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| 22 - Possible toxins Sufficient digestive electron production but may not be available for ATP. Check saliva rH2.
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|  | Organs Health, GeneralSupplements
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| 24 - Acid reflux or acidosis Possible acid reflux. Possible acidosis possibly due to incomplete digestion of proteins.
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|  | Organs General digestionStomachSupplements
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| 25 - Kidney spilling bicarbonates Spilling of bicarbonates into the urine. Possible bacterial infection. Kidney stress not able to remove acids.
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|  | Organs KidneysSupplements
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| 26 - Acidic cell possibility Kidneys OK. Possible excess acid in interstitium. Check saliva pH.
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|  | Organs Cells including mitochondriaGeneral digestionHealth, GeneralSupplements
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| 61 - Saliva pH slightly low If the urine pH is slightly to moderately low, the body is beginning to have a problem neutralizing excess acids. This may be the begining of bicarbonate exhaustion where the body cannot neutralize low pH. Supplement with digestive enzymes and alkaline diet. |
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Supplements
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| 65 - Urine pH moderately low Digestive inefficiency is producing lots of acids. Improve efficiency with digestive enzymes. Reverse this trend as low pH is stressful to the kidney membranes. |
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Supplements
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| 70 - Urine rH2 moderately low Free electrons available for energy are being lost in the urine. Check saliva rH2 for normal to low rH2. Liver enzymes may not be sufficient for nutrient conversion to form of amino acids and lipids for cellular energy. Check saliva pH for normal range to support cabohydrate pre-digestion. Consider digestive enzymes and liver support. |
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Supplements
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