Allergies, Intolerance, Asthma and Bronchitis
Studies show that acid lactic bacteria have anti-allergic properties. The effectiveness of their action depends on the type of bacteria (Fujiwara et al. 2004). Many people suffer from lactose intolerance, as they lack the enzyme that breaks it down – lactase – and suffer from diarrhea. With the help of lactic acid bacteria, which generate lactase, the intolerance to dairy products can be reduced (Salminen et al. 1993).
In July 2001, the newspaper Hjemmet published the following surprising recovery story: In 1985, the Danish vet V. B. was brought to the emergency department of an Aarhus hospital. He looked like skin and bones, as he had lost 55 lb. He suffered from intolerance to various foods, from diarrhea and pain. The doctors discovered he had a chronic inflammation of the pancreas. They tried different drugs, but nothing helped. His condition grew worse by the year. In 1999, he was taken to the ER for what seemed like the last time. When he was later released from hospital into home care, he had reached – according to the hospital discharge letter – the end of his life path. However, it proved not to be true. Once home, Mr. B. read news about a Danish farm where the cattle were so sick that neither their milk nor their meat could be used, but the animals were cured completely by being sprayed with Erik Nielsen’s beneficial EM bacteria. He ordered a bottle of such probiotic beverage from the manufacturer and two months later, to his surprise and to the astonishment of the doctors who ran thorough tests on him, he was completely cured and healthy.
Danish worker W. N. (Tarm) described the experience of his 70-year-old brother with Erik Nielsen’s organic EM probiotics. His brother suffered from asthma and recurrent bronchitis. When he started taking the organic EM probiotic, his problems soon disappeared.
Sources:
Ostan, I. (2016): Blessings from the Gut. Koper: Institut.O.
Fujiwara, D., Inoue, S., Wakabayashi, H., Fujii, T. (2004). The Anti-allergic Effects of Lactic Acid Bacteria Are Strain Dependent and Mediated by Effects on Both Th1/Th2 Cytokine Expression and Balance. International Archives of Allergy and Immunology. 135(3):205-215.
Salminen, S., Deighton, M., Gorbach, S. (1993). Lactic Acid Bacteria in Health and Disease. In: Salminen, S., von Wright, A. (eds.). Lactic Acid Bacteria. Marcel Dekker Inc., 199-225.
