Brand: Food Research

Serving Size: 1 Capsule

Servings Per Container: 90

Suggested UseServing size or as recommended by your health care professional. Adjust usage according to nutritional lifestyle requirements.

  • Supports bladder health
  • Supports healthy urination
  • Supports liver and kidney detoxification


Price: $33.00

    Quantity:

    Product Details

    Arginase Bladder contains ingredients that have been used to nutritionally support the bladder and various aspects of urine metabolism. It is intended to support the cleansing ability of the kidneys.

    “The liver has the greatest amount of this enzyme, and accounts for the majority of urea synthesis”[a] small amount is carried out by the kidney and brain” the hydrolysis of arginine to urea and ornithine makes possible the urea cycle” [1]. An excess accumulation of arginine (due to insufficient arginase) contributes to excessively frequent urination (as the body tries to flush this diluted semi-urine out) and increases in urinary tract infections (as this less concentrated semi-urine is a less hostile environment for pathogens than concentrated urine is). “The liver is well known for its ability to detoxify or excrete many drugs, hormones, and other substances” [2]. The liver tissue found in Arginase Bladder is from New Zealand.

    References
    [1] Bondy PK, Rosenberg LE. Duncan”s Diseases of Metabolism, 7th ed. W.B. Saunders Co., Phil., 1974
    [2] Guyton AC, Hall JE. Textbook of Medical Physiology, 9th ed. WB Saunders, Phil., 1996

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    No Synthetic Nutrients • No Dairy • No Preservatives

    * This is a nutritional product and not a medication intended to prevent, treat, or cure any illness. None of these statements has been approved by the US FDA or similar agencies. Not all citations meet peer-reviewed status so the statements are not conclusive. Professionals can, and do, disagree, regarding the efficacy of ingredients in nutritional formulas.

    Disclaimer: Some of these studies (or citations) may not conform to peer review standards. Therefore, the results are not conclusive. Professionals can, and often do, come to different conclusions when reviewing scientific data. None of these statements have been reviewed by the FDA.