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eklein wrote: If a compound is said to ' helps with the immune system and with immunoglobulin', and you have an immune disorder you are taking a relatively new drug for, wouldn't it be wise to let your doctor know this so that any unexpected interactions could be addressed promptly? How does colostrum do those things? What are the side effects? Things that help infant cows with normal processes do not necessarily help adult humans with immune disorders. And nplate has surely not been tested for interaction with colostrum from cows.
It would be wise to keep your treating doctor informed of all drugs, herbs, whatever you are taking. What if colostrum raises or lowers your level of something or other and that in turn affects how the nplate works so all of a sudden you have 2 million platelets? Grapefruit juice and lipitor - there's a combination that is a bad thing. Of course we wouldn't think before the interaction was discovered to tell our doctors that we were drinking grapefruit juice.
It's all chemicals and very complex. I think it's smart to give all the professionals as much information as possible.
Erica
eklein wrote: Some related questions that occur to me:
My dog eats grass for stomach upset. Should I have my son do the same? Should I be concerned that my dog pees and poops on the same grass or does that just add to the goodness and naturalness?
How is cow colostrum gathered, processed, purified, packaged? Who monitors it for strength (of what?), purity, impurities?
What research will you find that will tell you what will be the reaction between cow colustrum and any pharmaceuticals? Would it be colostrum dose-dependent? How do you know what the colostrum dose is (see second question).
(clearly I'm avoiding some work tasks!)
Erica
freckles wrote: colostrum is not patented
gkilianek wrote: You are both driving me nuts on here!! (Patti, freckles) WHO CARES!! Obviously your not here to discuss experiences you just get on here and dis people. Its bogus! I get that you might be miserable, we all have those days but that does not give you the right to take it out on others who are actually trying to make the best of their day. I can appreciate constructive criticism but when you bluntly attack another persons opinion, then you have gone too far. :blink:
patti wrote: Why would colostrum interfere with NPlate? I'm not advocating she use it (although I've used it), I'm just looking at it strictly from a food point of few. Colostrum is the first milk that all mammals get. It is high fat, high protein, etc. In a million years I can't stretch my brain enough to figure out how on earth that could "interfere" with NPlate.
I don't really care one way or another. Just trying to make sense of that statement.
Colostrum on the whole is typically used to attempt healing an immune system that is out of balance when used in conjunction with other modes of naturopathic healing. Just not gettin' the interference thing unless that's just your standard line of verbage.
Patti since you obviously hate anyone or anything in the medical field [by the way, would you say your friend April is in the medical field?, I would] I am going to quote from a holistic site which I would assume is an ok site with you.patti wrote: ...while grapefruit in particular has been noted to interfere with drugs, milk never has.
It really is a shame you and freckles and any others have had the misfortune to pick doctors who are money hungry, ignorant & stupid. Really I feel sorry for you. However it is wrong for you to lump all doctors into one big ball like that - it is ignorant actually. Not all doctors are like that - I have had doctors tell me to take something that isn't a patented drug, I have had doctors tell me to try alternative medicine. So to say "a doctor will never..." is totally wrong. You should watch those blanket statements you make - here are 2 that are wrong!patti wrote: ...The point freckles was making is that a doctor will never advocate something that isn't patented that a drug company isn't making money off of (and hence the doctor as well).
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