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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Ulcerative Colitis - Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) - Celiac Disease - Digestinol

Ever hear of Diverticulosis or Diverticulitis?

It all starts with Diverticula, these are small pouches that can form anywhere from your esophagus to your colon.  Formation in and along the colon are the ones to be most concerned about.  Nobody is born with them, they develop over time, and usually everyone has some, usually around a dozen, by the time they are 60 years old.

Most of us that have them are not aware they exist since they don’t cause any problems on their own.  The problem is when they become inflamed and/or burst.  If they are inflamed they can cause serious abdominal pain and if they were to burst, that would allow bacteria rich feces to leak into your abdominal cavity, which would lead to much worse symptoms.

Diverticulosis is the formation of the Diverticula pouches, Diverticulitis is the condition of those pouches becoming infected or bursting.

It’s hard to tell if you have it, because the pouches (diverticula) are usually painless. However, you can suffer from these symptoms:

  • Cramping on the left side of your abdomen. Pain disappears after passing gas or moving your bowels
  • Bright red blood in the stool

The pouches can form anywhere on your digestive tract, but mostly form at the end of the descending and sigmoid colons, located on the left side of the abdomen. Many times, they also form on the first section of the small intestine and rarely cause problems.

Diverticulitis can turn into a serious gastrointestinal disease. It can be a small abscess in one or more of the pouches or become a large infection, even a perforation of the bowel.

Heredity and aging play a key role in the development of diverticulosis and diverticulitis, but diet also is important.

Diverticulitis can be an acute or chronic disease. When its acute, it presents itself with one or more severe attacks of infection and inflammation. The inflammation and infection can diminish, but it may never clear up for good.

Symptoms include severe abdominal pain and cramping (mostly on the left side), bloating, constipation or diarrhea, thin stools, chills, fever and occasionally rectal bleeding.

If the obstruction persists, abdominal pain and tenderness will increase and you can experience nausea and vomiting.

If left untreated, diverticulitis will lead to serious problems that require surgery, including:

  • Abscesses may form around the infected pouches. If they go through the intestinal wall, you can develop Peritonitis,.- a very serious, potentially fatal infection that requires treatment immediately.
  • Severe bleeding may occur and you might need a blood transfusion.
  • Fistulas can develop if an infected diverticulum reaches an adjoining organ, forming a connection between them. This happens mostly between the large intestine and the bladder. An infection of the neighboring kidneys can result. Fistulas occur less between the large intestine and either the skin or vagina.
  • Scarring can occur. This can lead to a blockage of your intestine.

In Western societies, an estimated 10% of people over 40 yrs. of age will develop diverticulosis and at least 50% in people over 60. Diverticulitis will occur in about 10%-25% of those with diverticulosis.

Some researchers suggest that if you suffer from constipation and usually strain when you have a bowel movement, you can create enough pressure in the intestinal walls to weaken them and begin the growth of those pouches. Others studies suggest that not eating enough fiber in the diet is responsible. The lack of fiber leads to increased bowel wall strain to move stool through your colon. This causes more pressure that leads to the formation of pouches at weak points in the colon wall.

The increased pressure together with undigested food caught in the pouches can deteriorate the diverticular wall, which causes the inflammation and possible bacterial infection (Diverticulitis).

Many people aren’t happy with the results and/or side effects that come with the prescribed medications and strive to find another more successful approach. A healthier option is an all-natural product called Digestinol. This product contains an extremely potent strain of nutrients from the Aloe plant, that have been refined into a powder to prevent any side effects and focus on the main cause of the inflammation and discomfort in your body.

What is Digestinol?

Digestive Support, Irritable Bowel, Ulcerative Colitis, Crohns Disease
Digestinol Aloe Drip

Our product contains AMP (Aloe Mucilaginous Polysaccharides) which is an all-natural molecule found in the aloe vera plant. It is known to enhance the body’s immune system due to its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, anti-bacterial and anti-viral properties. We have a 97-98% success rate reported from people who take Digestinol as directed for 90 days or longer.

If you are not interested in prescription medications to treat your condition and prefer a more natural approach, Digestinol makes all-natural capsules that contain a very specific form of Aloe Polysaccharides to target the inflammation along your digestive tract.

These capsules also provide your body with the nutrients that it is lacking in order to take back control of itself. Digestinol isn’t just Aloe Vera powder, Aloe Vera (contains Aloin) which irritates your digestive system and can cause diarrhea. Digestinol undertakes very specific additional steps in order to remove the Aloin during their extraction process to focus on only the beneficial portions of the Aloe Leaf, the long chain Aloe Mucilaginous Polysaccharide molecules.

Since Digestinol is 100% all-natural it doesn’t bring along the side effects that other chemically based prescription medications have. We tell our customers to think of Digestinol as an all-natural digestive system specific vitamin that reduces inflammation and provides your body with specific nutrients that allow it to take back control of itself.

Our Digestinol capsules will also help to balance the good and bad bacteria levels in your body allowing it to regain control of its normal operations.

For more information, visit us at www.Digestinol.com or:

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