How To Know You Have Women Candida Overgrowth?

Greetings. New Zealand naturopath, Eric Bakker, author of Candida Crusher, formulator of the Canxida range of dietary supplements. Thank you so much for checking out my video. Today, we’re going to talk about recognizing different kinds of Candida patients. These are going to be different types of people that we see. I’m going to do a video on recognizing the female patient, recognizing the male patient, and recognizing the child patient.

This is recognizing the female Candida patient. This will be quite a handy video to have if you are a lady and you may suspect that you have a Candida yeast infection, but it’s also quite a good video for a naturopathic physician or a medical doctor to watch if he or she suspects that they may be dealing with someone who could have a potential yeast infection. I’m going to read some information from my book, Candida Crusher, and I’ll just add some comments to that as well.

How do you recognize if a patient has got a yeast infection? Is a yeast infection just a vaginal problem with a woman like some doctors tend to think? Well, it’s actually a lot more than that. Candida can create a huge amount of disturbance in the body. I’ve got a checklist here of different kinds of things that I want you to be aware of and different things that you could, if you are a physician, ask your patient, or if you are a patient, to try to get a feel for these types of bullet points I’ve got to come up with. If you can mentally tick off a lot of these things, it doesn’t mean to say that you definitely have got a yeast infection, but it means that there is a high probability that you’ve got one. I particularly would like you to do my yeast infection quiz. If you go to yeastinfection.org, you can do that quiz. You can also see if you’re a male or a female and go through that scenario on the quiz and just go through the checklist. That will really give you a good idea.

A case history will tell you if you are dealing with a female who has a Candida history or not. I just spoke with a patient in the States who asked me an interesting question about how do you know if you’ve got Candida? I said knowing that you’ve got Candida, it’s a little bit like when a patient comes to me as being sick for a long time, I consider myself a bit of a detective. It’s almost like one of those CSI movies where I have to find out all the facts. I also like to know about what’s happening around the case, the circumstances.

The history is very important to me to look at. Just like with any kind of investigation. We’re not doing a criminal investigation. We’re doing a health investigation. I like to know a lot about the person’s past. What kind job they have. What kind of foods they have been eating. What kind of living circumstances they’ve had. What kind of relationships they’ve had. These all will leave little telltale signs and vital clues. As a policeman or detective will tell you, most people end up getting busted on their own conviction. They’ll say stuff, and quite often, they won’t even know what they’re saying could implicate them in their disease. That will actually give me the information I’m looking for.

A woman who may have a history of taking the oral contraceptive or a mature woman with a history of hormone replacement therapy, estrogen therapy like Premarin. The pills, these hormonal pills, can sometimes really drive Candida up in the body. They can drive a vaginal yeast infection particularly in the body. I’m very careful to ask those kinds of questions. Look for the woman with persistent vaginal thrush, especially if she has had a vaginal yeast infection treated with fluconazole. Has she had that when she was younger, maybe say from 17, 18 up to about 25. Did she use any kind of medication for a vaginal yeast infection? Was she using applicators to put creams in there to try to get rid of it. Did she cure the problem? Did it go away? But then it came back later in life. Very interesting.

If there has been a history of recurring antibiotic use before the onset of the digestive health problem, you can almost guarantee that this lady will have had a yeast infection to some degree. People who’ve had antibiotics, particularly years prior, and then have had several rounds and you can see their health actually declining as a result of that. Usually, I will straight up request a stool test for that patient to look at what their level of beneficial bacteria are like. Low and behold, I will often find Candida there in the stool culture and a low level of beneficial bacteria.

Any woman with an annoying irritating white discharge. It could be bacterial vaginosis, but often it will be a Candida yeast infection. A female who experiences painful sex or who avoids intimate relations because of pain or discomfort, she should be checked out quite carefully for this condition. Suspect any woman with chronic polycystic ovarian syndrome or endometriosis.

I mentioned in a previous video, a good doctor friend of mine went to Canada years ago on an endometriosis conference and she said that they spent two to three days speaking about eradicating vaginal yeast infections. When a yeast infection becomes chronic and permanent, recurrent, and it gets suppressed by medication and then comes back again, there is often a potential there for that condition to go further in through the cervix, into the womb, and then create the infection and cyst development internally. There are many different hypotheses on the development of endometriosis, but one that I firmly believe there is some link with a bacterial or a yeast infection that actually got into the womb and created an immune response. Not all women, but many women with endometriosis have had yeast infections.

Look for the female who has a strong sweet or sugar craving. Carefully questioning during the case taking will illicit this crucial information. Does she crave chocolate, sweets or breads or maybe wine? Sweet cravings sometimes are a real red flag for a yeast infection. They need to be very carefully investigated. Don’t just look for a craving or strong desire for chocolate, bread, candy or sweets, look for the desire to consume orange juice, soda or fizzy drinks to dried fruits like dates, figs, or chewing gum, biscuits or a host of other foods that could be high in sugar. A person who wants a piece of bread recurrently could have a yeast infection, especially if it’s a strong craving or a desire.

I’ve recently discovered that various kinds of yeast affect receptor sites in the gut that can relay the information to the brain and drive a desire for glucose or for sugar, so it can actually be a yeast creating that desire for the glucose on a physiological level. Look for the woman who eats many pieces, three, four or five pieces of fruit each day. Fruit has plenty of sugar in it, especially oranges, grapes and dried fruits or bananas, too, can have a lot of sugar, especially very ripe bananas. Woman who love to drink wine, especially if there’s a history of oral contraceptive pills or antibiotic use. This can also be a key indication. White wine especially like chardonnay or pinot noir, the red wine, high in sugar.

Woman who love moldy foods like soft cheese like camembert and brie and sweet foods or drinks. A glass of wine with moldy cheese, again, can be an indication. Look for a woman who takes many kinds of dietary supplements, including probiotics, digestive enzymes, bowel products, detox products, cleanses. A person who goes to health food shops and natural people and they get all kinds of pills and potions to deal with multiple kinds of problems. Often there will be a yeast infection underpinning this problem.

Look for a history of unresolved digestive problems, particularly if this has been of long duration involving many visits to naturopaths or doctors. Many people who see me come to me as a last resort. They say, “I’ve been to 10 doctors. I’ve been to 5 naturopaths, 2 herbalists, 2 chiropractors, all sorts of people, and I’m still not right.” A stool test will sometimes really pick up some interesting information with this patient.

Woman whose partner suffers from yeast infections like jock itch. The problem can pass from the male to the female and from the female back to the male. Or in same sex relationships, this can happen quite commonly, too. Ladies with toenail fungus. Suspect digestive yeast related problems as well, especially if a localized toenail problem is of long duration. Wearing stockings, for example, all the time or shoes. I’ve seen this condition a lot with people who work on airplanes. Flight attendants can have this condition quite a lot. Wearing pantyhose, for example, office workers. Again, occupational. Having drinks after work and long hours of wearing clothing high in nylon can predispose you to this problem.

Poor motivation, depression or anxiety or any of the many different disorders that may develop in women without a firm diagnosis for Candida. So it’s important for me to understand not just the physical problems that the patient has, but also any mood issues that may be going on. People who have been sick for a long time often develop anxiety or stress. If it’s long enough, they may get depressed because they’ve been told that they’re crazy. That they, in fact, need to see a psychiatrist because it’s all in their head. It may be all in their head. They could actually have circulating garbage or bits of Candida antibodies floating in their head, so it may be in their head.

I hope this video gives you a bit of an insight into the different potential presentations of a female with a yeast infection. You need to think outside the square. Woman with yeast infections don’t just have vaginal problems. They can have digestive problems. They can have joint pain. They can have mood disorders. They can have many different problems going on.

They may have one or all of the above. If you put on your thinking cap and think outside the square, look at their case history, it could well be an issue there. If in doubt, do some testing that might further confirm what you’re looking for.

Thanks for tuning in. Don’t forget to subscribe and please don’t forget to do my yeast infection quiz. And also check out my Canxida.com website to understand the kind of products that I make. I make a Canxida cream now. Very specific for men and for women with all kinds of problems. Of course, I make the Canxida Remove and the Canxida Restore. Check it out. I’ll catch up with you in the next video. I’m going to do a video now on men and yeast infections. Different things to look out for.

How To Know Your Children Has Candida Infection?

Greetings. New Zealand naturopath, Eric Bakker, author of Candida Crusher and formulator of the Canxida range of dietary supplements. Thank you again for tuning into my video. I really appreciate you watching my videos. This is the third one in a three-part series on how to recognize the Candida patient. I did one previously on how to recognize the female patient who you suspect has Candida. I’ve just done one on the male and this is the third one. How to recognize a child with a yeast infection. I’ll read a bit more out of my book.

A child with Candida can be mislabeled hyperactive or learning disabled by a practitioner who does not fully understand the true significance of pediatric yeast syndrome. Dr. William Crook, who wrote the Yeast Syndrome, was a pediatrician who noticed that many of his young patients would improve significantly once the yeast overgrowth was eradicated. It’s a pity that many pediatricians today do not have the same level of clinical experience with intestinal dysbiosis and children’s health that Dr. Crook had.

Children who have Candida may manifest multiple allergic syndromes that can affect them on many different levels. These children can even display behavioral and learning difficulties as a result of individual reactions to foods, chemicals and preservatives and may be linked to a Candida yeast infection. In my clinical experience, some children do not need drugs like Ritalin after all. Particularly, if they are first assessed and treated for allergies and carefully screened for Candida and yeast infections or SIBO, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth. Like Dr. William Crook, I’ve certainly noticed over the years that children who have both behavioral and learning disabilities as well as yeast infections display a marked reduction of symptoms once the Candida is eliminated, much to their parents’ relief.

A very important part of Candida treatment with children is getting them away from sweets as much as possible. And a good way to start is by eliminating all soda drinks, candy, sweets, and unnecessary food and drink items. This can present as a challenge and you will find it an easier task with younger as opposed to older children. Believe me, I have four children, and I know how difficult it can be, but it is achievable. Especially if you offer your child fruits instead of highly processed sweets, ice cream, candy and soda drinks. Even though fruits contain sugar, they don’t contain the same kind of sugar as you would give straight out candy or ice cream. Give them diluted juices to step them down.

A case comes to mind. About a year ago, of a lady who brought me a five-year-old boy with an incredible attitude problem. In my room, he was pulling all my books off the shelf. He was jumping on the furniture and he was very disruptive. The mom told me that she was feeding him one and half kilograms of cheese a week. That equates to I think about three or four pounds of cheese in a week. Just giving him big slices whenever he was screaming. I mentioned to her about this connection with the molds, potentially the allergies and the behavior, and she was a little bit. “How can that cause any problems?” But the amazing thing is when the child was brought back in about six weeks, he sat there on the chair with his hands folded on his lap and didn’t move. And she said to me, “It’s incredible how he’s changed.” And it was just the cheese. Food is really, in some cases, linked up to behavioral problems, so just pay attention to that.

How do you recognize a child potentially with a yeast infection? Let’s read some things out of my book here. The case history will often tell you if you’re dealing with a child who has Candida or not. I regularly have naturopathic students who sit in for observations in my clinic, and I like them to be aware of the importance of case taking when it comes to children in the clinic, especially. A case well taken is a case half solved. What happened in the past is probably one of the most important questions you can ask a mother? It’s surprising how when you ask a mother when her child was prescribed an antibiotic in relation to her child’s health problem, time and again, we will see the relationship with the antibiotic and the effect on the bowel, skin, immune, behavior or other problem. Many children I see have had recurring antibiotics given, and you can actually see the breakdown in health each time these were given.

Look for the child who has a strong sweet or sugar craving especially. Careful questioning during the case taking will illicit this crucial information. While it is not true all children who crave sugar will have Candida, it is true that most all children with Candida have very strong sugar cravings. Don’t just look for a craving or a strong desire for candy or sweets. Look for the desire to consume orange juice, soda or fizzy drinks, dried fruits, dates, figs, lots of chewing gum, biscuits and a host of foods high in sugar. And often with this craving, you’ll see the behavioral attitude with it. If the child’s not given this, you’re going to get crying, screaming and you’re going to get all these problems associated with not giving or placating to that child’s desires. Look for the child who eats many pieces of fruit every day.

If there has been a history of recurring antibiotic prescribing before the onset of the digestive problem, you can almost guarantee there will be some kind of a yeast problem or SIBO, a bacterial problem. A child with recurring worm infections or worm infestations. Itchy anus, for example. Does the child have an itchy anus or complain of sore tummies routinely? There could be sweet craving underlying again. Suspect the yeast infection in children who get recurring worm problems.

Children who live with one parent. Listen to this one. And then spend every second weekend with the other parent. This is often the case with separated or divorced parents. Therefore, always ask the question, “Does Johnny live with one or both parents?” It is surprising how many times I’ve heard, “Oh, no. In fact, he lives with his father half the time.” In cases such as this, you may find the child will be spoiled with one of the parents with lots of sweets or things that the child desires, and the other one may be ultra-strict. That could be an issue.

The child may be very awful at the mom’s place, for example, not getting the sweets and very nice at dad’s where he or she is getting the sweets. Beware of grandparents or what we call the outlaws. They sometimes feel it is their right to be able to give the child special treats “sweets or ice cream or candy.” I found that when the child stays with one parent, on the alternate weekend swap, or with a grandparent, there may be behavioral changes or worsening of the symptoms. In this case, you want to carefully assess the diet. Again, ask the questions.

Abdominal pain that is undiagnosed by a bowel specialist. Think about dysbiosis, including parasites and/or yeast infections. Once you’ve concluded there is not fecal loading like severe impaction or constipation, treat for a yeast infection. Sometimes an abdominal x-ray or an ultrasound is required to see if there is any abdominal obstruction going on there.

A child living in a cold, damp or moldy environment who is always sick. He will need to be moved to a better environment before you begin to work on the Candida eradication. In New Zealand, we’ve got a lot of children who live in drafty, cold, leaky homes. I had a consultation with a lady in Denmark yesterday whose house was also quite moldy. Because I put up a video on mold, she realized that that was her problem. And then she carefully looked in the bedroom and she saw some mold up on the top. She started to understand that she was always getting worse in the beginning of winter and in spring and summer she cleared up. She put one and one together and she worked out it was the mold that was causing the problem.

Any child on pharmaceutical drugs long term. Does the child take asthma drugs like Ventolin, salbutamol, or a steroid preventative inhaler? Perhaps a recurrent prescription of an analgesic, anti-depressant or other medication. Routinely, you’ll see children with drug induced sickness and yeast infection. And a lot of children’s medications can be high in sugar as well. You’d be surprised to know how many cough medicines contain sugar.

Any child with a current bladder or urinary tract infection. Obviously, you’ll want to rule out diabetes or other blood sugar issues. Any underlying urinary issues that can be ruled out by a urologist, for example. But if there are recurrent urinary tract infections or bladder issues, then you may want to treat for a yeast infection. Any kind of recurring infections in the gut of bacterial or yeast in origin. Carefully check them out.

A child with recurrent ear, nose, throat, respiratory or sinus infection. Once again, suspect antibiotic use and in some cases, you’ll be surprised to learn that the child was never well since antibiotics. Any child you suspect of being celiac. Always check for bacterial, yeast or parasite infection long before you consider a gluten allergy or intolerance. Because it’s more likely the child will have an issue with yeast rather than gluten. Does the child crave sweet foods or drinks? Has there been a history of antibiotic use? Has the child traveled or been on holidays before diagnosis of being celiac? Did the kid pick up a parasite somewhere? More importantly, was the celiac diagnosis based on a biopsy or was it just basically through a blood test? Because blood testing is not always an accurate indicator of celiac.

Last but not least. The child with the terrible attitude. I’ve often seen children in my clinic presenting with behavioral problems and sometimes severe. No doubt like many naturopaths, I’m not saying for one moment that all children with behavioral issues have a Candida infection, but a surprising number do. How do you distinguish between a child with a yeast infection who does not appear to fit in with the family dynamics and a child who has autism?

What I do is look at the child’s diet and how strongly the child craves certain food items as a starting point. Many yeast infected children will have a craving for certain foods as strong as their attitude and they even rule the household and simply demand these foods. These are the children with food allergies as well. Many of them have an allergy toward sugar. Dr. Crook picked that one up a long time ago that the sugar craving is the strongest craving. And often the strongest craving can dictate the strongest allergy. And the strongest allergy can dictate the strongest behavioral problem. So if you’ve got that food sorted, you may well have the behavioral problem sorted and be more easy to manage the child.

Don’t forget to subscribe to my channel if you can. I appreciate your support. Also check out yeastinfection.org if you want to have a look at the internet’s best source of information for Candida yeast infection you’ll find on that site. And check out Canxida.com for some of the best products online. Thanks again for tuning in. I appreciate it.

Using CanXida Products: How To Use CanXida Supplements

Greetings. New Zealand naturopath, Eric Bakker. I’m the author of a book called Candida Crusher and I’m also the formulator of a range of products called Canxida. Thanks for checking out my video. I’ve got an email here and I’ve got many emails, many, many, many emails. In fact, I’ve got about 130 emails from people just in the last few weeks asking me the same kind of questions, so that’s why I’m going to do this video today to really cover the replies to these questions I’m getting from people consistently. The questions are mainly revolving around the Canxida products, which I’ve made and are available online. That’s Canxida with an “x”.

These products were created basically after many, many years of seeing patients and struggling with trying to find something that really had a great effect consistently on people time and again after using many different products. You can read more about the Canxida story on Canxida.com or you can also check out some of my videos on this Candida Crusher YouTube channel. There will be other videos on Canxida as well.

The primary thing I’m going to address with this video is the questions, “When do I take Canxida Remove? When do I take Canxida Restore? Can I take them together or should I take them apart? How long should I take them apart? Can I take them with food? Can I take them before food? Can I take them after food?” Lots of different questions here. There is another question here from somebody. “I have an allergy against black walnuts. Is it still okay to use the Canxida Remove?” Let’s cover some of these things now in detail and give you a good explanation on the Canxida range and the best way to take these products.

We’ll start off with the Canxida Remove. Canxida Remove has been just recently reformulated, so the brand new formula available also contains oregano oil. I challenge you people out there to find a better anti-fungal/anti-bacterial/anti-parasite product than Canxida Remove. I don’t think you’re going to find something as comprehensive as this or made quite in the same way. There are different little tips and tricks I’m going to explain to you now on how to get the best out of this product.

I’ve learned over the years that there are different sensitivities of people. Some people are normal, don’t super react to products. They can take products. Other people react reasonably strongly and other people super react. For the super reactors, if you know you’re reacting to everything your take. If you know you’ve got multiple food allergies and you can only eat maybe about five or six foods and you react to vitamins, you react to paracetamol or you react to Advil. You react to everything. You react to your mother-in-law, in fact, you know what I mean. You react to everything. Then you need to start with the smallest possible dose with Canxida Remove. We’re not talking normal people.

We’re talking super reactive people. You would start by cutting the tablet maybe in four or five pieces even. You can buy at Wal-Mart or Costco a tablet cutter. Tablet cutters are quite handy because you can even take small slices of a tablet. If you’re in doubt and you know you react to things, start with a very small dose. And then always start with food. Don’t ever start a supplement away from food if you super react. Take it with food.

If you find that when you take a small amount and you don’t react as violently as you thought you would, then you can probably double that dose. You would take a small dose for three days. And then after three days, you would take a small dose twice a day, etc., until you can actually take perhaps half a tablet or a whole tablet. That only really covers maybe five percent of people. Five to eight percent, not even at quite ten percent.

A smaller group of people who react are the sensitive people. They’re not super sensitive, but they’re sensitive. In your case, you would simply break a Canxida Remove tablet in half and take it in the middle of the meal, and you would do that for three days. You just snap a tablet in half. You’re eating away at your food, stop, swallow half the tablet and keep on going. That’s if you’re a sensitive, but not super sensitive person.

What is the difference between a super sensitive and a sensitive? A sensitive person has got probably a few food allergies. They may have had some quite strong die off reactions to other kinds of Candida products. They are a sensitive person. They may at times take an antihistamine. They may get eczema. They could have skin rashes. They could have a lot of external manifestations of the Candida problem. In that case, just be cautious. Break a tablet in half. If you’re okay on half a tablet with any meal, breakfast, lunch or dinner, for three days, then you double the dose. Then for the following three days, you would take half a tablet twice per day. And then a week after that, you can probably take one tablet per day, and then two tablets, building up to one tablet two or three times per day with meals. That’s about 20 percent of people.

Probably about 75 percent of people can usually go into one tablet twice per day immediately of the Canxida Remove. Usually with breakfast and with lunch or with breakfast and dinner or with lunch and with dinner. It doesn’t make that much difference. If you’ve got a sleeping problem, maybe not take the product with your evening meal. Take one with breakfast and take one with lunch. That’s if you’ve got bad insomnia. If you’ve got a little sleeping problem or you’re not too disturbed by it, have your meal probably around 6 p.m. and have your last dose with your evening meal as long as you’re not eating at 8 or 9 o’clock at night like some patients do.

Let’s just recap what I just said. If you’re an extremely sensitive person, start with the smallest possible amount for three days and I’m talking maybe about an eighth of a tablet even. If you’re a sensitive person, break the tablet in half. Take a half a tablet once per day for three days and then build up on that dosage. If you’re normal like me and don’t super react or have really bad die off, chronic headaches or feel sick when you take something, then you can generally take one tablet two to three times per day.

When would you take two tablets and when would you take three tablets? One tablet twice per day is a great starting point for the majority of people. You don’t need to go immediately into three. Now, you can take anywhere from one tablet up to 12 tablets per day of Canxida Remove. I wouldn’t probably go anything beyond about six or eight personally, but I have got a few patients that take large doses. Sometimes they break through barriers when they increase the dosage. That’s not something I recommend.

You don’t generally need to go beyond three, maybe six tablets per day, maximum. Three is usually fine. Start with two. And particularly if you’re just making some diet changes, starting with your diet change, start on two tablets per day. If you’ve got a very good diet and you’ve had it for some time and you’re happy with your dietary intake and you’ve been disappointed with other kinds of formulations like many of my patients have, you can take Canxida Remove right away, one tablet three times per day with meals. Always take Canxida Remove with meals. You’re not going to benefit from this formula taking it between meals or two or three hours away from food. There will be little benefit.

Why would there be no benefit? Canxida Remove is made in a very special way. Unlike other products you’re going to take. Any other kind of anti-fungal or anti-bacterial. This product is made in a very special way in terms of how it breaks down in the body. It takes two to three hours to break down. Unlike most tablets that break down very quickly. I’ve learned a very special proprietary way to sustain release a tablet. When you swallow this tablet, it breaks down slowly in the gut over about a two to three-hour period. Best with food because that’s when the digestion occurs. That’s when the body is secreting enzymes and acids. There is no harm taking that with food at all. I find a better patient response rate with food than when I’ve tried it away from food. Don’t chew the tablets. Just swallow them whole. I mean I chew them. I quite like the flavor of the different herbs and things like that. Swallowing them whole is perfectly fine.

Children. Depending on the body weight, but generally young children under five, you need to be very careful with very young children. Also, if you’re nursing or pregnant, you’re probably better off not taking the formulas to be honest. I’d rather you wait until you finish breastfeeding or if you’re contemplating conception or having a baby or carrying a baby, don’t take the formulas. Go and see your health care professional when best not to take them. With children, depending on the body weight of the child, anything over about five, you can probably give half to one tablet per day. Depending on how many pounds or kgs they are. Robust larger children can often take higher dosages than very small ones. Children tend to be more sensitive when they’ve got yeast infections, so you need to be very careful with dosage and always underestimate rather than overestimate. I prefer for most kids up to about 14, I would say one tablet per day, but we’ve got some large Pacific Island children here in New Zealand from Tonga or Samoa or Mali children. They can easily take two tablets per day. Some of these kids can get quite big.

You need to gauge that depending on the robustness of the child and their weight. If you’ve used medications on them before and you know they can handle different medications in larger dosages, then give larger dosages. You’re quite safe with this formula with children. You’re not going to get any violent reactions with them at all. Kids don’t mind these products. Tablets that are big, just cut them in half. Children over about 14, I would treat like an adult. I would give probably two per day. Up from about 7 to 14, anywhere between half to one and half tablets per day is generally about the rule. With food that product adjust the dosages accordingly.

Duration of treatment. Anywhere from three months to six months or even longer. Some people have been on Canxida Remove with our initial doses that we made for up to eight months or even longer. And they did that in a very long slow dosed fashion and got very, very good results. Other people have taken shorter courses of higher dosage. You can also chop and change. You can do a short course of high dosage. Then you can stop for a week or so and then do a long term dosage of say three months or so taking one per day or two per day. There are no rules here. It depends on your aggravations. It depends on your energy levels. It depends on the benefit you get from the product. You need to adjust the dosage according to how you feel.

I would generally recommend you take Canxida Remove in a probably four to six-week block. Work out a dosage. Stick to the dosage and then push it through for about four to six weeks then maybe give your body a spell for a week and then do another block, either a lower dose or a higher dose. It’s quite clever, especially if you’ve got parasites, to do so. With successive generations of bugs, sometimes it pays to hit them harder then to back off a little bit if you’ve got aggravations. Don’t be afraid to change the dosages at all on Canxida Remove. Short term high dose, long term low dose. Very smart move. I hope that gives you enough information on the Canxida Remove products.

Let’s talk a bit about the Canxida Restore product now. Again, you can read a lot about this on Canxida.com on the formula, on the enzymes, and the probiotics and why I’ve created this formula to be like that. I’m not going to go into the formulations on the video. You can read about those. The Canxida Restore was designed exactly for what it says, to restore the gut function. It’s a product that you can use very advantageously at the same time that you’re taking the Canxida Remove. In fact, both products are best taken together. You don’t need to take them apart. You don’t need to spread them apart by 10 minutes or half an hour. You can have the tablet and capsule and swallow them both at the same time.

How do I know that? I know that from working with tablets of this nature and capsules like this for nearly 30 years. I’ve worked with products for a long, long time. I worked with probiotics way before they became fashionable and I’ve discovered that a good probiotic works even better when taken with a good anti-fungal product. I’ve had no problems with that at all. But more importantly, I’ve also discovered you get much better results when you mix enzymes with probiotics rather than take them separate. You get an even better result with the majority of people when you give a probiotic with no prebiotic, and I’ve got very specific reasons why I don’t like prebiotics. And again, look at my video on Restore and you’ll hear all about that.

When do you take it and what’s the dosage? Well, this is in a very special capsule that is quite an expensive capsule to manufacture. This is why this product does cost a bit of money because it’s a quality product. It’s not a cheap, crappy, cellulose capsule. It’s made in a very special capsule that tends to break down only when it gets into the small intestine. It won’t break down in the stomach. It survives the stomach bypass. Nearly all probiotics you buy won’t do that. They will actually be destroyed, a lot of them, before they even get to the intestine. This particular capsule is specially designed to get to the right spot. And therefore, when you think about it, it’s also clever to take this with the Remove and with food because it’s not going to be affected by digestion.

This product is a bit different. Two doses per day is the norm. You take one with breakfast and you take one before bedtime. Now, why would you do that? When you just told us to take it with food. Why would you take one before bedtime? Well, this product contains an enzyme called serratiopeptidase, which is a very, very expensive enzyme if you buy the quality one that I’ve got in this formula. Serratiopeptidase works best on an empty stomach. And what it does is it gets into the bloodstream and helps to hunt down these circulating immune complexes and bits of debris caused when Candida and bacteria die off. It helps to gobble up antibodies bound to fragments of bacteria and Candida wall. It’s clever. It’s a very clever approach.

It’s also got multiple digestive enzymes in it that work well with food and work okay without food. There is no problem taking this product with food or without food. I recommend one dose with breakfast and one dose before bed. As you start to improve, you can also increase the dosage to breakfast, lunch and then before bed. Some patients have taken it at breakfast, lunch, dinner and before bed. You can’t take too much of that product. You can take anywhere between one to six doses per day. No problem. But when you start with the Canxida Restore, I would like you to take one with breakfast and one before bed.

With the Remove remember, breakfast, lunch or lunch and dinner or breakfast, lunch and dinner and with the Restore, breakfast and before bed. And you’re going to get a great result doing that. Both products are best taken together consistently for three to six months at a minimum, so take advantage of these packages that are available because you’re going to find them quite handy and you’re going to save yourself a bit of money.

The product is currently only available online predominantly through the States, but next year, I’m working on getting it shipped down to New Zealand, Australia, to look after all our Aussie and Kiwi customers down here. And I’m also going to work on British distribution to get throughout the EU because I’ve got many clients in Scandinavia and a lot of people in Germany and Holland who want the formula. To make it very expedient in terms of cost for you for shipping, we’re going to really try hard to get it into the EU and down here in what we call the antipodes or at the bottom of the world.

I think that’s given you a bit of good information now on how to use this product range. If you have any questions, please ask them through YouTube. That way many other people will benefit from the replies as well. I’m quite happy to reply. I try to reply to all YouTube comments and the channel is moderated. I have kicked a few people off the channel that came in with crazy replies, and I like to keep the channel clean for users to use. Please let me know if there is anything that you really do want to know. I get these kind of emails all the time.

I’ve got one here also. “I have an allergy against black walnuts. Is it okay?” It’s fine. Nut allergies, this is the green hull of the walnut. This isn’t the nut itself, so juglone is the active ingredient found in the hull of the walnut. Walnuts contain a peel around them when they grow. What they do is when they drop to the ground, the green peel shrivels up and turns black. That’s why they call them black walnuts. The hull itself contains the very strong anti-parasite ingredient called juglone.

As far as I know, there are no juglone allergies. There are nut allergies, but you can’t blame the hull of the outside of the nut on an allergy. I believe that it won’t be a problem. The smallest amount of this in this formula, you’d have to be so sensitive to nut indeed. I’ve rarely seen nut allergies like that. Of all the people I’ve tested for allergies, nuts come up every now and then. But in all the years I’ve seen patients, I’ve only ever seen maybe one or two people that were hospitalized from breathing a nut or that ate a peanut butter sandwich and immediately got anaphylaxis. They are very rare.

They can occur. If you’re one of those extreme creatures like that, then you may need to avoid the product. But in my opinion, 99.97 percent of people will be able to take this product without fear of black walnut allergy.

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