Noni Articles:

Digestive Inflammation and Food Cravings

Several new lines of research are showing that ghrelin levels are elevated during digestive distress in an effort to coordinate repair of your digestive tract. The adverse side effect of elevated ghrelin is that your appetite will elevate and you will eat more food, making you gain weight.

Read More:  cravings, Digestive Helper, Ghrelin, GI Soother, Noni, Super Dophilus, Super Immune Booster™

Ear Infections Set the Stage for Future Obesity

Researchers at the American Psychological Association's annual meeting presented multiple studies linking the frequency of childhood ear infections to the risk of obesity.

Read More:  antibiotics, Candida albicans, Digestive Helper, ear infections, Fiber Helper™, GI Soother, Noni

Lacking Friendly Flora Linked to Obesity

An emerging body of scientific data suggests that a lack of friendly flora in your digestive tract contributes to storing excess fat and becoming overweight. Researchers tested this in pregnant women, measuring the gut flora over the course of their pregnancy (in both overweight women and normal weight women).

Read More:  friendly flora, Noni, Super Dophilus

Candida Problems Evolving

Candida albicans is a normal inhabitant of your digestive tract and sinuses. Candida glabrata is a normal inhabitant on your skin. New research is showing that Candida glabrata is turning increasingly more hostile, can rapidly change its genome to become drug resistant, and is increasingly more of a problem to individuals with compromised immunity.

Read More:  Noni, sinus

Swine Flu Tip – Don’t Be Your Own Petri Dish

There are a number of things you can do to reduce your chances of getting the flu. At the top of this list is maintaining a healthy digestive tract. While the flu is a respiratory infection, it always incubates in your digestive tract before moving to your lungs. A healthy GI tract can reduce the likelihood of viral replication as well as getting your immune system into gear to deal with the problem.

Read More:  Digestive Helper, GI & Muscle Helper, GI Soother, H1N1, Immune Plus, Noni, Oregano Oil, Super Dophilus, Swine Flu

How Hostile Bacteria Take Up Unwanted Residence

Some of the worst bacterial infections have learned how to trick and evade the human immune response, allowing themselves to set up shop and wreak havoc to health. Two new studies help explain how problematic bacterial infections work their evil.

Read More:  avoiding detection, bacteria, genes, Noni

Noni as a Natural Immune Booster

Noni has been in use as a medicinal herb in various cultures around the world for several thousand years. Its traditional use relating to immunity includes combating bacterial, viral, fungal, and parasitic infections. It is used to help respiratory disorders, sore throat, gum infections, fever, headache, diarrhea, and indigestion. It is considered to have anti-inflammatory effects and is also a common remedy for joint pain.

Read More:  H1N1, Noni, respiratory, sore throat, Swine Flu

Watch for Sinus Stuffiness in the Fall Damp Weather

The past few weeks in much of the country has seen quite a lot of rain. Rain combined with autumn’s falling leaves poses a challenging immune system stressor for many people, as it is a perfect breeding ground for mold. This problem continues until there are two killing frosts.

Read More:  fall, Immune Plus, Lymphatic function, mold, Monolaurin, Noni, Oregano Oil, Quercetin, sinus, Vitamin C

How Fiber & Friendly Flora Reduce Inflammation

Scientists have made a major breakthrough in understanding why dietary fiber and friendly GI tract flora (acidophilus) provide significant benefit to such inflammatory problems as colitis, asthma, and arthritis.

Read More:  Daily Protein Plus™, Fiber, Fiber Helper™, freindly flora, Noni, short chain fatty acids, Super Dophilus

Are Low-Grade Infections a Major Cause of Heart Disease?

British researchers have demonstrated a key gene signal involved with the formation of plaque in arteries as well as that plaque rupturing and causing a stroke. When the gene is turned on then inflammation, arterial damage, and plaque formation follow. When the gene is blocked, none of these problems happen. Unfortunately, the gene is part of your natural defense against infection.

Read More:  heart disease, low-grade infection, Noni, plaque, TLR-2

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