Although I was aware of probiotics supplements, the need for one didn’t strike me until our diabetes and GI cancer study. It was our own research data that convinced me that it all begins in the gut.My team was conducting a survey of experience at Roswell Park Cancer Institute, in Buffalo, NY. At no point we had a single probiotic-related reason or even a thought when we planned for that study! We were interested in studying individuals with diabetes mellitus that presented with any gastrointestinal malignancies (i.e. tong, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, colon or rectum). The idea of the study was that the way diabetes mellitus and cholesterol were managed to begin with, may have played a role in the tumor evolution, its ability to recur and even play a role in patient survival (find here more about this study). By that moment in time we (and others) had already evaluated patients with diabetes and other cancers and – as you know by now – data indicated metformin users as having a significant advantage. So, in a way, we expected to see the same this time. But, as always, the unexpected unveils the most extraordinary discoveries!
The study was darn interesting and our team was in the seventh heaven, excited with the new understanding we gathered – naturally! Besides the publishing of brand new knowledge, that got me thinking prolonged hours, days, weekends…if in my own (obviously unhealthy) gut bad bugs had installed already, even if I was to start any cholesterol or diabetes medication they will not even get to absorbed properly into my system because of these bastards! Suddenly, the story of metformin or cholesterol medication working in some people and not others made a ridiculously logical sense! The more bad-bugs colonizing my gut, the less chance I would have to treat diabetes or cholesterol. Panic followed! OMG! I couldn’t allow it to get there. It wasn’t myself that preoccupied me, but rather the right way of approaching reversing or treating diabetes in roughly a third of the United States population and the other half a billion patients around the globe. We had to look into probiotics and how they could help preventing and treating cancer!
This is how I found the Garden of Life Once Daily Women’s Probiotics (find all Dr. Alice’s recommended probiotics here). On the negative side: the pills were huge and sticky. On the positive: the box had a pink design! 😀 You can tell how excited I was about this, can’t you? As I looked at the capsule stuffed with a powder counting 50 billion bugs and their lunches, I felt like looking into the future. I was looking at the colonists of my gut from tomorrow! How would I know they were alive and ready to fight? What if they were already dead? What if the bottle wasn’t stored in the right conditions of heat, light and humidity? What IF?? Too much thinking! I took the capsule with a full glass of water. They were IN! The moment reminded me of an old movie with nanobots. That’s what I have right now crawling in me: nanobots! But what if my good bugs are not alive? Too many questions for a scientist. I scratched my head twice and had an idea: milk! I could test them with milk. Half of the bugs in this mix were ones that make yogurt too, so they will turn fresh milk into yoghurt if they are alive! Perfect test! Grabbed a bowl, poured milk in and sprinkled over it the powder from an probiotic capsule I opened. I covered it nicely with aluminum foil and left it on the kitchen counter. I did the same with another bowl in which I poured plain milk, but no probiotic powder. That was my kitchen-study control in case the milk was to go bad on its own – although in that case it would have smelled bad. DONE! Now I could head back to my to-do list for the day. My tummy began to feet bloated. It was roughly 30 minutes after I launched the bug-shuttle. They seemed to be alive… That’s why it was so memorable!
The next day I had an unexpectedly good morning. Much less cramps than I was ready for. To be fair, I had experienced much worse abdominal cramps on other occasions than with these probiotics. They did the job. My two milk experiments were living proof: one was solid yogurt, while the other was simply room-temperature milk forgotten overnight on the kitchen counter. The package was surely safe and as described. This convinced my husband to try it and then a few friends followed. Zero complaints to-date, but everyone was properly coached. It all goes better when you know what to expect. As I was saying in one of my early posts: most patients do not like being surprised! Not when it comes to their health, medications or any decisions thereof. The more one knows what to expect and what it means, the more likely one is to accept it. It was the same with myself. In a way, I feel like new. I mean, just think about it: on my planet everything had changed, except the planet itself! Hope you enjoyed my gut re-colonization story and learned something new. Check out our knowledge to-date about probiotics
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