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AIM PrepZymes® - Digestive Enzymes Details

Digestive problems comprise the number one health problem in North America. These concerns, encompassing everything from hemorrhoids to colon cancer, result in more time lost—at work, school, and play—than any other health problem. They also appear to be occurring with greater frequency—while many of them were almost unheard of in our grandparents’ times, they are cropping up more and more and at an earlier and earlier age.
One way to help maintain digestive health is to be sure you get enough nutritious foods and digestive enzymes. Enzymes are essential to a healthy body because they transform food into nutrients.

Enzymes

Enzymes are the sparks that cause or speed up the essential chemical reactions our bodies need to live.

The human body produces millions of enzymes every second. Enzymes are necessary for providing cellular energy, for repairing all tissues, organs, and cells, for stimulating the brain, and for digesting foods. This includes the absorption, transportation, and metabolism of nutrients as well as the elimination of waste. Humbart Santillo, B.S., M.H., in his book Food Enzymes (1993), quotes a Scottish medical journal that says it well: “Each of us, as with all living organisms, could be regarded as an orderly, integrated succession of enzyme reactions.”

Three classes

Three classes of enzymes are metabolic enzymes, digestive enzymes, and food enzymes. Metabolic enzymes catalyze, or spark, the reactions within the cells. The body’s organs, tissues, and cells are run by metabolic enzymes. Without them, our bodies would not work. Among their chores are helping to turn phosphorus into bone, attaching iron to our red blood cells, healing wounds, and seeing that our hearts beat.

Digestive enzymes are secreted by the pancreas and break down foods, allowing their nutrients to be absorbed into the bloodstream and used in body functions. They ensure that we get the greatest possible nutritional value from foods.

Digestive enzymes include protease, which digests protein; amylase, which digests carbohydrates; lipase, which digests fats and oils; and maltase, which digests malt sugars and grains.
Food enzymes are enzymes supplied to us through the foods we eat. They include digestive enzymes, but also enzymes unique to the particular foods.

Food enzymes help us “predigest” foods; that is, start breaking down foods before our bodies’ enzymes begin to do so.

According to Santillo (1993), the enzymes found in raw foods digest 5 to 75 percent of the foods themselves without the help of other enzymes. This way, our bodies’ digestive enzymes have help in the digestive process, and we do not use as many of the body’s “in-house” enzymes.

The importance of enzymes

Enzyme theory is based on the pioneering work of Dr. Edward Howell in the 1920s. He wrote two books on the subject and theorized that humans are given a limited supply of enzyme energy at birth, and that it is up to us to replenish our supply of enzymes to ensure that their vital jobs get done. If we don’t replenish our supply, we run the risk of ill health.

Current research shows that as we age, we produce a reduced number of enzymes.
Enzyme theory became more popular as the Western diet became more dependent on processed and cooked foods. Enzymes are extremely sensitive to heat; food enzymes are destroyed at temperatures above 118 °F.

Pasteurizing, canning, and microwaving all destroy enzymes. This means that cooked and processed foods contain few, if any, enzymes, and that the typical diet found in industrialized countries is enzyme-deficient.

When we eat cooked and processed foods, we could well be eating for a shorter and less-than-healthy life.

Nutritional studies have shown that a regular diet of cooked and canned foods causes the development of chronic degenerative diseases. This points back to the importance of eating raw fruits and vegetables. Only raw foods have functional “live” enzymes. And the more raw foods you eat, the more live enzymes you get.

Decades ago, Dr. Howell advocated the consumption of large amounts of plant enzymes. More recent studies have examined the effectiveness of plant enzymes in a wide range of conditions (Gardner 1988).

The benefits of enzymes

The benefits of providing the body with more enzymes are many. As noted, getting more enzymes aids the body’s own enzyme supply, which may lead to a healthier life.

Recent studies (Leipner and Saller 2000) show that enzyme therapy could reduce the adverse affects caused by radiation and chemotherapy.

Most widely known is that digestive enzymes help us digest foods more completely. This means that we utilize more nutrients (which might mean that we eat less and maintain a stable weight) and experience better health.

There is another advantage to being sure that foods are well-digested. When foods are not well-digested, they remain in the stomach and can rot and putrefy.

This results in a buildup of waste in the colon. This fecal matter begins to decay, producing bacteria and toxins. The toxins eventually seep through the bowel wall, where blood capillaries pick them up and distribute them throughout the body. This can result in health problems. These problems include constipation, stomach bloat, poor digestion, gas, fatigue, weight gain and weight loss, headaches, and more. Using digestive enzymes ensures that your foods are more completely digested, helping to eliminate potential problems due to toxins.


How to use AIM PrepZymes®

  • To aid in digestion, take 1 capsule before or during each meal. You may take more or less depending on your needs.

  • Close tightly after opening and store in a cool, dry, dark place (70-75 °F; 20.1-23.8 °C).

  • Do not refrigerate.

Q & A

Who should use AIM PrepZymes®?

  • If you believe that you are not digesting foods well, you should use digestive enzymes. In addition, we have fewer enzymes as we age, so we should always consider using digestive enzymes as we grow older.

May children and pregnant women take AIM PrepZymes®?

  • Yes, they may. Both children and pregnant women should take the usual adult serving of one capsule before or during each meal. However, when using dietary supplements, it is recommended that you consult your healthcare practitioner.

Is there anyone who should not take AIM PrepZymes®?

  • Yes, it is recommended that those with gastritis or gastric or duodenal ulcers not use AIM PrepZymes®.

If we take enzymes orally, aren’t they destroyed by stomach acid before they can do anything?

  • According to Santillo, this is not true. In his book Food Enzymes (1993), he cites university research that has shown that supplemental enzymes pass through the stomach uninjured. In one study, the enzyme amylase digested starch in the stomach and then moved into the small intestine, where it continued digestion. Santillo (1993) also notes that foods are predigested by enzymes in the upper portion of the stomach, which is known as the cardiac stomach. According to Henry Gray’s Anatomy of the Human Body (1918), “The cardiac portion of the stomach is a food reservoir in which salivary digestion continues. The pyloric [lower stomach] portion is the seat of active gastric digestion.”

May I take AIM PrepZymes® with AIM FloraFood™ or other AIM products?

  • You may take AIM PrepZymes® with other AIM products. AIM PrepZymes® and AIM FloraFood™ are both best taken with meals. However, AIM PrepZymes® will break down the bacteria in AIM FloraFood™, so take these products with alternate meals.

References

  • Gardner, M.L.G. “Gastrointestinal Absorption of Intact Proteins.” Ann. Rev. Nutri. 8 (1988): 329- 330.

  • Gray, Henry. Anatomy of the Human Body. Philadelphia: Lea & Febiger, 1918; Bartleby.com, 2000. www.bartleby.com/107/

  • Leipner, J., and R. Saller. “Systemic Enzyme Therapy in Oncology: Effect and Mode of Action.” Drugs 59, no. 4 (April 2000): 769-780.

  • Santillo, Humbart, B.S., M.H. Food Enzymes: The Missing Link to Radiant Health. Edited by Debra Kantor. Prescott Valley, AZ: Hohm Press, 1993.

Suggested Reading

  • Bland, Jeffery, Ph.D. Digestive Enzymes. New Canaan, CT: Keats Publishing, Inc., 1983.

  • Clouatre, Dallas, Ph.D. Alpine Wild Garlic. San Francisco: Pax Publishing, 1995.

  • Kane, Emily, N.D. Enzymes: The Difference Between Raw and Cooked Foods. WorldHealth Online, www.healthy.net/asp/templates/article.asp?PageType =Article&ID=848p

  • Howell, Edward. Enzyme Nutrition: The Food Enzyme Concept. Garden City Park, NY: Avery Publishing Group, Inc., 1986.

  • Howell, Edward. Food Enzymes for Health and Longevity. Silver Lake, WI: Lotus Light Publications, 1994.

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AIM PrepZymes in Canada !

The complete Digestive Health line consists of AIM Herbal Fiberblend, and Aim PrepZymes®. Use these products to help yourself maintain your digestive health.
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PrepZymes 100 capsules $22.00 add to cart

 

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