Category Archives: Questions & Answers

Using Superfoods And Canxida Restore To Heal Your Gut

I often get asked to identify what foods I recommend for optimal digestive health.

This article is going to emphasize foods that I recommend based on their fiber and prebiotic content. I want to highlight the importance of feeding the bacteria in your digestive system – particularly your colonic bacteria.

Based on the thousands of stool tests I have conducted over the years, one thing is clear: people in the Western world are not eating enough fiber. I’m seeing more parasites than ever. I’m seeing more harmful bacteria. But what I’m seeing the most is lower levels of beneficial bacteria, especially the bifidobacterial and the Lactobacillus species, the two main groups of beneficial bacteria. These findings stem from the fact that people aren’t eating enough gut-healthy foods.

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I just read a study showing that the average American will be lucky to eat 14 grams of fiber in their diet per day, and maybe one to three grams of prebiotic sugars in their diet through the foods that they eat. In contrast, people in underdeveloped countries, eat up to 10 to 15 grams of these prebiotic sugars like inulin, fructooligosaccharide (FOS), and galactooligosaccharide (GOS). They are also eating up to six or seven times as much fiber as the average American.

In my opinion, it is crucial to eat high fiber, prebiotic containing foods regularly. To be clear, I’m not talking about cultured or fermented foods because they are an entirely different ball game. There is too much emphasis today on kefir, kombucha, kimchi, and yogurt. I’ve seen lots of people get side effects from putting kefir in their diet when their gut is dysfunctional.

If you have a dysfunctional digestive system, and you are drinking kefir every day, you can create a bigger problem than you are trying to solve. So, in my opinion, kefir is not a good drink when you have very bad irritable bowel, SIBO, or Candida overgrowth. I’m finding the same with kombucha. I consider yogurt to be a lot less problematic for people. Yogurt is especially tolerable if it’s a natural, sour Greek yogurt, sourced from grass-fed cows, and made with full-fat milk. Yogurt tends to be much less aggravating for the gut than kefir that you make at home.

The following is a list of just some of the foods I recommend routinely eating due to their fiber and prebiotic content:

  • Pumpkin seeds
  • Sunflower seeds
  • Chestnuts
  • Hazelnuts
  • Pecan nuts
  • Almonds
  • Good quality rolled oats cooked in plain water
  • Legumes such as adzuki beans, pinto beans, navy beans, lima beans
  • Brassica vegetables including cauliflower, broccoli, Brussel sprouts and kale
  • Chinese vegetables like bok choy
  • Green bananas and plantain bananas
  • Raw cacao
  • 70% cocoa products
  • Vegetables like artichokes, beets, asparagus and green beans
  • Alliums including onions, chives, and leeks
  • Jerusalem artichokes, burdock, dandelion roots, chicory root

When you start regularly putting these foods into your diet, you’re going to build excellent colonic health. You will notice that you will have better bowel movements.

Once your gut is very high functioning, you can start thinking differently and put kefir into the diet and put kimchi into the diet. These foods will keep your digestive system in great shape.

I also want to caution you about the use of prebiotics in dietary supplements. Many people take FOS, GOS, inulin and other prebiotics, in combination with a probiotic. The assumption is that a supplement that continues both a prebiotic and probiotic is good for gut health. We stopped using that combination in our clinic about four or five years ago. We had noticed and increasing numbers of emails and phone calls from people suffering from gas, bloating and feeling sick when using probiotics with synthetic prebiotics. We stopped doing it.

I think the problems is particularly with FOS because it feeds bacteria like Klebsiella in your gut.

Klebsiella is normally found in your gut, but if you build up large numbers, it’s going cause symptoms– just like Candida. When I started to regularly see stool reports with very high Klebsiella counts, I discovered to my horror that many of these people were taking two to three probiotics every day along with chemically manufactured prebiotics. Once I got them off that combination, we were able to return the Klebsiella to normal levels.

That is why I would be very cautious about taking a supplement that contains prebiotic sugars. If you look at my CanXida Restore, it includes no prebiotics for precisely this reason. The best source of prebiotics is the whole foods found in your diet, not a laboratory.

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Does The Candida Crusher Protocol Work For Vaginal Yeast Infections?

Our clinic has treated over a thousand women for vaginal yeast, and the results have been outstanding.

If you’re not getting rid of your thrush, there is something wrong, because you should be able to eradicate the infection within three to six months.

Nearly all my female clients with vaginal yeast infections get rid of it entirely well before six months. The patients with the quickest recoveries follow my eating plan and my lifestyle plan. I also recommend using borax capsules vaginally and beginning a course of CanXida Remove and Restore supplements. We usually recommend taking the CanXida products for three to six months. Changing your underwear daily is also important. Make sure you have a good washing machine that properly sanitizes your underclothing.

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This protocol works very well to treat vaginal yeast infections. We’ve treated over a thousand women with this problem, and it has worked nearly every single time. You should be able to get on top of this problem.

Remember that if you are in an intimate relationship, Candida can be transferred back and forth.

Please have a look at Chapter Five in the Candida Crusher book. This chapter is all about vaginal yeast infections. I have not seen any cases of vaginal yeast that can’t be treated successfully. I have seen patients that are resistant to doing the treatment, but I haven’t seen cases that can’t be completely fixed.

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Will Apricot Seeds Help Treat My Candida Infection?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBLCtspepKc

Apricot seeds were once very popular, particularly in the 1970s, because they were thought to cure cancer. People were eating large amounts of them.

Amygdalin, one of the compounds found in apricot seeds, converts to a cyanide-like compound in the body. The belief was that eating copious amounts of apricot seeds could kill cancer.

But plenty of published research on the topic has been inconclusive.

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In 1992 there was some research published in a British medical journal showing that amygdalin has no effect on cancer. However, there was a Korean study that showed that low doses of amygdalin had a positive impact on prostate cancer.

Overall, I think the jury is still out when it comes to the medicinal effects of apricot seeds.

In my opinion, almonds are probably just as good, if not better, than apricot seeds but with a lot less risk. I can’t see any harm from having four, five, or six apricot seeds a day. Apricots contain vitamin A, iron, and valuable prebiotics. Overall, apricot seeds are a good healthy food, but I don’t think they offer any killing power against Candida.

Does Having Candida Mean That I Have to Go Gluten-Free?

There’s a significant link between Candida and gluten. Let’s start by talking about a protein called HWP1, or hyphal wall protein 1. Candida creates this protein so that it can hook up to the intestinal wall. The immune system doesn’t recognize HWP1 as foreign when the Candida is alive. Interestingly, the amino acid configuration of HWP1 is very similar to the amino acid configuration of two proteins found in gluten called gliadin proteins.

There are about seven different proteins found in gluten, but alpha and gamma gliadin look very much like HWP1.

The immune system does not mount a response to HWPI when the protein is intact. However, HWP1 is not a very stable protein because Candida has a limited life span. It lives and dies repeatedly. Candida replicates by sending out spores and hyphae. The amount of Candida replication that occurs will depend on the bacterial balance in your gut.

Eventually, as a Candida cell dies, it leaves the shell of the HWP1 behind. HWP1 starts to denature, and now the immune system does recognize it as a foreign substance. The immune system then mounts an attack on the protein. This attack can spread to gluten proteins due to the similarity between HWP and alpha and gamma gliadin. The end result can be the beginning of an autoimmune process.

It’s a very interesting concept. I’ve seen in many people that once we eradicate Candida, they can eat gluten again.

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In other words, going gluten-free doesn’t have to be a life sentence.

Just because your healthcare professional tells you to avoid gluten does not mean you have to avoid gluten for the rest of your life.

There are some conditions autoimmune conditions, like psoriasis, for example, that I see a lot in my clinical practice. Our clinic has found that up to 65% of people with psoriasis have Candida. I can tell you now from my experience that when you eradicate Candida in these patients, they can tolerate gluten again. It’s absolutely true. I’ve seen this in the clinic numerous times.

There are reasons why people become gluten intolerant, but sometimes the reasons get missed. Rather than adopting a gluten-free diet and leaving it there, I believe it’s essential to investigate why people become intolerant to a particular food or substance. Is it because they are drinking too much alcohol? Is it because they’re not sleeping enough? Have they got a high-stress lifestyle? What is undermining their system to decrease the tolerability of gluten? Have they got HWP1 protein? What is going on in their digestive system?

With a bit of investigation and insight into the state of the GI tract, these problems can often be solved.

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Bringing Back The Good Gut Bacteria With Probiotics

I’ve had clients prescribed antibiotics in situations where something like grapefruit seed extract would have been sufficient. I think that is unfortunate because the collateral damage from antibiotics use can be quite significant. For example, doxycycline is an antibiotic that kills off bifidobacterial, one of the beneficial bacteria found in the colon.

If you are using doxycycline, I would recommend a regime of probiotics and prebiotic foods once you’ve finished your prescription. Some people will recommend taking the probiotics while still on the antibiotics, but that doesn’t make any sense to me. Instead, wait until the course of antibiotics is entirely done.

Doxycycline can cause side effects for some people. I would not recommend that you repeat this prescription of antibiotics. Sometimes when you go back and repeat the laboratory test, they still find the same microorganism. In those cases, it’s not uncommon for further antibiotic treatment to be recommended. If possible, avoid another round of antibiotics. You want to protect the beneficial bacteria in your gut from further harm.

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I would start taking the probiotics as soon as you stop taking the antibiotics. I recommend taking the probiotics twice a day – usually with breakfast and your evening meal. If you’ve been on antibiotics for three weeks, you should take probiotics for a minimum of two to three months. I usually suggest that my clients take probiotics until they are feeling in very good shape, and then continue for an additional three to four weeks beyond that.

I also recommend using prebiotic foods in combination with probiotics. Prebiotic foods are high in fructooligosaccharides (FOS), galactooligosaccharides (GOS), and inulin. Prebiotics provide sugar to healthy bacteria, such as bifidobacteria, that need to re-populate the colon after exposure to antibiotics. If you are interested in learning more, I have videos on YouTube that provide further information about prebiotic foods.

If you’re feeling weaker than usual after using antibiotics, you can get your strength back without taking probiotics, but it is going to take a lot longer. It’s much easier to rebound physically if you take probiotics. I recommend using a probiotic that contains bifidobacterial.

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