.

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Say Goodbye to Probiotic Yogurt: ISOThrive MicroFood



Give the 100 trillion bacteria in your gut something to smile about—and to invite you to try a new natural supplement and share some helpful tips with your readers on how to enhance their gut health. {Product provided for review/feature consideration}



With spring around the corner, people are spring cleaning inside and out. For many folks, that means juice cleanses, colonics, and new diet regimes—including probiotic supplements like yogurt and kefir.

But if your gut is feeling out of whack (constipation? acid reflux?), you don’t necessarily need to clean it out or fill it with foreign bacteria from probiotics. One of the most important things you can do is feed the good bacteria already in your gut.

ISOThrive —a gastroenterologist-endorsed, bacterially fermented microFood (or 'pre'-biotic) nectar—is designed to feed specific bacteria in your gut that are picky eaters. They aren’t happy with anything else and they’re critical to your health. Here's what it does:

>> ISOThrive goes where probiotics can't. A daily dose of fermented microFood like ISOThrive fuels the good bacteria in the digestive tract to tackle acid reflux, constipation, bloating, and gas.

>> ISOThrive rebalances our diets the ancient way. Modern food production has removed a type of microFood that your “good” bacteria need to keep you healthy. You can’t get this from plants or other supplements. Our ancestors got it by eating lots of not-so-tasty fermented vegetables or sourdough breads. ISOThrive (which is tasty) adds it back.

>> ISOThrive preps our bodies to stave off disease by restoring our dietary imbalances. Our diets lack specially fermented microFood, so our starving "good" gut bacteria are "breaking bad"—using other energy sources (such as our gut lining) and making us sick.

Until next time...






No comments:

Post a Comment

I love to hear from you, so leave a comment, question, or suggestion and stay tuned because I WILL respond! xoxo...

Blogging tips