Saturday, December 19, 2009

Case Study: Prebiotics + Heart Health Formula Reduced Cholesterol 22% in 30 Days

A recent study conducted by Dr. Bill Misner, PhD, Director R&D, Emeritus, Hammer Nutrition, demonstrated reduced cholesterol with the use of Prebiotin - Heart Health formula. The study, an anecdotal examination of two subjects, showed reduced cholesterol in both an active endurance athlete with already-good cholesterol, and a sedentary non-active individual with high cholesterol.

A 69-year male endurance athlete & 56-year female non-athlete consumed a supplement containing 7-grams fiber with a prebiotic daily for 30-days to determine if "Prebiotin" had a positive effect on bowel health and reducing cholesterols.

Two subjects one with low-normal healthy cholesterol and one with elevated cholesterol taking “Prebiotin” probiotic-fiber supplement daily significantly lowered cholesterol levels both unexpectedly -6% and -22% respectively in only 30 days time.

Click here to see the full summary of this research including extensive notes and references.

The case study here is not represented as indicative of Prebiotin's potential to decrease cholesterol for any specific subject or in general. These results should be treated as anecdotal information for consideration only.

Friday, December 4, 2009

A Buyer's Guide to Prebiotics and Prebiotic Supplements

Congratulations on considering a prebiotic supplement. Supporting health, digestion and immunity with a prebiotic is certainly something we recommend.

But not all prebiotics are created equal. We hope you will consider Prebiotin, but would like to suggest a few key considerations you should ask of _any_ prebiotic supplement you may consider:

1) Does the prebiotic company engage in safe manufacturing processes

a. Is it manufactured in the U.S.A. or overseas, e.g. China. Do they even tell you where it’s made?

b. Has the facility been inspected by the FDA?

c. Does the facility follow the FDA’s “GMP” (Good Manufacturing Process) requirements to ensure safety and lack of contamination.

2) Is it actually a prebiotic?

a. Fructo-Oligosaccharides and Galacto-Oligosaccharides are the only ingredients that authorities agree have fully met the ‘proof’ of being prebiotics.

b. Not all FOS and GOS are created equal: Does the prebiotic offer a full-spectrum prebiotic such as Oligofructose-Enriched-Inulin, or simply “inulin” or “FOS” – much cheaper alternatives without the same research-proved benefits.

c. Does the product use alternative ingredients that are only “possible prebiotics” or have only “prebiotic effects” - such as agave, isomalto-oligosaccharide, dextrin, lactulose, etc.

3) Is the prebiotic company medically credible and responsible?

a. Does the prebiotic contain only natural ingredients?

b. Does the prebiotic add unnecessary calories, carbs, fat, sugar, salt or other ingredients to your diet?

c. Does the prebiotic list all ingredients and include a full “nutrition info” panel on the packaging?

d. Does the prebiotic provide information on the research, studies and clinical proof standing behind its product?

4) Is the prebiotic made by a “real” company you can contact, and which tells you openly about itself and its policies?

a. Does the prebiotic company have a website with a thorough “about us” page, a toll-free number, a physical mailing address and other ways to ensure they’re “real” and that you can reach them if needed?

b. Is there a physician, PhD or other real ‘authority’ who stands behind the product, or is it just an anonymous “supplement company.”

c. Does the company focus as a specialist in prebiotics? Or, do they offer many products on a “whatever’s selling these days” basis?

We hope you'll visit http://www.prebiotin.com and consider Prebiotin for yourself or your loved ones. We certainly do run our company and product in accordance with the concerns noted above. But whatever you do... ask questions before you start taking ANY supplement into your body! You deserve answers and the truth!

New Study: Prebiotin Primary Ingredient May Stop Cancer Cells

Study, as reported in British Journal of Medicine, says Oligofructose-Enriched-Inulin - the exact prebiotic used in Prebiotin - may prevent the growth, and promote the death of cancer cells in the colon. In the Journal's peer-reviewed article, we learn that human colon cells representing early and late stages of colon cancer were exposed to short chain fatty acids - produced during the fermentation of prebiotic fiber. The early stage cells “responded more sensitively”, according to the research results.

The research was conducted by incubating bacterial samples with Oligofructose-Enriched Inulin (OEI).

OEI, the exact prebiotic used in Prebiotin, is a natural, plant-derived compound of oligofructose and inulin together. Unlike plain inulin, which ferments mostly in the right-hand side of the colon, OEI creates beneficial bacteria fermentation and production of short-chain fatty acids throughout the colon. Most prebiotic products and supplements use plain inulin, a far cheaper ingredient than OEI.

The researchers note: “Since early [cancer] cells were found to be more sensitive, this may have important implications for chemoprevention when translated to the in vivo situation, because survival of early transformed cells could be reduced,”

Even beyond this latest study, there is more peer-reviewed clinical research that suggests the relationship between prebiotics and colon cancer.

One study says "Probiotics and Prebiotics have the potential to impact significantly on the development, progression and treatment of colorectal cancer and may have a valuable role in cancer prevention."

Yet another states: "There is substantial experimental evidence to suggest that probiotics and prebiotics may be beneficial in the prevention and treatment of colon cancer."

One more states: "Dietary synbiotics reduce cancer risk factors in polypectomized and colon cancer patients."

Get more information on this peer-reviewed university research on prebiotics and colon cancer / colon polyps at http://www.prebiotin.com under the "Clinical Research and Studies" tab.

Prebiotin contains the exact prebiotic ingredient used in this latest study which "suggests that the intake of prebiotic dietary fibres...protects against colorectal cancer."

For those seeking to add prebiotics to their diet, Prebiotin suggests consumers seek a supplement which does not add excess fat, calories or sugar, which contains a full-spectrum prebiotic, not just cheap inulin, and which is manufactured under the FDA's "GMP" guidelines in a certified facility. Additional information is available at http://www.prebiotin.com.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Creating "Energy Pods" to Nourish Your Body

WHAT IS AN ENERGY POD?

An energy pod is a small, a very small, packet of energy and activity that is created in your colon by good colon bacteria. These are good and you want to get as many of these as possible. They simply make lots of good things happen. The technical name for these Energy Pods is short chain fatty acids. This phrase has meaning to scientists but for the rest of us, an Energy Pod describes it beautifully.

WHERE DO THEY COME FROM?

An Energy Pod can not be bought at the store. You can not get them in a bottle nor make them easily in a laboratory. Rather, they come from certain normal, healthy bacteria that reside in the large bowel or colon.

AREN'T ALL BACTERIA BAD?

No,no, a thousand times no! Most bacteria are our friends and this is particularly the case in the colon, where there are teaming trillions of good bacteria just waiting to help us. There are some bad bacteria within the colon, but when the good ones predominate, they force the unwanted ones out.

SO, HOW ARE ENERGY PODS MADE?

It is really pretty simple. The healthy bacteria in the gut rely on food fibers for their own nourishment and fuel. Fiber from plant food such as inulin and oligofructose is not used by the human body, so it arrives in the colon unchanged. There the fibers enter one end of the bacteria. It is then metabolized and an Energy Pod comes out the other end!

OK, SO WHAT DO ENERGY PODS DO?
  1. They create a healthier mix of bacteria in the colon. More good ones, fewer bad ones.
  2. They acidify the colon which is a good thing. One small consequence of this is that noxious flatus smell disappears.
  3. They are the nutrients that the colon's own cells need to stay healthy. Yes, the bacteria within the colon actually nourish the colon cells themselves. Is this not neat?
  4. They tighten up the junctions between the colon cells and help prevent a "leaky gut"
  5. They help to eliminate certain carcinogens or cancer causing substances in the colon
  6. They get into the blood stream and are actually used as energy by the body itself.
  7. There are some others, but you get the picture. It is a pretty impressive list and there is science behind them.
CAN YOU FEEL THEM WORKING?

Well, yes and no. Like most chemical processes within the body, you can't feel an individual energy pod occuring, but when million upon millions of Energy Pods are flooding through your colon and body, it can have a positive impact on how you feel.

HOW DO I GET MY BODY TO MAKE LOTS OF ENERGY PODS?

The soluble fibers that drive this energy factory in the colon reside in the fruits and, especially, the vegetables that most of us just do not get enough of. They are particularly high in:
  • dandelion greens
  • chicory
  • jicama
  • agave
  • asparagus
  • yams
  • jerusalem artichokes
In fact, these fibers are found in small amounts throughout the plant world in 36,000 species of plants. We just have to eat enough of them. But since many of these truly prebiotic-rich plants are not part of our typical western diet (even a relatively 'healthy' diet), we created Prebiotin. Prebiotin is a mixture of oligofructose and inulin, the very fibers that are in these above plants.

So, protect your colon by eating well. This, in turn, will create mountains of Energy Pods to keep your colon and your general health at their peak.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Leaky Gut and Fatty Liver

Our professors back in medical school always said we should listen carefully to patients as they usually could tell you what was wrong with them. Then I went into practice and patients began to tell me that they had a leaky gut.

A leaky gut? Yes, we knew that there were a few rare conditions where proteins and fluid leaked through the gut wall into the intestine. These were easily diagnosed and I can’t ever remember making this diagnosis. So, it was a head scratcher.

Now recent medical journal articles are providing some answers. And, yes, it turns out that many of my patients did have “leaky guts”. We just did not know the science behind it. Now, it looks like we do. More importantly, there may be simple things that we can do to correct it.

THE BUGS IN THE GUT

One point that needs to be remembered is that everyone has huge numbers of bacteria in their gut, mostly in the colon. These can never be cleansed away nor would you want to do so. However, we now know that there are good bugs and some not so good bugs in the bowel. We can call them bad bugs. The balance of whether you have predominantly good or bad bugs depends almost solely on what you eat

THE DIET OF GUT BACTERIA

Fiber. Yes, soluble planet fiber is the main and premier food for the good bugs in the gut. The bad bugs can thrive on almost anything else you eat. They particularly like the high fat, high sugar, low fiber foods found in the western diet. But the good guys like certain particular soluble fibers found in vegetables and fruits. These are called prebiotics. They are most prevalent in artichokes, chicory, dandelions, onions, bananas and certain others. When these foods are consumed in adequate amounts, the good bacteria flourish and the bad ones do not. It is as simple as that. The problem is it’s near-impossible to get enough prebiotic fiber by eating these foods. Unless you have Dandelion Salad and Artichoke Soup while gnawing on a Chicory root, it’s tough to hit the 4+grams per day you need. That’s why we created Prebiotin. Prebiotin is a 100% natural, plant derived pure prebiotic that dissolves easily in food or liquid.

GOOD and BAD BUGS and A LEAKY GUT

Here is what science now knows about this condition. The cells along the gut wall should be lined up very tight one to another with a thin grout-like material holding them together. Nothing gets between them, either in or out. What happens when bad bugs predominate in the gut is that they produce substances that actually loose this “grout or mortar” between the cells; a “leaky gut”. The space between the cells widens. Fluids can then seep out into the gut. More importantly noxious agents produced by these bad bugs-let’s call them toxins- can and actually do move through these spaces on into the blood stream. From there they move on up to the liver.

FATTY LIVER

This condition is very common in type 2 diabetes or the “metabolic syndrome” where a person is overweight, has hypertension, is at risk for heart disease and likely has pre-diabetes. It is directly related to the high fat, high sugar, low fiber diet so prevalent in our society. So, these toxins which come from the bad bacteria move into the blood stream through the leaky gut. They then cause fat to be deposited into the liver and along with that may cause inflammation which can actually lead to cirrhosis of the liver. That is right. You can get cirrhosis of the liver even without drinking alcohol.

To summarize:

· Bad bugs in the gut actually can weaken the binding substance that holds colon cells tightly together, creating a leaky gut.

· Toxins produced by these bad bugs then move through these weakened spaces and into your bloodstream.

· When they reach the liver, they can cause damaging fat to be deposited in the liver, creating a fatty liver.

· Prebiotics, such as Prebiotin, reverse the balance in the colon from bad bugs to good bugs.

· Hopefully, in adequate amounts they can reverse or at least improve this liver condition.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

New Study Suggests Prebiotics Increase Lifespan by 33%

A recently published study from the British Journal of Nutrition has demonstrated that Oligofructose Enriched Inulin (the exact active prebiotic in Prebiotin) can reduce cholesterol, triglycerides, body weight and leads to a 33% increase in lifespan!

Okay, now the caveat: the study was done on rats and they were fed the prebiotic in Prebiotin for their entire lives from birth to death.

Nevertheless, the result is amazing. The rats fed prebiotics were slimmer, had lower cholesterol and triglycerides and simply flat-out lived longer. 100% of both the prebiotic-fed rats and the control group survied to 12 months - the equivalent of early adulthood for a rat. However at 18 months (middle-aged!), 100% of the prebiotic rats were still alive while over 20% of the control rats had died. At 24 months (getting a bit geriatric), nearly 80% of the prebiotic rats were still alive while about half the control rats had died.

Chart showing increase lifespan with prebiotin15R

Interestingly, the causes of death were similar for the rats fed Prebiotics versus the control group. They died of the same things, just later for the rats on prebiotics.

So are we actually claiming Prebiotin can make you live 33% longer? Of course not. If this study shows anything, it shows that the digestive system - and the colon in particular - are true "health organs" not just a waste disposal system.

Having said that... My expected lifespan +33% means I expect to see all of you at my 120th birthday party!

One very real aspect of this study: it reinforces our ongoing commitment to use Oligofructose Enriched Inulin as the prebiotic driver of Prebiotin. Most prebiotic supplements just use plain inulin. While plain inulin is much (much!) cheaper, it does not have nearly the research-proved health benefits that Oligofructose Enriched Inulin has. We're not the kind of outfit that would pull that kind of switcheroo just to make a few extra bucks - but do take a long, hard look at any "prebiotic" that lists "inulin" or "chicory root" as their prebiotic. That is NOT the same as Oligofructose Enriched Inulin!

You can read the article by clicking this link to the British Journal of Nutrition. Read and decide for yourself... But rest assured, we here at Jackson GI are being extra-careful to get our daily dose of Prebiotin now!

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Omipresent Antibacterials

What could be more wonderful than having an antibacterial in your soap, toothpaste (Crest, Colgate, Sensodyne), after shave, mouth washes, clothes, bedding, even kitchen utensils, everything!. Ain't chemistry wonderful? What is the agent that has so quietly seeped into our every day life? 

Why, it is Triclosan. Never heard of it?  Then you must go to Wikipedia, search triclosan and then read it. 

The FDA meekly rolled over for industry and allowed this product to be used everywhere. It does not readily decompose as it has been found in landfills 30 years after it was put there.  

The public has been taught that bacteria are all bad and that the only good bacteria is a dead one.  But bacteria are for the most part friendly and useful. We really do not want to get rid of them. When the friendlies on the skin and mouth are killed off to vigorously, it makes room for the unfriendlies. True, triclosan has been used successfully for MRSA skin carriers. But a case could easily be made that scrubbing our skins too hard with antibacterials, simply makes room for the resistant ones, MRSA for example, to take up residence.

Triclosan is a biocide. The suffix "cide"in science means "kill" It interacts at multiple parts of bacteria within and on the bacterial surface. Since we all go back to bacteria several billion years ago, you should not be surprised if many of these chemical, enzyme and protein reactions are present in our own bodies. They very likely serve very useful purposes. 

Why would we want to confront them with a destructive chemical made by industry to sell soaps and toothpaste? Yes, the Wiki article speaks to suspected bad effects in the body from triclosan. When this chemical hits water and sunlight--surprise!! A dioxin is formed. It reacts with chlorine in water to form chloroform gas (a carcinogen according to the federal EPA).

The safest thing to do is read the labels on everything. If you see a word you do not understand--well make up your own mind what to do. By the way, Ivory brand is the only liquid soap I could find without triclosan. If you see the word "antibacterial" you can assume it has triclosan in the product.

My company, Jackson GI Medical is in the business of making prebiotic fiber supplements that support and help beneficial bacteria, so I am keenly aware of this subject. Perhaps more to the point, Jackson GI (unlike many 'supplement' companies) lists our ingredient on the label and has full nutritional info/disclosure. And we put our prebiotic ingredients right on our website so folks can check it out BEFORE they buy (just roll your mouse over the "view larger" link on our product page)

Why? Not because we have to, but because we believe an informed, nutritionally-aware customer is in everyone's best interest. We don't hide behind any "secret blends" or "proprietary mixtures." 

So whether you're avoiding Triclosan, checking that a supplement is all natural, or simply being health-aware, label reading is a good thing. I can't tell you how to live your life, but I can tell you that I'm always suspicious of products with novella-lenth ingredient lists right off the bat.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Astrophysics of the Colon?

I just spent a great 12 hour day at a gala symposium at Arizona Sate University in Tempe on Origins. It was a scientific extravaganza extraordinaire, looking at all aspects of our planet, our own solar system, our entire cosmos and, of course, us humans ourselves. These and the archived videos of the sessions are and will all be available at asu.edu. Search out Origins Symposium.

70 of the world's leading scientists, including 6 Nobel prize winners were on the program. The world famous astrophysicist Stephen Hawkins was to attend but had to give an audio presentation instead as he became ill and could not attend. It was, perhaps, the greatest collection of such scientists ever gathered for such a symposium.

Some of the information they shared was simply beyond understanding for us mere mortals who raptly sat at the feet of these giants. However, what was totally understandable by the 3,000 of us in the audience (how about that for a conference that ran 12 hours right through the March Madness final game!) was the sheer joy of discovery that was so evident to these experts and that came across so clearly to us.

So what did it all mean to me? Well, I am a retired gastroenterologist. I haven't retired, however. I have simply shifted gears into high drive to better understand the enormous new discoveries that have occurred about the workings of our own bodies and, especially, how the bacteria within our gut have turned out to be such loving buddies and such health producing partners. Who could have predicted it? We simply take care of them and make them healthy by supplying them with the right nourishment and they, in turn, do the same for us.

There are some enormous projects being followed in this area even today. The Gastrointestinal Microbiome is one whereby the entire gene makeup of all the bacteria in the gut is to be determined and understood. There are enormous implications from this project alone. It is certain that what we know now is just the first chapter in a wonderful scientific adventure story.

So, how do I and my readers fit in? Well, my skills are in the GI field. They are also in the field of communicating the complex workings of the GI tract in health and disease to my patients. This is what is so exciting. There is simply so much to tell and it is not just of academic interest. What a cosmic physicist tells us really does not have any practical importance to us individually: Let's face it. However, how the gut works in each of us can have a very important outcome to our personal well being.

That is rather neat. I don't really understand cosmic physics, string theory or how the atom works very well, but I do understand the excitement of discovery and the thrill of telling others of practical things they can do to make their lives and health better. I look forward to continuing to share these discoveries in my own field of gastroenterology with you.

Our major international meeting of Digestive Disease Week is in Chicago this May-June. Last year there was just a breakfast meeting on Prebiotics and Probiotics. This year there is an 8 hour session with lots of other presentations. The field has come a long way in a short time. We are in an information overflow, so stay tuned.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Prebiotic Comments & Questions from Friends & Family

We now get many such comments and questions from friends. Many are so worthwhile that I put them up here for every one to see.

ANTIBIOTICS, PROBIOTICS and PREBIOTICS
Q- Should I take probiotics and prebiotics when I take on oral antibiotic?

A- Yes, I think I would. A year ago I was uncertain. Now there is enough info getting into the medical literature and practice of medicine, that the potential benefit may outweigh the uncertainty. More to the specifics:
    
Probiotics

Select the ones that have the highest amounts of:
  • Bifdo logum
  • Bifido rhamnosus
  • Strepto salivarious
  • Saccharomyces boulardi
Use twice a day. (Sorry about the technical names. You can get a full essay at Probiotics)

Prebiotics

Our oligofructose enriched inulin prebiotic fiber supplement (Prebiotin) is the best. I would use2 grams twice a day

When the antibiotic course is concluded, I would use the above for at least 1 week and then continue Prebiotin indefinitely

FINGERNAILS and TOENAILS

Since I have personally been on Prebiotin, I have been quite surprised at the growth and strength of my nails. I have checked with my colleagues and they say the same thing. A person from California says "stronger fingernails". Finally, I have a long standing fungus infection in one toenail. which appears to be clearing.

I have no idea how this may occur or even if there is any effect with Prebiotin. We do know that when the bacteria factory within our colon is functioning optimally, that health benefits occur beyond the colon. Could our finger and toenails be one such benefit? It has not been proven yet, but it will be fun to wait and see.

PERIODONTAL DISEASE

A close friend of mine has been on Prebiotin for over a year. She reports that her periodontist has been amazed that the pockets around some of her teeth have been gradually closing. These pockets of of periodontal disease are caused by bad bacteria getting into these crevices. Could swallowed prebiotics in some manner stimulate "good" bacteria to grow at these sites and displace the bad ones? At this time we can only guess at this possibility since there is no reported research yet in the medical literature. However, since there is no downside to taking these naturally occuring fibers, I would say go for it! Let us know what happens.

ULCERATIVE COLITIS

An attorney friend of mine with ulcerative colitis has told me that since taking Prebiotin, he has been able to reduce his medication, he no longer has foul flatus smell and that he just feels better. How this happens is becoming clear to me. Hydrogen sulfide is the very smelly and nasty gas that is made by certain colon bacteria. Remarkably, almost all UC patients make this gas, so there is something special here. There is suspicion that this toxic gas actually promotes damage to the colon wall in some manner.

These bugs need a neutral enviornment to grow and produce this gas. The do not grow in acid conditions. Prebiotics and more specifically Prebiotin produce beneficial acid substances and so reduce the growth the growth of these bad bugs. We need further good research here, but were I still in practice I would place all my UC patients on Prebiotin along with their standard medical program. There is virtually no downside and, who knows, there may be a significant benefit.
  • From Florida: "I love how Prebiotin has helped my daughter's ulcerative colitis".
  • From Minnesota; "I was diagnosed with colitis.... my symptoms went away and have not returned"
  • From North Carolina: "It helps my ulcerative colitis symptoms"
CROHNS DISEASE

Crohns disease starts with bad colon bacteria invading the wall of the lower small intestine and/or the colon. We now know who these nasty guys are. When prebiotics such as Prebiotin are taken, certain substances called short chain fatty acids are formed by the good bacteria. In additional to these substances being very good for the nutrition of the colon wall itself, they seem to change the makeup of the bacteria next to the colon wall. The good bacteria grow and the bad ones do not. 

Will this be a benefit for the Crohns patient? We will have to wait and see, but there are researchers who are cautiously optimistic. As with ulcerative colitis were I still in practice I would advise my Crohns patients to try adding these natural plant fibers to their medical program.
  • A Prebiotin user from Pennsylvania says "not as many flare-ups of my Crohns".
We get many other positive comments, but I will save these for another day.

Frank Jackson MD

Friday, March 13, 2009

A Layman's Guide to Flatus (AKA Farting)

When I was practising gastroenterology, no subject came up for discussion more often than gas, farting and flatus. Everybody has it but no one talks about it. So here is some up to date medical information on Gas, Farting and Flatus.

The colon is home to myriad numbers of bacteria, most of which provide numerous health benefits to our colon and to our body in general. It is in our own health interest to keep this bacteria factory operating at peak efficiency. Most of the bugs rely on soluble fiber plant food for their own nourishment and growth. No problem here. This is why eating lots of veggies, whole grains and fruits is so good for us. So, it is important to know that bacteria are a normal and healthy part of our colon. 

Now our best friends in the colon are the Bifido and Lacto bacteria (Relax, you don't need to know the technical names). These guys and gals do not make gases. They only do good things for us. However, there are other bacteria in the right side of the colon that ferment these same plant fibers and do make lots of hydrogen gas. We would rather they didn't but they do and you just have to accept this fact that really can not be changed. The good news is that Hydrogen gas is completely odorless. So you may "toot" but you won't reek. So far so good. 

But stay with me here. What happens when this hydrogen gas moves around to the left side of the colon? 

Ahh, here is where 2 diabolical characters do their work. The first are the sulfide producing bugs. They take the arriving hydrogen gas and convert it into hydrogen sulfide (H2S). This is what gives flatus its foul smell. This rotten egg type gas is the source of jokes and great merriment. However, there is really nothing funny about H2S. In fact, in equal concentrations it is as deadly as hydrogen cyanide! Could this be the reason for so much talk about "deadly farts?" Humm. Well, H2S offends our nostrils, but for most of us that is the end of it, if you will excuse the pun.  

A second type of bacteria in the left colon metabolize this hydrogen gas to make odorless methane gas. Yes, methane is the gas that some of your high school jock friends light in the gym locker room. It was called lighting farts in my day. As fun as that may have been, we now know that methane, compared to H2S, is harmless from a health standpoint.

So, here are some key points. 

  1. Flatus is normal and is proof that you are feeding your good Bifido and Lacto friends adequately. 
  2. The normal number of farts per day is somewhere around 12 with females going down to 7 and beer drinking, meat eating males reaching 20 or so. 
  3. There is great variation and a lot depends on what and the amount you eat.

Can you get rid of the fart smell? Yes, you can. Certain prebiotic fibers in plant food cause the good bacteria to make certain acid substances, which in turn make the sulfide forming bacteria stop growing and so stop making these smelly gases. These prebiotic fibers are particularly present in avocados, onions, garlic, bananas, artichoke. agave, and wild jams. Americans really eat very small amounts of these plants and so get a low amount of these fibers. Of course, they are the active prebiotic fibers in our Prebiotin supplement, and as always I encourage you to visit http://www.jacksongi.com and learn more for yourself - maybe even consider adding Prebiotin to your dietary regimen

The proof-in-the-pudding is this: My friends and I as well as many customers find that their flatus no longer has any smell after taking these supplements and increasing these foods. Our CEO even 'took over' a page on the Jacksongi.com site to talk about his experience in "sinking the stink" of his flatus using Prebiotin. (He thinks I don't know, but it's definitely worth a read). 

So, the good news is there is something you can do about the ill smell of farts. 

But, can you change the volume of flatus? For certain you should increase the prebiotic fibers in the foods you eat. These and our Prebiotin supplement can be used until your flatus has no smell. They can and should be increased until the volume of flatus is within your tolerable range.  

I will close with a quote from Ben Franklin in a parody essay he wrote in 1781.

"My Prize Question therefore should be, To discover some Drug wholesome & not disagreable, to be mixed with our common Food, or Sauces, that shall render the natural discharges of Wind from our bodies, not only inoffensive, but agreable as Perfumes."

Well, prebiotic food fibers and our Prebiotin will not change the smell of flatus into a perfume, but at least we can render it odor-free. I would therefore salute my fellow Pennsylvanian Ben Franklin and tell his spirit that we have gone half way in his quest. Even now we are working on genetically inserting the smell of a lavender plant into colon bacteria to produce lavender farts. (Just kidding!)

Monday, March 2, 2009

Crohn's Disease - Important New Information

There are bugs in your colon that are your friends. There are also some bugs that you do not want there. They seem to be the ones that cause inflammation problems for Crohns patients.

We gastroenterology physicians have always known that colon bacteria play a key role in Crohns Disease. No bugs, no inflammation. We now know a lot more about Crohns and how the different types of colon bacteria may effect the disease. This new information is a bit startling in as much as it finally may allow Crohns patients to more fully participate in their own well-being by managing their diet in a more scoience based manner. You are referred to my full essay
Dietary Therapy for Crohns Disease.

The most important fact to understand is that y
ou want to enhance the growth of good colon bacteria and retard that of the bad ones, the ones that are likely the injurious ones

How do you do that? Medical research is now giving us some answers. We now know that the beneficial bugs, primarily the Bifidobacter and Lactobacillus, thrive when we eat enough of foods that are rich in prebiotic fibers. (For my detailed description, go to Prebiotics.) 

Eating enough of these foods and taking a prebiotic supplement is likely an important part of therapy along with the recommendations of your physician. 

Let me outline 5 major important points for Crohns patients, points that are new and not yet widely known by patients.

  1. Bad Bugs-Good Bugs. Crohns patients have a significant increase in the bad bacteria that adhere to the colon wall. This is where bacteria invade the intestine. Adequate prebiotic fibers can change this make up by reducing the bad actors and increasing the good ones, the ones that do not cause inflammation.

  2. A Leaky Gut. We now know that CD people have abnormal spaces between the lining cells of the colon. This almost certainly is the place where these invading bugs enter the colon and small bowel. Prebiotics act to tighten up these spaces and, hopefully, preventing inflammation from occuring.

  3. Spectacular Short Chain Fatty Acids. When the good bacteria, the Bifidos and Lactos, thrive, they generate short chain fatty acids (SCFA), a substance that helps nourish the colon's own cells. In addition it seems to act like a fire hose, significantly reducing inflammation.

  4. Impressive Immune Boost. Prebiotic food fibers also increase certain immune substances within the bowel wall. This enhanced local immunity seems to be useful in further reducing inflammation.

  5. Amazing Acidity. Increasing acidity within the colon reduces and even stops certain of the nasty bacteria in the bowel from growing, the ones we feel are part of the disease. You can not acidify the colon by eating acid foods like citrus fruit. You can do it by eating prebiotic containing foods or supplements. These, in turn, cause the production of SCFAs which are acid and seem to exert this good effect in the colon.
There is evidence in the medical literature to support the above.  Some is not as firmly established as we would wish, but most of it is going in the right direction. The fact that making major changes in the eating patterns of Crohns patients could significantly improve their disease is startling to those of us who have been reading the medical literature and who have treated so many of these patients in the past. 

Our Prebiotin product can provide a regular dose of prebiotics each day. 

In the past it seemed that diet was not particularly important and we usually recommended that patients just eat what agreed with them, whatever that was. Now we seem to be at a threshold where patients can become active participants in their own therapy. What a remarkable and welcomed fact that is!

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Important new information on Ulcerative Colitis

THE SHORT VERSION

The smelly flatus that most ulcerative colitis (UC) patients have is not merely an embarassment or annoyance, it is likely a real problem. 

The malodorous scent comes from hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a gas made by certain nasty bacteria in the colon. In addition to being very pungent, hydrogen sulfide is also very toxic - as deadly as hydrogen cyanide in the same concentrations! 

Now there is evidence to show that ulcerative colitis patients don't seem to handle H2S very well. Many medical researchers now feel that H2S damages the colon's cells in those people who are genetically susceptible to UC. So, it makes sense to get rid of H2S if at all possible. 

And now, we know how this is possible:

First, reduce sulfate or sulfur in the diet. Your colon bacteria can not make hydrogen sulfide without getting lots of sulfur from the foods you eat. You can learn which foods are high in sulfur by going to my essay Dietary Therapy for Ulcerative Colitis.  Specifically, meats are very high in certain amino acids that contain sulfur. So reduce meats and other animal protein in your diet very significantly. If it were me, I would stop them entirely for a month or so. Cruciferous veggies (broccoli, cabbage, Brussel sprouts et al) are also high in sulfur. Alas, these very healthy foods may be contributing to H2S production in the colon. So, I would stop these, too, for 8 weeks.

Second: acidify your colon. I know that between heart-burn, acid-reflux and such, people have a poor perception of "acid" - but in the colon, an acidic environment is a good thing. The colon bugs that make hydrogen sulfide need a neutral environment to grow. If there is a lot of acid around, they do not grow and make H2S. Pretty simple. 

How do you do this? Not by eating acid foods such as citrus fruit. You do this by inducing beneficial bacteria in your colon - the Bifidobacter and the Lactobacillus ones - to make acid substances called short chain fatty acids (SCFA).

These SCFAs are incredibly useful substances in the colon, especially for ulcerative colitis patients. They are the very nutrients that the colon's own cells use for healthy growth. So, by stimulating the growth of these Bifido and Lacto good guys, you prevent the formation of H2S and you also nourish your own colon cells, the very ones that are damaged in ulcerative colitis. The best way to do this is to consume a good amount of prebiotic fiber. (Prebiotics are the plant fibers that these good bacteria use to grow themselves.) I recommend a daily dose of Prebiotin for this purpose.

Which brings me to oligofructose enriched inulin: Prebiotin. These special plant food fibers do the trick. 

In my experience and those of my family and friends, the maloderous smell of flatus simply disappears, indicating that H2S is no longer being produced - a nice benefit even for those of us without ulcerative colitis. But more important than this is that my friends who have ulcerative colitis have seen very significant improvement in their symptoms when they did these two things-reduce high sulfur containing foods in their diet and take Prebiotin to acidify their colon. 

So, this is what current medical research is showing us. Were I, a trained gastroenterologist, still in practice, I would start every ulcerative colitis patient on this very simple dietary program and a daily prebiotin regimen. Simply by smelling their flatus, a patient could tell if they are having a good effect. 

The fact is that most GI doctors now know that bacteria bugs in the colon are a major factor in ulcerative colitis, but till now we did not know exactly how this happened. Now, I think we do. 

So this is the "short version" of my own dietary treatment for UC patients. In the near future I will write a longer version which will address the medical evidence to support the above recommendations. Most people, I suspect,  just want to know what will work and what are the side effects. There are no side effects with prebiotics except an increase in the volume of odorless flatus if too much prebiotic is taken. Simply cut back to an acceptable level. 

I would dearly love to hear from UC patients who give this program a try. You should know that you may be on the cutting edge a very new and effective, additional way to treat this very troublesome disorder. What an amazing idea! Taking dietary control of your own medical problem!

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Global (Gut) Warming

After retiring from an active career in gastroenterology several years ago, I've had the time to think through my own training and what I really knew about the gut. I knew oceans about diseases, endoscopy and the complex drugs and treatments we used. However, there just wasn't much time to think through the fine points of basic intestinal health and nutrition. 

These topics were always on our course agendas but, frankly, they were not very sexy, compared to highly technical treatments and procedures with which we dealt every day. Further, there just was not enough time to think through the very basics of the gut. It seemed pretty simple. You put decent food in one end and waste came out the other. Patients always implored me to tell them more about what they should eat and how to manage their nutrition. Aside from the obvious of recommending lots of fiber, lesser animal, saturated fats and weight control, there did not seem much more to say.

Now I am away from caring for individual patients, away from the endoscopes, away from the frantic hospital work, and, yes, away from the burden of the unending paper burden of insurance and regulators. I have remained deeply interested in quality care in medicine. I have become a medical literature mole, ferreting out  some startling new areas in our field of gastroenterology. What I have discovered and what is still not fully appreciated by my disease and procedure oriented colleagues ( I was one myself, I confess) is that the gut is a thing of beauty. The colon itself is a true health organ, providing myriad health benefits if it is just treated right. (See my article: A Wonderful Colon for more on this).

If I can borrow an analogy, I view our gut very much as we, the media and the government view the environment, climate warming and our very precious earth. We know we must clean it up and, hopefully, this is slowly happening. For too long we have treated our gut the same way, not considering the foods we put into it. If it tasted good, that was the only criteria for good nutrition for many of us. Now we know so much more about intestinal function within us in much the same way that we know about CO2 and pollutants in the air we breath. 

The colon in particular, always in the past viewed as nothing but a waste receptacle, is now known to be a health producing organ that is filled with huge numbers of healthy and some not so healthy bacteria. Feeding it correctly tilts the bacteria balance in many healthy ways. Plant prebiotics are the center piece of this new knowledge. Probiotics are likely of some benefit as well.

So, this will begin a series of blog talks and interchanges with you the public. I will speak to many gastrointestinal disorders such as diverticulosis, irritable bowel syndrome, constipation, colon and other cancers. osteoporosis (yes, there is a colon component here), Crohns Disease, Ulcerative Colitis and others. Do you have a GI topic you would like me to discuss?

I have really not retired from practice. I have simply moved away from private patient care to public gastrointestinal care. I wish to provide the best dietary advise by a trained gastroenterologist who spends time almost every day searching the medical literature and conversing with my colleagues for that which is helpful to you.

Keep tuned

Frank W Jackson MD

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Overdue Intro

In reviewing my first couple posts, I realize I never really kicked off this blog - I rather just 'jumped in'. So let's rectify that:

OK, I am a trained gastroenterolgist MD, but a total amateur in the blogoshere. So I now tip my toe in the waters of the blog.

I am the founder of Jackson GI Medical (http://www.jacksongi.com). By founder I mean I wrote all the copy on the site, vouch for its accuracy and medical credibility, helped direct the creation of the web site and brought our first product, Prebiotin, to the e-commerce market. Then it got really hard and, frankly, less interesting. Running a company was just totally different from coming up with good medically sound ideas and writing for the public and patients.

Enter Kris Chronister (http://krischronister.blogspot.com). By an incredibly happy coincidence we met some time ago. Now we are a solid team. His skills and vision on running a company merged very well with mine.

The idea of bringing medically credible dietary info and products to the public and patients alike was a natural for both of us. So, he is now the CEO and I am now back in the laboratory and at my desk where I can use my own skills to the best of all our advantage-both you the public and we the company.

My plan is to get solid good dietary information to the the healthy public as well as to gastroenterology patients. For sure, I will speak in a very easily understandable manner on how the gut works and what we all can do to make it support us and keep us healthy. I can not speak to any specific person about their medical problems. That just doesn't work on the blog, professionally speaking.

But I do want to hear from the public with their own comments, opinions and general dietary questions. I promise to provide good information supported by medical facts and evidence to the extent it is available.

My next blog topics in no particular order will be:

  • Peanut butter and the gut
  • The new era of prebiotics
  • Crohns disease and prebiotic fiber
  • Whatever happened to natural fiber ( why has fiber become a buzz word for good health?)
  • Ulcerative colitis and prebiotic fiber
  • Prebiotics fibers and appetite/weight loss ( I promise no hype or lies!)
  • Cancer (many kinds), polyps, diet and fiber.
  • Diverticulosis- why do we get this disorder and what can we do we do about it?

Ok, this is a start. If you have topics you would like me to address, please let me know.

So stay tuned to my blog - and to Jacksongi.com. We have several new products in the design stage which will provide solid health benefits without the hype.

Frank W Jackson, MD
Gastroenterologist

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Gut Immunity: Fact and Fiction

If you haven't noticed, many of the packaged foods and probiotic bacteria products we buy are touting "enhancement of the immune system" as a reason to buy these products. They make it sound like our own natural immune system is just not good enough and that it needs an extra kick that their products will provide. What do we make of all this? 

Everyone has an immune system. Without it the bacteria and viruses outside and inside would simply overwhelm us at an early age, like in infancy. Our immune system depends on our body's ability to make antibodies and certain other factors to fight and defeat these bugs. These are made in our lymph glands and, early in life, the thymus gland. However, a major part of the immune system resides in the intestinal tract. This is as it should be. The colon is home to a huge number of bacteria and some of these fellows are nasty. Our immune system, in the wall of the intestine and especially the large bowel or colon, protects us. 

A quite remarkable recent research finding is that some of these bacteria, when stimulated vigorously to grow, produce certain substances that, in turn, actually appear to make the bowel wall more resistant and stronger. The contents of the colon actually become more acid and this is likely the reason why. 

So, what stimulates the good colon bacteria? It is actually the foods that we eat, especially plant foods. These foods contain certain fibers, now known as prebiotic plant fibers that are the food source for these good bacteria. Vegetables, grains and fruits are loaded with these healthy fibers. 

But back to the original question. Does "enhancing" the immune system by ingesting vitamins, herbs or probiotics really do anything? And is this important? 

The answer to the first question is probably yes. Researchers who have done research on the bowel wall have found that when certain bacterial species, especially the Bifido (Bifidobacter) species, are increased in the colon, then indeed some increase in certain immune factors is seen. This has been seen when both prebiotic plant fibers and probiotic bacteria are fed to animals and in some instances to humans as well. 

The answer to the second question is uncertain at best. We simply do not know if this very small increase in immune factors in the colon in the otherwise healthy person results in fewer colds, other respiratory conditions or any other infection. In other words, if these immune factors increase by 1% or so, are we healthier for it? 

My educated guess is that the answer will be no, if an answer is ever obtained. Simply eating 25-35 grams of a mixed group of vegetables, grains and fruits each day will almost certainly give you the stimulus to your friendly Bifido colon bacteria and keep your immune system "enhanced" just fine. Taking anything beyond is likely not harmful, but it also is likely not very helpful either. 

Of course, for those who eat less than this amount, you should visit Jacksongi.com for Prebiotin prebiotic soluble fiber supplements

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Our Friends, the Bacteria

Below is a link to a New England Journal of Medicine article this week. Family members Wilson and Matt are the 2 docs in the trenches who I urge to respond to my comments.

For those non-medical people, read the first and last few paragraphs of the article anyway. These give the main points. I remain a post-doc out in the pasture eating alfalfa (very good for cattle's bowels I am told). As you all know, I am now intensely interest in prebiotics and the gut microbiota, the glorious cauldron of gut microbes. But, this is a serious memo to friends and family.

If there were ever any proof needed of the power of evolution, what bacteria have shown us is the best (or worst) example. They have simply evolved to defeat whatever humans have come up with to counter them. We are possibly on the precipice of some very bad things happening.

Now that I no longer am part of the active medical community and, especially, since I am a confirmed advocate of natural responses (to the extent possible) to those things that we will not be able to change - e.g. bacterial resistance to our increasingly toxic antibiotic drugs - I pass these thoughts and recommendations on for what they are worth.

1. Most bacteria are our friends-cherish them

2. Bacteria are everywhere-air, skin, nose, mouth, every part of the gut, urinary and vaginal tract-everywhere. They are at the top of the highest mountains and the bottom of deepest seas. They were here billions of years before we arrived. They produced the oxygen in the air that we breath. They are our buddies. We want to keep the good ones very close.

3. Maintain your good skin bacteria. When bathing, use soap sparingly. Avoid "antibacterial" soaps - the A-Bomb of washing yourself. If the good skin bacteria are excessively washed away, guess who will come to dinner?

4. Maintain a flourishing collection of good gut bacteria. How?...

5. Eat 25-35 gms of veggies, fruits and whole grains each day. And make sure to take your Prebiotin with the prebiotic fibers that nourish just the probiotic good bacteria in the gut - the ones we want to keep there.

6. Absolutely avoid "detox" regimines. Your body does just fine getting rid of most of the nasty stuff we encounter. Further, you can never "cleanse" your gut nor would you want to. No regular high colonic enemas.

7. Avoid antibiotics to the extent you can. Most antibiotics kill bacteria almost everywhere in body along with bad ones we take then for. When the good ones are gone-- yep, you guessed it.

8. If you have ever had MRSA, get your nose cultured. Your pet, too. You and they may be carriers.

Bottom line - protect the good bacteria inside and outside your body, they are your friends.

Whether you call me Dr. Frank, Dad, Uncle Frank or simply friend I urge you to consider this.

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: "Frank Jackson"
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 9:15:18 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: An article from The New England Journal of Medicine

Dr. Frank Jackson wants to notify you about thefollowing article from The New England Journal of Medicine:

Antibiotic-Resistant Bugs in the 21st Century -- A Clinical Super-Challenge: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/360/5/439??eaf