Do You Know Where Your Food Comes From?

Product Description
The food we choose affects people’s lives and the environment. This book shows how the global food market is affecting all of us. Case studies, recipes, and fascinating facts help make this book useful and engaging to students…. More >>

Do You Know Where Your Food Comes From?

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NUTRITIONIST – Street Sign dietitian healthy food gift

  • Brand New Sign
  • Proudly Made In the U.S.A.
  • Perfect Gift Idea!!!
  • Top Quality Sign
  • Perfect for Indoor or Outdoor

Product Description
This is a brand new 4″ tall and 18″ wide street sign made from weatherproof plastic with premium grade
vinyl. The sign is perfect for indoor or outdoor use, made to last at least 3-4 years outside. The sign has rounded corners and a 1 hole pre-drilled for easy mounting. These signs will not rust or fade. Be sure to check out all of our other signs, they make great gifts!!… More >>

NUTRITIONIST – Street Sign dietitian healthy food gift

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Leaky Gut Syndrome – What You Should Know

Leaky Gut Syndrome (often shorted to LGS) is a condition wherein partially digested food, toxins, bacteria, and abnormally large macromolecules “leak” from the stomach and intestines into the bloodstream. This permeability of the stomach and intestines is caused by antibiotics, poor diet, parasites, various toxins, or an untreated infection. These causes affect the cells in the wall of the stomach, causing spaces to occur between them, allowing foreign substances to pass. Symptoms of LGS include gas, indigestion, chronic joint and/or muscle pain, diarrhea, constipation, fatigue, respiratory problems such as wheezing or coughing, a mild pyrexia (fever), temporary abdominal pain, digestive difficulties, increased frequency of infections, skin disorders, and the inability to properly absorb nutrients.

While Leaky Gut Syndrome can be fatal if left untreated for a lengthy amount of time, it is easily detectable. A solution of Mannitol and Lactulose is administered to the patient, who would then need to collect urine samples for the subsequent five to six hours. The amount of each chemical apparent in the urine, therefore unabsorbed into the intestines, determines how permeable the stomach and intestinal walls have become.

Treatment of Leaky Gut Syndrome may include the removal of harmful bacteria or parasites, the adoption of a diet high in fiber, as well as the elimination of sugary and starchy food, and the use of nutritional supplements and digestive aids, such as fish oil and flax seed oil. In time, the spacing between cells in the stomach and intestine walls will decrease.

» Read more: Leaky Gut Syndrome – What You Should Know

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