🤍What about L. crispatus and B. infantis?

ruticker 07.03.2025 7:25:23

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Recognized from a YouTube video by YouScriptor.com, For more details, follow the link 🤍What about L. crispatus and B. infantis?

Okay, and then, do you have plans to add to the line, um, the other coagulants and the *Gaseri* and things like that? Neia, there's so much to do! I can imagine you just think it's oh so simple—just add it. Well, we're not going to do it, but that *Infantis* microbe, for instance, in infants, is so important. There's another microbe, *Lactobacillus crispatus*, that's extremely important for female reproductive health. I have two new grandchildren, and their mom was told nothing! This is a woman who has an obstetrician, a gynecologist, a functional medicine doctor, an endocrinologist, a gastroenterologist, a cardiologist, and a rheumatologist, and no one said a word about it. In fact, my son, he's kind of a wise guy, asked the obstetrician, "What do you think about probiotics during pregnancy?" Just, "Oh, they don't work." Oh wow! Yet, the effects are profound. There's so much here to do: the in-body composition, skin health, restoration of joint cartilage, reduction of uric acid, hyperemia—is it going to be a microbiome issue? Reduction of oxalates—oxalate kidney stones is a microbiome issue. All sorts of colitis, Crohn's disease, IBS, Alzheimer's type—these are all, to a great degree, not entirely, but to a great degree, conditions associated with a disrupted microbiome. So, there's so much to do! But if all somebody did was get *R* right, you are off to a huge start in regaining control over numerous aspects of your health, including shape, body composition, and your emotional social health. Right, right! Can you, I think you mentioned this earlier, can you talk a bit about *Lactobacillus crispatus*? Um, I can't completely get rid of UTI. Really interesting microbe—excellent work done here near me in Chicago at Loyola. So, *Crispatus* is meant to be carried by all females, but for the same reasons as having lost *Rorai*, a lot of ladies have lost it. When you lose it, you're much more prone to miscarriages, to premature delivery of a child, which can be catastrophic. Right? To deliver a child at 28 weeks, that child's going to have a problem for a lifetime—not to mention two months or whatever in the NICU, which destroys your health and the health of the parents too, by the way. So, *Crispatus* reduces the likelihood of premature delivery of a child, inhibits STDs, reduces the likelihood of such things as candida vaginitis and E. coli vaginitis, restores the vaginal lining. A lot of ladies, as they age, get dryness—*Crispatus* helps restore it. And, uh, it restores sensation and reduces the likelihood of recurrent urinary tract infections dramatically. It also reduces incontinence—urge or stress incontinence, like cough or sneeze, pee—very embarrassing, right? The conventional solutions for these problems are terrible. For instance, estrogens—a woman has to decide, "Am I going to risk thromboembolic disease, blood clots, and endometrial cancer to address this?" Or a surgical procedure for their incontinence, or repeated antibiotics that destroy your health. So, *Crispatus*, you restore. Now, we're going to come out with a *Crispatus* product probably by early spring or so. It won't be just *Crispatus*; we'll have other things. Right now, the only commercial product I'm aware of that has *Crispatus* is Jarrow Advanced *Filus*. Okay, Jarrow, uh, *Femas Advanced*. Okay, there are some goofy products with names—there's a lot of confusion about names, so look at the back, make sure it has *Crispatus* in it. That would be a start, by the way. It makes delicious yogurt—the best! Okay, that's what I was gonna ask! It's so interesting to make the different yogurts with the different probiotics and experience the different flavors. It's really quite fun—it's kind of like, you know, tasting wine or something, and you can see the differences in all of them. And that one's a lot of fun to make. It's unlike the *Rorai*, which is very acidic; the *Crispatus* yogurt is very mild. Okay, yeah, I can't wait to try it! And, um, you said that's going to be coming out sometime this year, maybe in about three months or so? Awesome! Okay, do you have any idea about, like, if there was a woman who was pregnant and she consumed the *Lactobacillus rhamnosus*, if that would be passed on to the baby when the baby was born? Um, have you looked into that at all? Yeah, the mother should pass that—that's how it's supposed to happen. It's not the most important microbe for the baby; the most important microbe for the child is *Bifidobacterium infantis*. That is a crucial microbe for a mom to pass on to the baby. Unfortunately, mom might not have it, or the baby does get it, but the baby receives one to five rounds of antibiotics shortly after birth, which is very, very common. Because if a child has *Infantis*, it has a greater chance of normal neurological maturation and maturation of the immune system. So, children who get *Infantis* and breastfeed—because *Infantis* allows that child to metabolize the oligosaccharides, human milk oligosaccharides being provided by breast milk—that child is more likely to not develop type 1 diabetes, asthma, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and will have a higher IQ. So, not having that... So, the *Rorai* plays a minor role in the infant microbiome, but it plays a major role in mom's health because the *Rorai*, via oxytocin, causes expression of breast milk. So, a lot of ladies fail to breastfeed—they're unable to—and one of the reasons is loss of *Rorai* and thereby oxytocin. Restoring *Rorai* and oxytocin encourages the eternal infant bond and discourages postpartum depression, which is a terrible problem. If a woman is suffering depression, she fails to bond with her child, and the child can suffer. It's a big problem, of course, it's treated with antidepressants and terrible things like that. Here we have a natural solution for many of the phenomena of reproduction. Yeah, so if a woman was pregnant, it would be a good idea to consume the *Infantis* strain that you mentioned, and then a commercial baby when it's born. So, the way it's done—um, the University of California, Davis, group did a lot of this work and commercialized a product called Vivo Evi. I have no relationship with this company; they just did good work. But they tell you to feed it to your child by mixing it with breast milk. I say, why not do it the way it's supposed to be done? Which is, how about mom during pregnancy, like third trimester? So, make yogurt at a better *Bacter* and *Infantis*, same methods, same temperature, time, etc., and mom eats it. And then she provides *Infantis* to her child at the time of delivery in the context of the broader microbiome, like it's supposed to be done. And you can still give it to the child to be absolutely certain because it's so critical. Yeah, so the *Rorai* point for mom—not so important for baby in the early years. As that child matures, it becomes extremely important for social behavior, for control of body, what I call shape and body composition—where muscle is located, where fat is located. Your ability to interact with other people. So, one of the great effects people will notice right away is you seek out the company of other people. Now, think about this, Neia—we're talking about this kind of wanting people's company and comfort at a time of record social isolation, record suicide. Half of all marriages end in divorce, and the psychology community has been tabulating, has been measuring, tracking the rise in narcissistic behavior. They've been tracking it since 1963. So, for instance, in 1963, they asked people, "True or false: I am a very important person in this world." In 1963, 13% of people said, "Yeah, that's true for me." Our time? 83%. Oh wow! No, there's more to this than just *Rorai* and *Nai* tone. But, you know, if it's consumer behavior and social media, you and I don't have that much control. But we have control over whether somebody has *Rorai* and thereby oxytocin. Because we're seeing it—people may do this for SIBO or other reasons, but they say, "I like my family better. I introduced myself to strangers in line for coffee at Starbucks." Or, "I had an office party, and I hated those things. I'm always thinking they're looking at my clothes, my makeup, my hair." You find yourself looking forward and being comfortable in social settings. So, it really changes behavior. Yeah, and that social connection is so incredibly important for our health. So, that's amazing!

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