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Colostrum / Transfer Factor
  Colostrum / Transfer Factor
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Ayurvedic physicians and the Rishis have documented colostrum's physical and spiritual benefits. They make a candy by dropping the colostrum in boiling water and then coating it with sugar. People in Scandinavia and northern European countries are very familiar with the healing benefits of colostrum. They make a delicious pudding dessert, topped with honey, to celebrate the birth of a calf and its good health.

History; Source


Historically, bovine colostrum has played a significant role in natural healing. Bovine colostrum has been used in India for thousands of years. In the United States and throughout the world, bovine colostrum was, due to its content of antibodies, used for immune purposes prior to the introductions of sulfa drugs and antibiotics.

In the early 1950s, Dr. Albert Sabin became aware of the possibilities of colostrum. He found these antibodies, grew them in a cultured media and produced the first antiviral vaccine. Hundreds of years of human use, thousands of scientific studies and human clinical trials world-wide have shown bovine colostrum to be safe and effective.

Colostrum is available without a prescription in health food stores.





Colostrum / Transfer Factor can help with the following:
DietNot recommended for:
  A Raw Food/Fruitarian Diet
  A Vegan Diet

Immunity

  Immune System Imbalance (TH2 Dominance)
 Transfer factor may help to rebalance a TH2 dominant Immune system.

Organ Health

  Hepatitis
 Hepatitis Specific Transfer Factors from colostrum were used in 260 cases and a 100% clinical recovery was reported with no side-effects. Immunological profiles were normalized in approximately half of the individuals at the end of the observation period.


KEY
May do some good
Likely to help
Avoid absolutely


GLOSSARY

Antibody (Antibodies)
A type of serum protein (globulin) synthesized by white blood cells of the lymphoid type in response to an antigenic (foreign substance) stimulus. Antibodies are complex substances formed to neutralize or destroy these antigens in the blood. Antibody activity normally fights infection but can be damaging in allergies and a group of diseases that are called autoimmune diseases.

Antiviral
Any of a number of herbs, drugs or agents capable of destroying viruses or inhibiting their growth or multiplication until the body is capable of destroying the virus itself. Most antiviral agents are members of the antimetabolite family.

Ayurvedic (Ayurveda)
Type of alternative medicine in which diet and therapies, such as herbal inhalation and massage, are dictated by individual's body type; 4,000 year-old traditional Indian system believed to be helpful to those suffering insomnia, hypertension and digestive problems.

Colostrum
The first (immunologically rich) milk produced by lactating mothers after giving birth. Usually collected within 24 or 36 hours. Usual sources are cows.

Cytokines (Cytokine, TH1, TH2)
Cytokines are chemical messengers that control immune responses. They are secreted by white blood cells, T cells, epithelial cells and some other body cells. There are at least 17 different kinds of interleuken and 3 classes of interferon called alpha, beta and gamma and various subsets. Interleukens and interferons are called “cytokines” and there are two general groupings, Th1 and Th2. Th1 (T-cell Helper type 1) promote cell-mediated immunity (CMI) while Th2 (T-cell Helper type 2) induce humoral immunity (antibodies).

Hepatitis
Inflammation of the liver usually resulting in jaundice (yellowing of the skin), loss of appetite, stomach discomfort, abnormal liver function, clay-colored stools, and dark urine. May be caused by a bacterial or viral infection, parasitic infestation, alcohol, drugs, toxins or transfusion of incompatible blood. Can be life-threatening. Severe hepatitis may lead to cirrhosis and chronic liver dysfunction.

Immune System (Immune Response, Immunity)
A complex that protects the body from disease organisms and other foreign bodies. The system includes the humoral immune response and the cell-mediated response. The immune system also protects the body from invasion by making local barriers and inflammation. The process may involve acquired immunity (the ability to learn and remember a specific infectious agent), or innate immunity (the genetically programmed system of responses that attack, digest, remove, and initiate inflammation and tissue healing).

Transfer Factor
Protein immunomodulators extracted from colostrum from immunologically stimulated animals that promotes specific immunity to certain antigens such as viruses.




Last updated: Sep 28, 2008


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