AOR UTI Cleanse now with Cranberry helps prevent recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs) and is a source of antioxidants for the maintenance of good health.
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| Serving Size: 1 gram (approx ½ tsp)
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Dried Cranberry juice (Vaccinium macrocarpon)
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100 mg
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| Non-medicinal ingredients: D-Mannose (1000 mg/serving), maltodextrin
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AOR™ guarantees that no ingredients not listed on
the label have been added to the product. Contains no wheat, gluten,
nuts, dairy, soy, eggs, fish, shellfish or any animal by-product.
ADULT DOSAGE: Take 1-2 scoops 4-5 times daily with
water and without food, or as directed by a qualified health care
practitioner. Use for a minimum of 4 weeks to see beneficial effects.
CAUTION: Consult a health care practitioner prior to
use if you are taking blood thinners or have a history of kidney
stones. Consult a health care practitioner if symptoms persist or
worsen.
Although urinary tract infections (UTIs) can involve a variety of
Enterobacteriaceae and Gram-positive pathogens (including Staphylococcus
saprophyticus and some enterococci species), nearly all infections of
the lower urinary tract and bladder are caused by a few strains of E.
coli bacteria called uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC). Various
harmless strains of E. coli are normally present in the body - but they
don't belong in the urinary tract.
If UPEC get into the bladder
or the urethra, the body has ways of fighting them off - including the
obvious method of simply flushing them out with the urine. But these
bacteria have evolved ways of anchoring themselves to the cells of the
urinary tract. The invading UPEC take advantage of receptors naturally
found on the cells of the mucosal lining of the urinary tract. Receptors
are like molecular "docking bays" for substances that the cells need
for their normal growth and development. Like pirates in an old movie,
UPEC use "grappling hooks" called type I pili to first hook on to these
receptors, and then to invade the cell.
Once inside the cell,
these pathogens can live and reproduce in safety, shielded from many of
the body's defensive immune responses. In fact, they are so
sophisticated that when the body detects that cells have been infected
and activates the cell suicide program to destroy the bacteria, UPEC can
actually flee the dying host cell before it is flushed out, and look
for new cells to invade!
Pathogenic E. coli bacteria's pili
"grappling hooks" are composed of long, fibrous chains of a molecular
"glue" called adhesin. The effective binding of these adhesin molecules
depends on the chemical attraction that exists between them and the
residues of a simple carbohydrate called D-Mannose on the cell surface
receptors of the urinary tract host cells.
The chemical attraction between UPEC adhesins and D-Mannose is
their strength - but it also provides a point of vulnerability. If you
can interfere with the binding of adhesins to the D-Mannose residues in
the receptors of your urinary tract cells, then you can also prevent
UPEC from getting a foothold for adherence and infection. One way to do
this, long known to work in a test tube, is by using D-Mannose itself.
When isolated urinary tract cells are bathed in D-Mannose, it acts as a
molecular "chaff." The bacterial adhesins bind to the D-Mannose in their
environment instead of to the D-Mannose residues on the cells. This
gums up their pili and prevents them from hooking onto urinary tract
cells.
It was discovered in the late 1980s that a small amount of
D-Mannose is present in the urine normally, apparently acting as a
defensive mechanism against pathogenic bacteria. When D-Mannose is taken
as a supplement, much more of the carbohydrate passes through the
urinary tract, strengthening this natural defense.
A decade after
this discovery, Dr. Jonathan V. Wright of the Tahoma Clinic pioneered
the use of D-Mannose supplements to fight off UTIs. For some years, he
has been reporting the successful results that his patients have
experienced in using D-Mannose to rid themselves of infection. Even
patients who had remained infected after having been subjected to a wide
range of potent, side-effect-inducing antibiotics have successfully rid
themselves of chronic or acute infections using D-Mannose. Other
nutritionally oriented physicians and health practitioners have since
adopted Dr. Wright's protocols, and the feedback is uniformly excellent
from UTI sufferers and their caregivers alike.
Again, not all
UTIs are caused by UPEC. So if you try a course of D-Mannose and
infection persists, it is likely not caused by these E. coli bacteria
but by some other pathogen. In that case, don't just keep going on with
the supplement in hopes that it will eventually "kick in:" discontinue
use of D-Mannose and consult a physician for treatment appropriate to
your case. But for the great majority of urinary tract infections,
D-Mannose offers a safe, natural option with a simple, ingenious
rationale, no known side-effects, and a great reported success rate.
D-Mannose is a simple carbohydrate similar in structure to glucose. Some unfriendly bacteria have lectins (adhesion molecules), which bind to residues of mannose in the epithelium of the urinary tract. Some clinical experience suggests that supplemental D
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