Are There any Negative Consequences with the Serum-Derived Bovine Globulin?

Are There any Negative Consequences with the Serum-Derived Bovine Globulin?

Can I say more about what the serum derive immunoglobulin does and if there are any negative consequences?

The only negative consequence I can think of is when you're using it at the wrong time. For instance, early in the process, let me equate this to neurotransmitters for just a moment. When you look at neurotransmitter study and it's at the beginning of an infection, everything is up by the, you know, inhibitory neuro transmit, excitatory slant to the top. And over the years they will degrade in a certain pattern. Okay? I call it dynamic neurotransmitter assessment.

The same thing with the gut. At first, when you have all this inflammation and all these antigen antibody reactions, the gut immune system is hyperactive. It's, it's working too much. And if you add immunoglobulins to it, be worse. So, you know, you do a trial of it and it's worse and you know that's the stage.

But if somebody's been chronic for a really long time, or if you happen to have a test that has a low secretory IGA, then you're pretty safe using it. How it actually works, what the mechanism is, I don't remember. Okay, I'd have to go back looking that up. But if you type in serum derived bovine immunoglobulins in Google, you'll get all the pub meta, all the various studies, and that should give you more information. I'm sorry, it's just not on the top of my head at the moment.