Wednesday, 9 July 2014

Do You Know What Your Appendix Is For?

First of all you should know how important bacteria are and what it does inside your gut from mouth to anus.

In the small intestines most of the nutrients in your food are absorbed through the lining into small blood capillaries. To get the food to this state it has been broken down with the help of some very active bacteria. The bulk of the two kilos of bacteria you carry around are in the small and large intestines.

The waste from your anus consists mostly of water but also contains dead and alive bacteria as well as a tiny amount of inorganic salts. It should also contain the only part of the food the body cannot absorb and yet remains an essential part of a healthy diet.

Colosan
This is plant cellulose otherwise known as roughage that fresh greens like spring greens provide.

Unfortunately we don’t eat enough roughage but we do eat an awful amount of over refined foods and too much salt and sugar.

Colosan is a supplement that is taken orally and helps keep the colon clean as the name implies. It’s doing what should be done naturally if only we would eat healthier diets with much needed roughage.

The bacteria in our gut are an essential part of the digestive process but it was all very different hundreds of thousands of years ago.

Back then humans survived almost solely on vegetation picking and eating leaves all day much as many animals still do.

The appendix which in humans is an average eleven centimetre long worm-like dead end attachment to the large intestine just where it joins with the small intestine, has no use to us at all today but back in the days of leaf eating man it did have some vital use.

It is thought that the appendix was specifically there to store the bacteria essential to the digestion and break-down of the bulk of the diet which was cellulose. It may even have been a retreat for bacteria when humans suffered severe diarrhoea when much of the bacteria would be flushed away.

For Colosan Feel Free to call us0800 2800 486 or 0118 969 1402 

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