Parkinson's Disease Tulip


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Old 06-18-2015, 11:37 AM #1
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Quote:
Originally Posted by soccertese View Post
just curious, even low protein foods such as fruits negate the affect of your aa mix?
if i eat anything with more than 5grams of protein negates my C/L for up to 2hrs, have to double the dose and try to play catchup. anything dairy is the worst.


ironically, a lot of what you are taking is "food".

have you ever considered just taking C/L as needed just to see what it's like? or just as a backup in case you can't get your HINZ aa's? then you might get the best of both worlds?
Thanks for the suggestion, Soccertese. I do get the protein effect, especially from milk. I think some of it, especially from low protein food, is just slow stomach emptying. I have often thought about taking the c/l pills at times when it is inconvenient to blend the powders or if I have to be hospitalized for some reason. I will ask Dr. Stein what an equivalent dose might be.
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Old 06-18-2015, 12:14 PM #2
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Originally Posted by GerryW View Post
Thanks for the suggestion, Soccertese. I do get the protein effect, especially from milk. I think some of it, especially from low protein food, is just slow stomach emptying. I have often thought about taking the c/l pills at times when it is inconvenient to blend the powders or if I have to be hospitalized for some reason. I will ask Dr. Stein what an equivalent dose might be.
C/L is cheap and effective, i never leave home without it.
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Old 06-19-2015, 09:17 AM #3
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http://www.drbass.com/sequential.html

DIGESTION TIME OF VARIOUS FOODS
(approx. time spent in stomach before emptying). ........

Water
when stomach is empty, leaves immediately and goes into intestines,
Juices
Fruit vegetables, vegetable broth - 15 to 20 minutes.
Semi-liquid
(blended salad, vegetables or fruits) - 20 to 30 min.
Fruits
Watermelon - 20 min.digestion time.
Other melons - Canteloupe, Cranshaw, Honeydew etc. - 30 min.
Oranges, grapefruit, grapes - 30 min.
Apples, pears, peaches, cherries etc. - digest in 40 min.
Vegetables
Raw tossed salad vegetables - tomato, lettuces, cucumber, celery, red or green pepper, other succulent vegetables - 30 to 40 min. digestion. -
Steamed or cooked vegetables
Leafy vegetables - escarole, spinach, kale, collards etc. - 40 min. - Zucchini, broccoli, cauliflower, string beans, yellow squash, corn on cob - all 45 min. digestion time
Root vegetables - carrots, beets, parsnips, turnips etc. - 50 min.
Semi-Concentrated Carbohydrates - Starches
Jerusalem artichokes & leafy, acorn & butternut squashes, corn, potatoes, sweet potatoes, yam, chestnuts - all 60 min. digestion.
Concentrated Carbohydrates - Grains
Brown rice, millet, buckwheat, cornmeal, oats (first 3 vegetables best) - 90 min.
Legumes & Beans - (Concentrated Carbohydrate & Protein)
Lentils, limas, chick peas, peas, pigeon peas, kidney beans, etc. - 90 min. digestion time
soy beans -120 min. digestion time
Seeds & Nuts
Seeds - Sunflower, pumpkin, pepita, sesame - Digestive time approx. 2 hours.
Nuts - Almonds, filberts, peanuts (raw), cashews, brazil, walnuts, pecans etc. - 2 1/2 to 3 hours to digest.
Dairy
Skim milk, cottage or low fat pot cheese or ricotta - approx. 90 min. digestion time
whole milk cottage cheese - 120 min. digestion
whole milk hard cheese - 4 to 5 hours digestion time
Animal proteins
Egg yolk - 30 min. digestion time
Whole egg - 45 min.
Fish - cod, scrod, flounder, sole seafood - 30 min. digestion time
Fish - salmon, salmon trout, herring, (more fatty fish) - 45 min. to 60 digestion time
Chicken - 1½ to 2 hours digestion time (without skin)
Turkey - 2 to 2 ¼ hours digestion time (without skin)
Beef, lamb - 3 to 4 hours digestion time
Pork - 4½ to 5 hours digestion time

(Editor's notes
Note1: raw animal proteins have much faster digestion times than the above times for cooked/heated animal proteins.
Note2: The digestion times given are under an ideal situation of eating only one food, chewing well, and having efficient digestion, as is the case e.g. after a fast. They are digestion times for optimally healthy persons, with good eating habits. The digestion times are to a large part derived from Dr. Gian-Cursio's and Dr. Bass' practices.
Digestion times are much longer on a conventional diet, and for persons with non-optimized digestive systems, or persons lacking in energy, and for meals with many ingredients put together haphazardly = not in the optimum sequential order.)
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