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Ed2010 (Canada) on 05/17/2014

News:

There is a new product for Lactose Intolerance that cures completely in 1 to 2 months. It is a sulphur compound that heals the intestine and reactivates the lactase enzyme secretion to digest lactose in milk.

I never tried this product. Just passing the news. It is not a prescription medicine, it is natural health product available in Health Food Stores.

The product name is SULMEDOL.

Good Health

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Replied By Rawmilkmike (Usa) on 05/19/2014

Christopher Gardner, a researcher at Stanford University, said he wanted to find out if there really was any effect on lactose intolerance from drinking raw milk. When he found out that most of his over 500 lactose intolerant volunteers actually had no trouble digesting lactose(instead of admitting that he had just proven that lactose intolerance has nothing to do with lactose), he decided instead to do a study on the 16 lactose malabsorbers. What's so absurd about this is that lactose malabsorption is not really a problem in this country while lactose intolerance most certainly is. Most lactose malabsorbers are not even mildly lactose intolerant. They claim to have proven us wrong about the benefits of raw milk, when in fact they have actually proven us right.
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Replied By Olga (Maryland) on 07/14/2022

I am not sure I understand your post and how that experiment proved the opposite. How do we know if someone is lactose intolerant or has lactose malabsorption? Could you please explain? it would be great to know more about that. Thank you.

Replied By Cheesygirl (Kingston, Ontario, Canada) on 11/19/2015

I heard about Sulmedol and after much consideration, I tried it. I was told by a gastroenterologist that I was lactose-intolerant, even though he did not do any tests to confirm his diagnosis. Another doctor told me that lactose intolerance is "fashionable these days".Are flatulence and diarhea also "fashionable"? So after spending a lot of money on lactose enzymes to try and counteract my lactose problems I saw Sulmedol and I thought, "why not?" I was very careful not to use any dairy products for 4 weeks, as they suggest on the label - and this was harder than you'd think because dairy products are in so many food items, like whey in gluten-free breads, and of course butter in pretty much everything. I used the Sulmedol as directed, twice daily. The big day came when I bravely added a small amount of coffee cream to my coffee. Soon after, the gas started, and then the frequent bowel movements. So unfortunately, Sulmedol did not work for me. I wish it had. I love cheese of all kinds, so I'm back to lactose enzyme pills. Boo, hiss!
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Replied By Nahuel (Buenos Aires) on 06/25/2023

Sulmedol worked for me. After 8 years of lactose intolerance, it completely disapeared. But the treatment was larger than 1 month. After 1 month I tried some food with lactose and I was still intolerant, but after around 2 months I was cured. Lately a friend of mine told me he was lactose intolerant and I tried to help him by giving him the link for buying the product, but I could find it anymore. Do you know if it is still available?
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Replied By John (Georgia, USA) on 11/06/2023

I know this is a late reply, but I saw from a site that previously stocked Sulmedol, that it is listed as Sublimed Sulfur. https://lapara.ca/en/products/sulmedol

So I'm thinking regular Sublimed Sulfur powder might be the same?