Guest guest Posted November 5, 2004 Report Share Posted November 5, 2004 Forwarding this, interesting results hehe. Janet > > MM All, > > This was posted on another list - maybe some of you might find it useful. > " There is an independent website that checks the potency and safety of > herbal products, click here for www.consumerlab.com. " Sample headlines > incude: > > Milk Thistle Supplements May Help Liver Disease, But Some Contain More > Active Ingredient Than Others > Test Results for 27 Products Now Available > > 41 Omega-3 Supplements Found Free of Mercury, PCBs > But Some Low in EPA & DHA or Spoiled > > Four Vitamin E Products Fail to Meet Claims > Test results for 33 vitamin E supplements and skin products > > Fifteen Iron Supplements Pass Testing > Many strengths and forms of iron found on market, but individual needs > vary. Advice on how to choose the right product to avoid mishaps. > > Problems Found with Eleven Multivitamins > Test Results for 46 Women's, Prenatal, Men's, Seniors, Children's, and > General Multis as well as Vitamin Waters and Pet Multis > > Key Ingredient Missing in Some Arthritis Supplements > Large review of glucosamine, chondroitin, and MSM supplements > > > Reviews to Date: Click on the menus below or click here for a full > alphabetical list. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 7, 2005 Report Share Posted July 7, 2005 Anytime you are working on testing supplements you are both testing and treating that substance. For the most part you won't have to worry about testing several at the same time, HOWEVER, when testing multiple types of the same item (ie: GABA) you have given the body some of the frequency for GABA when you do the first test, they may or may not have tested well for it, however the next bottle may not be needed any longer since the body thinks it got some from the first test of the other type so you have to take that into account when looking at the results. Concentrate more on if it shows toxic (usually a toxic system rather than the product, however it can be that too), if one bottle test toxic and the next does not then for some reason that person resonated better to the one which was not toxic. If one gives an allergic response and the other does not, why? But to determine if they need it, then that can be swayed by multiple testing. The other end of this is that sometimes a person is non-responsive to a product but when given one test it wakes up the system and now responds better to it... so as you can see it truly is the most confusing part of the program to decipher and to learn. If you have my manual then I go into detail on this, it is also discussed in great detail in the DVD's I made since it is so difficult to learn and understand. Yours in Health, Kathy Supplement Testing I have been testing a few people who take lots of supplements. In one test I have gone through 45 supplements for the individual. There is some concern that testing this many supplements may lead to distorted results. I have heard that one should wait 10 to 15 minutes after testing a few supplements before proceeding. Does anyone have experience with supplement testing that could verify if this is true or not? Jim ............................................. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 12, 2005 Report Share Posted July 12, 2005 How can you tell if it toxic or not? Steve > Anytime you are working on testing supplements you are both testing and > treating that substance. For the most part you won't have to worry about > testing several at the same time, HOWEVER, when testing multiple types of > the same item (ie: GABA) you have given the body some of the frequency for > GABA when you do the first test, they may or may not have tested well for > it, however the next bottle may not be needed any longer since the body > thinks it got some from the first test of the other type so you have to take > that into account when looking at the results. Concentrate more on if it > shows toxic (usually a toxic system rather than the product, however it can > be that too), if one bottle test toxic and the next does not then for some > reason that person resonated better to the one which was not toxic. If one > gives an allergic response and the other does not, why? But to determine if > they need it, then that can be swayed by multiple testing. The other end of > this is that sometimes a person is non-responsive to a product but when > given one test it wakes up the system and now responds better to it... so > as you can see it truly is the most confusing part of the program to > decipher and to learn. If you have my manual then I go into detail on this, > it is also discussed in great detail in the DVD's I made since it is so > difficult to learn and understand. > > Yours in Health, > Kathy > > Supplement Testing > > > I have been testing a few people who take lots of supplements. In one > test I have gone through 45 supplements for the individual. There is > some concern that testing this many supplements may lead to distorted > results. I have heard that one should wait 10 to 15 minutes after > testing a few supplements before proceeding. Does anyone have > experience with supplement testing that could verify if this is true or > not? > Jim > > > > > > > > ............................................ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.