posted
anyone use this for joint pain? I have co-workers who are taking it and it is helping them.
Posts: 509 | From southern new jersey | Registered: May 2003
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posted
I've taken it every day for 3 years, since before I knew I had Lyme. I'm a marathon runner and the collagen definitely helps -- it healed the tendonitis I had in my foot (I had tried everything, I started using collagen on a whim and after a month the pain was gone).
There have been studies done that it helps heal tendons, but I'm too lazy to link them. A lot of runners I know take it. I use the Great Lakes brand, which is what Buhner recommends. Joint pain is the one Lyme symptom I never had.
Posts: 1 | From USA | Registered: Dec 2019
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posted
I used to be able to take collagen peptides in the form of a protein shake. Now it causes me so much pain. I think it is due to my oxalate problem.
So if it causes something of yours to get worse consider oxalates.
Posts: 832 | From Somewhere | Registered: Nov 2010
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posted
Is collagenpeptide the same as normal collagen powder?
Posts: 68 | From Germany | Registered: Nov 2019
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Marz
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 3446
posted
do they take it from bones?
Bone broth makes me ache.
Posts: 1297 | From USA | Registered: Dec 2002
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Keebler
Honored Contributor (25K+ posts)
Member # 12673
posted
- I find that a beef chuck roast has a nice amount of connective tissue / collagen with the healing fat on it, to complement the protein with all the other nutrients as well. I asked for it untrimmed and untied and just slow roast it at 250 degrees until its fall apart tender.
One thing to consider with both collagen powder and whey powder -- and some other protein powders as well . . . just like other highly processed foods . .
is that while they may not trigger a spike in glucose, they can trigger a spike in insulin from the sudden rush of that powder and that insulin - in excess, in a flood so to speak - can cause weight gain and also damage in the body / nerve endings in various ways - especially with insulin resistance which approx. 75% of the population has.
The whole food source does not do that as it's digested and absorbed more slowly.
And, generally, meat and animal fats do not spike high glucose or insulin, unlike any processed foods, which all the powders are - they are highly processed and most often just not something the body knows what to do with.
Plant powders can cause even higher spikes in both glucose and insulin, too, due to their carbohydrate nature and there immediate absorption and rush. -
[ 12-25-2019, 11:47 AM: Message edited by: Keebler ]
Posts: 48021 | From Tree House | Registered: Jul 2007
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Marz
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 3446
posted
I called company that makes this as a candy. They use the hide from cattle.
Posts: 1297 | From USA | Registered: Dec 2002
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