After years of health coaching I noticed to a pattern among clients who had stubborn, hard to treat gut infections. They came to me after countless attempts at trying to eradicate bacterial overgrowth in the small (SIBO) or large intestine (LIBO), yeast overgrowth (candida) and parasites.

I’ve also worked with many clients who have suffer from upper GI symptoms like chronic heartburn, reflux and GERD.

What both have in common is a bacterial infection of the stomach called helicobacter pylori or h. pylori.

A root cause infection

H. pylori was only discovered in the 80s as a root cause of ulcers and stomach inflammation. It also causes other problems by lowering stomach acid. Low stomach acid compromises digestion and lowers the body’s natural defense against ingested pathogens.

This can have a devastating downstream effect on the microbiome by causing and feeding pathogenic infections, and making them very difficult to eradicate.

H. pylori in itself can cause digestive symptoms that are typically classified as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), as well as keep the biome in perpetual chaos, causing problems with bowel movements, skin, energy, mood, weight and digestion.

A hidden infection

What makes h. pylori tricky to navigate is that Western medicine is not good at finding it. It’s an infection that can often hide, and won’t show up on tests.

When it is found, antibiotics and stomach acid blockers are prescribed. This can push an already struggling microbiome into complete chaos, causing new problems or exacerbating existing symptoms.

H. pylori symptoms

You can have h. pylori without any upper GI symptoms. It can cause a variety of digestive symptom like constipation, gas, burping, bloating and weight gain or loss. It can also cause anxiety or depression as well as fatigue.

Why I wrote the rescue guide

I wrote the H. Pylori Rescue Guide because this is a common root cause of many mysterious digestive complaints and there’s not a lot of good information on how to fix it. This can be the missing link for intractable infections.

Due to increased antibiotics use, h. pylori is becoming more difficult to kill but I have had a lot of success with my comprehensive protocol. That is because I include two major factors that influence eradication the most.

The guide also includes:

How to avoid reinfection.

How to take the right tests to spot it and find a hidden infection with a typical biome pattern caused by h. pylori.

Several options for natural protocols that work

How to bust biofilms (this is very important)

What foods support eradication and what foods increase inflammation.

How to address painful symptom and find relief naturally.

Immune support (and the h. pylori immune connection)

And 11 h. pylori fighting, gut friendly recipes that will support eradication.
There’s over 60 pages of information to teach you everything you need to know to finally get relief. And it is available as an instant download.

 

For those who prefer a print copy it is also available on Amazon here.

11 healing recipes

Along with killing h. pylori, the 11 recipes in the book will help support stomach acid, heal and seal the stomach lining and weaken/paralyze bacteria so they are easier to kill.

Here are some recipe previews:

Stimulate digestion with ginger pickle

Flavored coconut butter cups make the perfect h. pylori snack.

Drinks matter.

Coffee makes h. pylori harder to get rid of. Switching your coffee for an anti-inflammatory, dairy free matcha turmeric chai latte can make a huge impact on symptoms.

Get an instant download of the h. pylori rescue guide below