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thebear
08-22-2020, 01:51 AM
Just found this great Poliquin article. I used to use them a lot but this reminded me I need to get back on them.

The term “glandular therapy” may sound like an obscure practice but it’s actually one of the most powerful ways to provide nutritional support for hormones!

If we know anything about human health and function, it’s that hormones regulate how we feel on a day-to-day basis. They affect sleep, energy levels, hunger, fat burning, muscle building, brain function, libido, immunity, and so on. If you are feeling it, hormones affect it.

Glandular therapy is defined as the use of supplemental glands and organs from animals for nutritional support. Historically, glands were regularly used in medical treatment. Humans regularly got nutritional support by eating organ meats, such as liver, brain (whole or as headcheese), offal, or sweetbreads (thymus and pancreas) from beef or sheep as a regular part of their diet. Today, these organs are hard to get and the reality is that many people find them unappetizing. This is where supplementation comes in.

One way to think of glandular therapy is as a back-up for your organs as you handle the challenges of modern life, including excess stress, lack of sleep, compromised nutrition, intense exercise, and toxin exposure.

How Does Glandular Therapy Work?

Your glands and organs are the powerhouses in your body that keep you running. They include all of the following:

Your heart, pumping blood and oxygen to power the muscles and brain

Your adrenals, releasing stress hormones like cortisol to supply energy

Your pancreas, releasing insulin to regulate blood glucose and energy levels

Your spleen and thymus, supporting immunity

Your thyroid, regulating metabolism and energy

Your liver, working overtime to regulate metabolize and eliminate toxins

Your brain, regulating motor function and allowing for cognition

Your sex organs (ovaries for women and testes for men), overseeing libido and reproductive function

When working optimally, your organs keep you looking and feeling great. Unfortunately, stress, poor diet, aging, chemical exposure, inactivity, and the other ills of modern life take a toll on your organs.

Supplementing with animal glands (also known as organotherapy) can help your organs regenerate and strengthen themselves. When consuming specific animal tissues in supplemental form, the glandular DNA is incorporated and helps repair the organ in question (1). This approach is based on the ancient theory that “like heals like.”

Glandulars also supply hormones, enzymes, and other nutrients that are easily incorporated into the human body. In the case of glands like the thyroid and adrenals, the glandular is literally helping replace the missing hormone.

How Is Glandular Therapy Different From Herbal Supplementation?

Glandulars are unique from herbal, plant-based therapies because they contain enzymes that are identical to the human body but not present in herbs. These enzymes, which can partially bypass digestion, support physiological processes in the body (3).

The effect of glandulars on enzymes is worth noting. There are as many as 75,000 enzymes in the body that are involved in metabolic, anabolic, catabolic, and digestive processes. They help rebuild and detoxify. Enzyme activity is another way glandulars differ from herbal supplements because plants don’t have bioidentical enzymes, reducing their efficacy in the human body.

What Are Examples of Glandular Therapies?

Glandulars are typically extracted from organically fed livestock that live outdoors and receive no chemicals or antibiotics. Most glandulars are from cows (bovine) or sheep (ovine). Common examples and benefits of glandular supplements include the following:

Thyroid Gland supplies thyroid hormone in a form the body can use. It is useful for people with symptoms of low thyroid including afternoon tiredness, poor circulation, poor temperature tolerance, headaches, low metabolism, diminished female libido, weight concerns, and dry skin (2, 3).

Adrenal Gland is used to support cortisol balance and help you handle stress. It is useful for people who are fatigued, find their mind racing all day, have trouble waking up in the morning, or have an abnormal craving for salt (2, 3).

Thymus and Spleen Glandulars support immune function and are useful for people who have compromised health due to frequent illness or infection (3).

Cardiovascular Glandulars from bovine heart may help with glucose uptake and the manufacturing of ATP, improving energy levels. They are often used by people with low blood pressure, overwhelming fatigue, and athletes interested in improved performance (3).

Liver Glandulars are the most common and can support the liver to regenerate and detoxify (2). They have been found to support energy levels by providing bioavailable heme iron (to overcome anemia) and improve fatty acid and carbohydrate metabolism (3).

Take Away Points:
Glandular supplements provide nutritional support to promote growth and maintenance of organs and glands rather than an excess of a single hormone or factor.

The main reason to use glandular supplements is because organ meats have been largely removed from our food supply.

Glandulars provide DNA that helps repair the organ in question.

Glandular therapies are not a substitute for medication. Rather, they serve to support health before it reaches a diseased state.

JohnMcc
08-22-2020, 02:04 AM
Started doing this with deer liver and heart. We used to never eat it growing up. Last year I started eating them and they turned out to taste pretty good to me especially the heart.

thebear
08-22-2020, 02:31 AM
Started doing this with deer liver and heart. We used to never eat it growing up. Last year I started eating them and they turned out to taste pretty good to me especially the heart.

I love Heart. So good!

Mattymoo
08-22-2020, 06:10 AM
I make a good lambs fry
I soak lambs liver in milk overnight
I rinse it off dry it, slice it and coat it in a little flour.
Fry Spanish onion in olive oil, remove then fry chopped bacon or panchetta then keep it warm
To make sauce put white wine,bay leaf, apple cider vinegar, peppercorns,white onion in a saucepan and reduce till 2TBS.
Strain into another saucepan and stir in cream and mustard.simmer untill coats back of spoon.
Fry the liver in a pan for 2 minutes.
Serve liver, top with bacon and drizzle on sauce

Mattymoo
08-22-2020, 06:11 AM
ive seen bovine colostrum but its not affordable lol

laedlaerd
08-22-2020, 07:09 AM
Always thought sweetbread was brain...I was wrong lol. Interesting read, my grandmother used to make liver and also tripe (intestines/stomach) never liked either of them.

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maxmuscle1
08-22-2020, 09:05 AM
Lamb sweetbreads are expensive at restaurants

Max

JRam
08-22-2020, 12:09 PM
I used to take tons of desiccated liver tablets per the advice of Vince Gironda. Then I discovered gear.

thebear
08-22-2020, 01:27 PM
I used to take tons of desiccated liver tablets per the advice of Vince Gironda. Then I discovered gear.

Lol. Still good to take.

JohnMcc
08-22-2020, 02:22 PM
I've always wanted to try pork belly, i see YouTube videos of top class chefs preparing it and it looks good as fuck.