Serrapeptase for Scar

5 star (1) 
  100%

Linda (Washington) on 07/11/2021:
5 out of 5 stars

I am absolutely convinced a digestive enzyme called serrapeptase is more than amazing for scar tissue.

In 2010, I was researching what I could to eliminate scar tissue due to having a double nerve surgery for the Guyon Canal (wrist) and the ulnar nerve moved to inside elbow. I had 2 IME Drs tell me if scar tissue in Guyon canal grew back it could eventually cause loss of use of my dominant hand (I have nerve damage to little finger and ring finger). I accidentally ran across Serrapeptase, which was well known and used in England and Europe; discovered by a famous German heart doctor that he would use on patients requiring bypass surgery. He would give them several months of Serrapeptase and retest the blockages and discovered this enzyme eats plaque in the arteries. He found he did not have to do the bypass surgeries. He found it ate scar tissue as well as lessened COPD to the point that folks could give up their oxygen tanks. serrapeptase.org and serrapeptase.info were the websites from across the pond I educated myself with. Serrapeptase is prescription only across the pond.

My story is I began taking it immediately finding it in a health food store. They sold very little because folks did not know about it in US, so was inexpensive.

I had had my appendix removed at age 3 resulting in a raised keloid (sp) scar as I grew. When I was 63, I discovered I no longer had the raised scar….it was a thin white line. I checked every scar I had and they all faded.

I had read on one of those two websites, that if the scar tissue is no longer there - the scar tissue is no longer pressing against nerves, resulting in lessened pain.

I recently listened to a podcast in which an 83 year old researcher was finding serrapeptase was eating the plagues in his beloved wife’s brain due to Alzheimer’s.

I take it every day and have since 2010. it works like Rid X in your home sewer system. It eats the garbage in our body and it is made from a protein in the stomach of the silkworm. The silkworm hibernates in a hardened cocoon and when it leaves it squirts the protein at this hardened shell to fly out from my understanding.

There is a very strong possibility it will heal the scars in your trachea of the scars.

Best wishes this will work for you. I so trust in it that I have not really read the latest information on serrapeptase….only that which I heard about the brain plaques.


EC: This post originally appeared on Earth Clinic's Q&A site here and has been cross-posted to our Scar Remedies page so that many more will see it!

REPLY   15      
Return to Scar