed reaction (IgG mediated) food allergies (dairy, soy, eggs, cane sugar, vanilla and nutmeg). So I take Custom Probiotics Adult CP-1 formula which is free of all my allergies. Those capsules each contain 50 billion live cells of freeze dried probiotic bacteria. I order those online. If you're interested, pm me for more info.

SUE

oceangirl Collaborator

Thank you, Sue. I am interested but do not know how to "PM". Incredible, huh? Anyway, I may get help on that.....

lisa

Skylark Collaborator

I've been taking Renew Life Ultimate Flora and it worked well for me. The Renew Life bottle says it is gluten-free but may contain traces of soy or dairy from the fermentation process so that one depends on how soy-sensitive you are. I've also used Threelac, but the bacterial strains in it are a little controversial. It is gluten-free and soy-free but it's kind of expensive compared to the Renew Life.

Oh, to PM click the person's name to the left at the top of the post. On their profile in the left-hand column there is a link to send a private message.

oceangirl Collaborator

Skylark,

Thank you!

lisa

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    1. - trents replied to barb simkin's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
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      celiac, chocolate and alcohol

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    3. - trents replied to barb simkin's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
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    • trents
      So, you had both and endoscopy with biopsy and a colonoscopy. That helps me understand what you were trying to communicate. No, no! It never occurred to me that you were trying to mislead me. It's just that we get a lot of posters on the forum who are misinformed about what celiac disease is and how it is diagnosed so I need some clarification from you which you were so gracious to give.
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    • trents
      So, I'm a little confused here. I understand you to say that you have not been officially diagnosed with celiac disease. Is this correct?  You have had genetic testing done to check for the potential for developing celiac disease and that was positive. Is this correct? I think you meant to type "gluten sensitivity" but you typed "gluten insensitivity". Just so we are clear about the terminology, there is celiac disease and there is NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity). They are not the same but they have overlapping symptoms. Celiac disease causes damage to the small bowel lining but NCGS does not. NCGS is often referred to in short form as gluten sensitivity. However, people often use the terms celiac disease and gluten sensitivity interchangeably so it can be unclear which disease they are referring to. Genetic testing cannot be used to diagnose celiac disease but it can be used to establish the potential to develop active celiac disease. About 40% of the general population has one or both of  the genes that have been most strongly connected with the potential to develop active celiac disease but only about 1% of the population actually develops active celiac disease. This makes the genetic test useful for ruling out celiac disease but not for diagnosing it. A colonoscopy cannot be used to diagnose celiac disease because it doesn't permit the scope to go up into the small bowel where celiac disease does the damage. They use an endoscopy ("upper GI) for checking the small bowel lining for celiac damage.
    • barb simkin
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