Kluyveromyces Marxianus B0399 as a CURE
Posted: Sat Oct 28, 2023 3:08 pm
Hi guys. I need your help.
I spent the last months of my life reading scientific researches about halitosis. As it turns out, there are thousands, if not tens of thousands of studies done by scientific institutes, scientific communities and specialized clinics for the treatment of halitosis (Belgium, Switzerland). Their works are not just compilations of useless information that you could see on dozens of sites that your search engine gives you. Surely many of you have come across some of these studies - what they have in common is that the cause of halitosis (in the absence of periodontal disease and tonsil disease) is said to be the tongue coating - which is true - but why does this coating appears and why does it cause a stench in some people and nothing in others, is to this days a dark place of modern science.
The main way to combat halitosis, according to scientists and employees of specialized clinics, is much more thorough oral care than the average person, which necessarily includes cleaning tongue coating (it is responsible for 70% of the bacteria producing Volatile Sulfur Compounds) and rinsing mouth with rinse with chlorhexidine or (in studies over the last five years, scientists agree that this is even better) with chlorine dioxide. However, even they agree that even with the maximum possible cleaning of the oral cavity (tongue brushing, flossing, rinsing, specialized toothpaste), bad breath will disappear for NO MORE than 12 hours.
However, I did find one interesting study.
You can read it yourself:
https://biomedres.us/fulltexts/BJSTR.MS.ID.002180.php
but in a nutshell, scientists in Italy have used Probiotic Lactic Yeast Kluyveromyces Marxianus (formerly Fragilis) B0399 in the treatment of halitosis. After 14 days, just over 90% of study participants were completely cured of halitosis. The study was published in article format in a scientific journal.
But please don't rejoice ahead of time. There are a couple of obvious questions with this study.
1. Why, despite the year of the study (2018), its results have not yet scattered around the world?
2. Is this study an advertisement for a product containing the above probiotic, and all the authors (there are five of them) were bribed?
3. I've read a lot of studies, and one of the main signs of a serious study is its complexity and abundance of confusing tables. Everything here is clear even to the average person, and the odor reduction diagram looks like it was drawn up by a second grader.
I have an answer to every question, but I don’t want to get my hopes up in advance. In my life - probably as in yours - there were many false hopes. It seems to you that everything is over, but a week passes and it turns out that everything has just begun.
So why haven't I tried it myself yet?
As you can see from the flag on my profile, I am from a country that shall not be named. Supplies of foreign medicines, as well as food, as well as many clothing brands, have been suspended. There are no probiotics with Kluyveromyces Marxianus B0399 sold in my country and it is not possible to ship from other countries. This is where I need your help.
I am reaching out to those who lives in countries where these probiotics are available. Please buy any brand that contains it and try it for yourself. Write here that you are ready to try, and then after two weeks whether it helped you or not.
I think I said everything I wanted. If you have any questions, ask below and I will try to answer each one. If you have questions about halitosis: what causes it, what methods do scientists suggest to hide it, why do I so often refer to the oral cavity when many here say that it comes from the stomach or intestines (which may be true, but does not in any way cancel the direct relationship between those three) - ask and I will try to send you a link to a specific scientific study for your specific question.
Thank you guys and stay safe!
P.S. My answers to the three questions, I've asked you above:
1. The vast majority of halitosis researchers are dentists. The probiotic I'm talking about acts on the intestines, and accordingly is an area of interest for gastroenterologists, who have almost no research on halitosis. Moreover, in medicine, the issue of halitosis in recent years has been completely shifted to the shoulders of dentists, who, if they conduct probiotic research, study probiotics exclusively for the oral cavity (I have seen dozens of such studies), which have either short-term benefit or no benefit at all.
2. The list of authors is extensive and heterogeneous. Some of the authors are associated with very large research laboratories. However, this does not negate the fact that they could have been bribed or their names there are purely nominal.
3. The simplicity of the table and the study may be due to the fact that the dentists who carried it out at a certain point entered the field of gastroenterology and were not able to determine what caused the healing properties of the product.
P.P.S: Here is the study how Kluyveromyces Marxianus (Fragilis) B0399 works:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3272993/
I spent the last months of my life reading scientific researches about halitosis. As it turns out, there are thousands, if not tens of thousands of studies done by scientific institutes, scientific communities and specialized clinics for the treatment of halitosis (Belgium, Switzerland). Their works are not just compilations of useless information that you could see on dozens of sites that your search engine gives you. Surely many of you have come across some of these studies - what they have in common is that the cause of halitosis (in the absence of periodontal disease and tonsil disease) is said to be the tongue coating - which is true - but why does this coating appears and why does it cause a stench in some people and nothing in others, is to this days a dark place of modern science.
The main way to combat halitosis, according to scientists and employees of specialized clinics, is much more thorough oral care than the average person, which necessarily includes cleaning tongue coating (it is responsible for 70% of the bacteria producing Volatile Sulfur Compounds) and rinsing mouth with rinse with chlorhexidine or (in studies over the last five years, scientists agree that this is even better) with chlorine dioxide. However, even they agree that even with the maximum possible cleaning of the oral cavity (tongue brushing, flossing, rinsing, specialized toothpaste), bad breath will disappear for NO MORE than 12 hours.
However, I did find one interesting study.
You can read it yourself:
https://biomedres.us/fulltexts/BJSTR.MS.ID.002180.php
but in a nutshell, scientists in Italy have used Probiotic Lactic Yeast Kluyveromyces Marxianus (formerly Fragilis) B0399 in the treatment of halitosis. After 14 days, just over 90% of study participants were completely cured of halitosis. The study was published in article format in a scientific journal.
But please don't rejoice ahead of time. There are a couple of obvious questions with this study.
1. Why, despite the year of the study (2018), its results have not yet scattered around the world?
2. Is this study an advertisement for a product containing the above probiotic, and all the authors (there are five of them) were bribed?
3. I've read a lot of studies, and one of the main signs of a serious study is its complexity and abundance of confusing tables. Everything here is clear even to the average person, and the odor reduction diagram looks like it was drawn up by a second grader.
I have an answer to every question, but I don’t want to get my hopes up in advance. In my life - probably as in yours - there were many false hopes. It seems to you that everything is over, but a week passes and it turns out that everything has just begun.
So why haven't I tried it myself yet?
As you can see from the flag on my profile, I am from a country that shall not be named. Supplies of foreign medicines, as well as food, as well as many clothing brands, have been suspended. There are no probiotics with Kluyveromyces Marxianus B0399 sold in my country and it is not possible to ship from other countries. This is where I need your help.
I am reaching out to those who lives in countries where these probiotics are available. Please buy any brand that contains it and try it for yourself. Write here that you are ready to try, and then after two weeks whether it helped you or not.
I think I said everything I wanted. If you have any questions, ask below and I will try to answer each one. If you have questions about halitosis: what causes it, what methods do scientists suggest to hide it, why do I so often refer to the oral cavity when many here say that it comes from the stomach or intestines (which may be true, but does not in any way cancel the direct relationship between those three) - ask and I will try to send you a link to a specific scientific study for your specific question.
Thank you guys and stay safe!
P.S. My answers to the three questions, I've asked you above:
1. The vast majority of halitosis researchers are dentists. The probiotic I'm talking about acts on the intestines, and accordingly is an area of interest for gastroenterologists, who have almost no research on halitosis. Moreover, in medicine, the issue of halitosis in recent years has been completely shifted to the shoulders of dentists, who, if they conduct probiotic research, study probiotics exclusively for the oral cavity (I have seen dozens of such studies), which have either short-term benefit or no benefit at all.
2. The list of authors is extensive and heterogeneous. Some of the authors are associated with very large research laboratories. However, this does not negate the fact that they could have been bribed or their names there are purely nominal.
3. The simplicity of the table and the study may be due to the fact that the dentists who carried it out at a certain point entered the field of gastroenterology and were not able to determine what caused the healing properties of the product.
P.P.S: Here is the study how Kluyveromyces Marxianus (Fragilis) B0399 works:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3272993/