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This is a post I sent to a mother with 3 kids with CF, she uses glyconutients on

all of them and take a look at what she has to say.

From mum to baby Liam 13 weeks

Cystic fibrosis and glyconutrients

Hi dawn and sam

I am a mother in New Zealand who has a child with CF he is 13 weeks old. We

have already had one baby with CF but unfortunaly she died when she was 8 days

old due to surgery complications and PAs. I have gained your contact though a

lady who deals with glyconutrients and I understand that you have used these to

the kids advantages. I really would appreciate your feedback as in what you

have used and what difference you saw. If you are interested there is a yahoo

group called crataegus@... it is a herb that people are useing with

lots of success due to the flavonoids in the plant, these are used to enhnance

digestion and assimilation. It is used in very small doses, if you do too much

you actually do the opposite of what you're trying to accomplish.

Thank you so much for your time, I appreciate it

O'Neill

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,

Thanks for posting this. It's so ironic that all these posts about

Mannatech products are emerging at once -- at the same time there is

hot research in the scientic world with glyonutrients, glycoproteins,

phytochemicals, flavonoids -- and the sugar, mannose is studied for

PA. I heard about a mom in Texas whose children are doing very well

using Mannatech products. Is that this same mom you wrote to, or is

this someone else?

Also, I read the email you sent to the mom, and just wanted to clarify

a tiny point. Yes, though crataegus helps the digestion so poops are

now normal and you need much less enzymes (and watching the effect on

poops is how we determine individual dose), medical researchers that

are studying flavonoids believe that specific flavonoids positively

affect the CFTR. One of these flavonoids is quercitin, which is in

many fruits and vegetables -- including the herb crataegus. So it's

not just the digestion crataegus helps; it's the entire body because

of how it helps the CFTR function.

So one reason Mannatech's Phyt-Aloe could work is because tht product

is made up of brussel sprouts, broccoli, kale, cauliflower, carrots,

pineapple, papaya and aloe vera. You might remember from our

discussion on the crataegus list that those vegetables are good

sources of sulfur, magnesium, and vitamin A; the pineapple and papaya

are high in natural enzymes, and aloe vera soothes inflammation -- so

it would soothe an inflammed intestinal tract.

The Ambrotose that this mom mentioned also contains aloe vera, and

something called " Manapol powder " (something patented by Mannatech)

and " naturally occuring plant polysaccharides. " Plant polysacharides

are also known as plant sugars -- ( " glyconutrients " ) and they are not

as simple as they seem. Many researchers and scientists around the

world are devoted to unraveling the mysteries of these

plant-manufactured nutrients and how they help prevent diseases, and

either prevent or encourage parasitic or bacterial invasion both in

the host plant and in humans.

Kim

This is a post I sent to a mother with 3 kids with CF, she uses

glyconutients on all of them and take a look at what she has to say.

From mum to baby Liam 13 weeks

> Cystic fibrosis and glyconutrients

>

>

> Hi dawn and sam

> I am a mother in New Zealand who has a child with CF he is 13

weeks old. We have already had one baby with CF but unfortunaly she

died when she was 8 days old due to surgery complications and PAs. I

have gained your contact though a lady who deals with glyconutrients

and I understand that you have used these to the kids advantages. I

really would appreciate your feedback as in what you have used and

what difference you saw. If you are interested there is a yahoo group

called crataegus@y... it is a herb that people are useing with lots of

success due to the flavonoids in the plant, these are used to enhnance

digestion and assimilation. It is used in very small doses, if you do

too much you actually do the opposite of what you're trying to

accomplish.

> Thank you so much for your time, I appreciate it

> O'Neill

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

Thanks for posting this. It's so ironic that all these posts about

Mannatech products are emerging at once -- at the same time there is

hot research in the scientic world with glyonutrients, glycoproteins,

phytochemicals, flavonoids -- and the sugar, mannose is studied for

PA. I heard about a mom in Texas whose children are doing very well

using Mannatech products. Is that this same mom you wrote to, or is

this someone else?

Also, I read the email you sent to the mom, and just wanted to clarify

a tiny point. Yes, though crataegus helps the digestion so poops are

now normal and you need much less enzymes (and watching the effect on

poops is how we determine individual dose), medical researchers that

are studying flavonoids believe that specific flavonoids positively

affect the CFTR. One of these flavonoids is quercitin, which is in

many fruits and vegetables -- including the herb crataegus. So it's

not just the digestion crataegus helps; it's the entire body because

of how it helps the CFTR function.

So one reason Mannatech's Phyt-Aloe could work is because tht product

is made up of brussel sprouts, broccoli, kale, cauliflower, carrots,

pineapple, papaya and aloe vera. You might remember from our

discussion on the crataegus list that those vegetables are good

sources of sulfur, magnesium, and vitamin A; the pineapple and papaya

are high in natural enzymes, and aloe vera soothes inflammation -- so

it would soothe an inflammed intestinal tract.

The Ambrotose that this mom mentioned also contains aloe vera, and

something called " Manapol powder " (something patented by Mannatech)

and " naturally occuring plant polysaccharides. " Plant polysacharides

are also known as plant sugars -- ( " glyconutrients " ) and they are not

as simple as they seem. Many researchers and scientists around the

world are devoted to unraveling the mysteries of these

plant-manufactured nutrients and how they help prevent diseases, and

either prevent or encourage parasitic or bacterial invasion both in

the host plant and in humans.

Kim

This is a post I sent to a mother with 3 kids with CF, she uses

glyconutients on all of them and take a look at what she has to say.

From mum to baby Liam 13 weeks

> Cystic fibrosis and glyconutrients

>

>

> Hi dawn and sam

> I am a mother in New Zealand who has a child with CF he is 13

weeks old. We have already had one baby with CF but unfortunaly she

died when she was 8 days old due to surgery complications and PAs. I

have gained your contact though a lady who deals with glyconutrients

and I understand that you have used these to the kids advantages. I

really would appreciate your feedback as in what you have used and

what difference you saw. If you are interested there is a yahoo group

called crataegus@y... it is a herb that people are useing with lots of

success due to the flavonoids in the plant, these are used to enhnance

digestion and assimilation. It is used in very small doses, if you do

too much you actually do the opposite of what you're trying to

accomplish.

> Thank you so much for your time, I appreciate it

> O'Neill

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

,

Thanks for posting this. It's so ironic that all these posts about

Mannatech products are emerging at once -- at the same time there is

hot research in the scientic world with glyonutrients, glycoproteins,

phytochemicals, flavonoids -- and the sugar, mannose is studied for

PA. I heard about a mom in Texas whose children are doing very well

using Mannatech products. Is that this same mom you wrote to, or is

this someone else?

Also, I read the email you sent to the mom, and just wanted to clarify

a tiny point. Yes, though crataegus helps the digestion so poops are

now normal and you need much less enzymes (and watching the effect on

poops is how we determine individual dose), medical researchers that

are studying flavonoids believe that specific flavonoids positively

affect the CFTR. One of these flavonoids is quercitin, which is in

many fruits and vegetables -- including the herb crataegus. So it's

not just the digestion crataegus helps; it's the entire body because

of how it helps the CFTR function.

So one reason Mannatech's Phyt-Aloe could work is because tht product

is made up of brussel sprouts, broccoli, kale, cauliflower, carrots,

pineapple, papaya and aloe vera. You might remember from our

discussion on the crataegus list that those vegetables are good

sources of sulfur, magnesium, and vitamin A; the pineapple and papaya

are high in natural enzymes, and aloe vera soothes inflammation -- so

it would soothe an inflammed intestinal tract.

The Ambrotose that this mom mentioned also contains aloe vera, and

something called " Manapol powder " (something patented by Mannatech)

and " naturally occuring plant polysaccharides. " Plant polysacharides

are also known as plant sugars -- ( " glyconutrients " ) and they are not

as simple as they seem. Many researchers and scientists around the

world are devoted to unraveling the mysteries of these

plant-manufactured nutrients and how they help prevent diseases, and

either prevent or encourage parasitic or bacterial invasion both in

the host plant and in humans.

Kim

This is a post I sent to a mother with 3 kids with CF, she uses

glyconutients on all of them and take a look at what she has to say.

From mum to baby Liam 13 weeks

> Cystic fibrosis and glyconutrients

>

>

> Hi dawn and sam

> I am a mother in New Zealand who has a child with CF he is 13

weeks old. We have already had one baby with CF but unfortunaly she

died when she was 8 days old due to surgery complications and PAs. I

have gained your contact though a lady who deals with glyconutrients

and I understand that you have used these to the kids advantages. I

really would appreciate your feedback as in what you have used and

what difference you saw. If you are interested there is a yahoo group

called crataegus@y... it is a herb that people are useing with lots of

success due to the flavonoids in the plant, these are used to enhnance

digestion and assimilation. It is used in very small doses, if you do

too much you actually do the opposite of what you're trying to

accomplish.

> Thank you so much for your time, I appreciate it

> O'Neill

>

>

>

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