Awareness for gut-health issues is riding high, but the solution may not be what you think.
Gut health is a growing health craze for good reason. Related problems affect roughly one out of every three adults. That contributes to millions of doctor visits, hospitalizations or emergency admissions in the United States every year. It even has it’s own day: World Digestive Health Day.
In an effort to improve their digestive health, Americans have become obsessed with friendly bacteria, otherwise known as probiotics. In addition, Americans spend over $2 billion each year on probiotic supplements, while sales of fermented foods like yogurt, kombucha, and sauerkraut are on the rise. It is becoming popular to add probiotics to many other foods and beverages as well, including chocolate, nutrition bars, smoothies, and even orange juice. Marketing would have us believe that probiotics offer the answer to all our gut issues. There is no question that they are an important consideration in wellness, but do they always represent the best natural solution?
The simple truth is that the digestive relief many people are looking for may be better achieved with the use of digestive enzymes. Probiotics and digestive enzymes are easily confused, as they are often lumped together into the same category of gut-health supplements, but they are actually two different approaches for improving digestive health. The living organisms contained in probiotics can have beneficial effects on the body, but unlike enzymes, they do not break down foods to enable proper digestion and relief from digestive problems. In fact, they have very limited value in helping deal with common digestive complaints like indigestion, gas, bloating, and food intolerances. The reason is simple: Probiotics do not digest food. We need digestive enzymes to accomplish this task. While probiotics are marketed as a cure-all for almost any digestive concern, in reality, the relief that people seek is often best obtained through supplementation with digestive enzymes.
Some digestive enzymes break down protein (proteases), some break down fat (lipases), while others break down carbohydrates (amylases). There are many more types of enzymes than these, but you will generally find these three included in most digestive enzyme formulas.
Unlike probiotics, enzymes can make an immediate difference. That is because enzymes actually help digest food; probiotics do not. Many people who have occasional digestive difficulties will feel relief after taking a digestive enzyme supplement within minutes. Many digestive symptoms are simply the result of improper breakdown of food by enzymes. Supplemental enzymes work directly with the body to break down your meal properly.
While our own body produces digestive enzymes, they may not be enough. Supplemental sources, largely derived from microbial and plant sources, can pick up the slack. In particular, fungal enzymes have become the most effective because they are very stable and can function within a wide range of pH levels.
The best digestive enzyme supplements work at multiple pH levels. This effect is very important because the pH in the digestive tract can range from very acidic to mildly alkaline. For example, the pH in the stomach is 1.5 (acidic) and up to 8.3 in the intestines (alkaline).
As chief science officer of Enzymedica, I feel it is important for our products to do what they say they will do, and a significant piece of that puzzle producing supplements that contain the active ingredients that actually affect the complaint people take it for—whether that is enzymes, probiotics, or a combination of the two.
Remember, knowledge is power when it comes to remedying your digestive health issues. Knowing the right supplements for your gut health will help you in the long run when it comes to maintaining good health. For more digestive health tips visit doctormurray.com and enzymedica.com.