Digestion

Digestive Enzymes

Enzyme blend that helps break down carbs, fat, and protein; useful for lactose, bean gas, and pancreatic insufficiency.

Digestive Enzymes

Digestive Enzymes

60
score
B
evidence
Caution
risk
Quick Take

Worth trying if you have lactose intolerance, bean gas, or pancreatic insufficiency; low return for normal digestion.

Digestive enzymes are protein catalysts used to break down food; supplements usually contain lactase, alpha-galactosidase, amylase, lipase, protease, or pancrelipase from fungal or porcine sources. Similar enzymes occur in foods such as pineapple and papaya, but supplement products are more concentrated. They speed hydrolysis of lactose, starch, fat, and protein before intestinal absorption. Best evidence is for lactose intolerance, bean-related gas, and exocrine pancreatic insufficiency; multi-enzyme blends may help some people with post-meal bloating or indigestion.

Proven Benefits

01
Improves digestion in pancreatic in
02
Eases lactose intolerance
03
Reduces legume-related gas
04
May ease post-meal bloating
05
May reduce indigestion

Protocol

Amount
1 labeled serving
Frequency
With each problematic meal
When
Immediately before or at the start of the meal; alpha-galactosidase works best with the first bite, lactase with dairy.

Onset Time

Acute with the meal; 2-4 weeks for bloating trials.

Who Should Consider

Lactose intolerant adults
People who get gas from beans or FODMAP-rich meals
People with exocrine pancreatic insufficiency
Adults with recurrent post-meal bloating or indigestion
Older adults with reduced pancreatic output

How It Works

They provide exogenous catalysts that hydrolyze starches, fats, proteins, lactose, and oligosaccharides before colonic bacteria ferment them. In people with low enzyme output, this can improve digestion and reduce gas, bloating, and greasy stools.

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