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Back Clinic Guide to Hormones and Health

Back Clinic Guide to Hormones and Health

Back Clinic Guide to Hormones, Iron, and Metabolic Health: An Evidence-Based Guide from Clinic to Community

Abstract

In this educational post, I outline a practical, evidence-guided roadmap for patients and clinicians navigating heavy menstrual bleeding, iron deficiency, post-bariatric considerations, PCOS patterns, testosterone symptom management, DVT risk around contraceptives, and the nuanced role of progesterone across the lifespan. Drawing from current research and my clinical practice at El Paso Back Clinic, I explain how integrative chiropractic care and physical therapy can stabilize biomechanics, calm the nervous system, and improve adherence to care plans—while nutrition, sleep, and targeted supplements support recovery. Hormone therapies and medications are discussed in the background where appropriate; our primary focus is musculoskeletal alignment, movement restoration, and conservative options that influence physiology upstream. You will find stepwise reasoning, the physiological “why” behind each intervention, and pragmatic tips to safely translate science into daily practice.

Back Clinic Guide to Hormones and Health

Introduction: The Right People, The Right Plan, The Right Sequence

As a clinician, my first step is to “get the right people in the room.” Complex symptoms—heavy periods, fatigue, post-gastric bypass nutrient issues, or training-related hormone fluctuations—rarely have a single cause. Collaboration between chiropractic, physical therapy, primary care, nutrition, and, when needed, endocrinology allows us to address mechanical stressors, autonomic tone, and metabolic basics before escalating to medications.

At El Paso Back Clinic, we lead with a conservative, function-first strategy:

  • Restore joint mechanics and soft-tissue health
  • Rebalance neuromuscular control
  • Normalize breathing and vagal tone
  • Replete with iron and foundational nutrients
  • Use lifestyle and movement therapy to support endocrine rhythms

Below, I guide you through how these pieces fit together.

Heavy Menstrual Bleeding, Iron Deficiency, and Movement: What the Body Is Telling Us

When patients report heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB), dizziness with exertion, or shortness of breath on stairs, our assessment screens for iron deficiency and anemia and evaluates the musculoskeletal drivers that exacerbate pelvic and abdominal strain.

Why iron matters physiologically:

  • Hemoglobin carries oxygen; iron deficiency reduces oxygen delivery, increasing heart rate and perceived exertion (Carter et al., 2020).
  • Low iron levels alter mitochondrial efficiency and impair collagen cross-linking, slowing tendon and fascia recovery (Huang et al., 2022).
  • In women with HMB, addressing iron often improves fatigue, cognition, and exercise tolerance before any hormone therapy is considered (Pavord et al., 2020).

How integrative chiropractic care helps:

  • Pelvic mechanics: Excessive anterior pelvic tilt increases abdominal pressure and may aggravate pelvic congestion. Lumbar-pelvic adjustments, sacroiliac mobilization, and hip capsule work can reduce peripheral nociception and myofascial guarding.
  • Diaphragm and pelvic floor synergy: Breath mechanics coordinate pressure. We train nasal, diaphragmatic breathing with crooked-chain positions (90/90 hip flexion, feet elevated) to restore rib cage expansion and pelvic floor excursion. This reduces pain perception via vagal activation and decreases sympathetic wind-up (Noble & Hochman, 2019).
  • Loading for resilience: Once symptoms stabilize, we layer graded hip abduction/external rotation strength, along with posterior-chain endurance (glutes/hamstrings), to offload the pelvic floor and lumbar spine.

When we do consider adjuncts in the background:

  • Iron supplementation (oral or, if malabsorptive issues exist, IV iron under medical supervision), plus dietary heme iron and vitamin C to amplify absorption (Pasricha et al., 2021).
  • Thyroid screening if fatigue and cold intolerance predominate; normal thyroid function supports erythropoiesis and menstrual regularity (Alexander et al., 2017).
  • Cyclic progesterone can reduce bleeding in select patients, yet our clinic keeps the spotlight on biomechanics, recovery, and iron first, because better oxygen delivery and reduced pelvic strain often decrease symptom severity.

Clinical observation

In active women with HMB, I frequently see overstriding and rib flare. Correcting gait mechanics, soft-tissue tone in the iliopsoas and QL, and teaching stacked ribcage-to-pelvis posture decreases cramping and low-back tension within two to four weeks, while iron repletion improves energy by week three to six.

PCOS Patterns, Weight Change, and Musculoskeletal Strategy Restoring Insulin Sensitivity and Cycle Rhythm

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) intersects metabolism, inflammation, and androgen balance. Patients often have central stiffness, reduced thoracic mobility, and deconditioned gluteal complexes—patterns that raise insulin resistance and low-grade inflammation.

Why movement is medicine here:

  • Skeletal muscle is the largest glucose sink. Strength training increases GLUT4 translocation independent of insulin, improving glycemic control (Dela & Kjaer, 2020).
  • High-intensity intervals (as tolerated) enhance mitochondrial biogenesis, thereby improving insulin sensitivity and reducing adipose-derived inflammatory cytokines (Gillen & Gibala, 2018).
  • Thoracic extension and scapular control restore breathing mechanics and reduce allostatic load.

Integrative chiropractic and PT plan:

  • Adjust the thoracic spine + ribs to unlock chest expansion
  • Neuromuscular re-ed with hip hinge, lateral hip control, and gait retraining
  • Progress from isometric glute bridges and banded clamshells to split squats and deadlifts
  • Add low-impact intervals (bike, rower) in 1:1 work: rest ratios to start

Background supports:

  • Nutrition with protein targets (1.2–1.6 g/kg/day) and fiber to stabilize glucose
  • When medically indicated, metformin or inositols may be considered by the primary care team (Unfer et al., 2017); we remain focused on physical capacity and adherence.

Clinical observation

When hip mechanics stabilize, and consistent strength work begins, I see improved sleep depth and cycle regularity in 8–12 weeks, often before any medication changes. Patients report fewer cravings, less pelvic pain, and a smoother training curve.

Testosterone, Estrogen Symptoms, and Practical Expectations: Understanding Absorption, Distribution, and Excretion

In athletes or patients undergoing medically supervised testosterone therapy, breast tenderness or nipple sensitivity can emerge early when levels shift rapidly. Most cases settle as the body equilibrates.

The physiological triad:

  • Absorption: Cutaneous or implant sources rely on local perfusion and surface area; more cardiac output increases early uptake.
  • Distribution: Adiposity and total body water determine tissue partitioning. With weight loss, the volume of distribution decreases; the same dose may yield a stronger response.
  • Excretion: Renal clearance dominates; slower renal clearance in older adults can prolong the duration of effect (Handelsman, 2017).

Clinic reasoning:

  • We avoid reactive “extra sessions” or dose escalations based on gym chatter. Rapid swings create side effects without a durable benefit.
  • If estrogenic symptoms persist, we first reassess the dose, timing, and training stress. When a non-pharmacologic nudge is preferred, dietary indole-3-carbinol from cruciferous vegetables or standardized DIM may support estrogen metabolite balance; however, data are mixed, and we emphasize monitoring over aggressive blockers (Reed et al., 2021).
  • For women with high SHBG on combined oral contraceptives, free testosterone may be suppressed. In such cases, we coordinate with the patient’s clinician to evaluate non-estrogenic, long-acting contraceptives before considering androgen-based strategies.

How chiropractic fits:

  • We keep our emphasis on spinal and rib mechanics, soft-tissue balance, and a stable strength plan. This decreases nociceptive noise and supports consistent recovery—key for any endocrine adaptation.

Clinical observation

Older men with reduced renal clearance often experience longer therapeutic windows. Our role is to maintain joint mobility and postural strength, minimizing training-related spikes in pain that can otherwise confound symptom tracking.

DVT Risk, Contraception Choices, and Safer Symptom Pathways: A Risk-Benefit Lens

For a 45-year-old woman with definitive contraception (IUD or tubal ligation), staying on systemic combined oral contraceptives to control PMS or heavy bleeding may not provide a favorable risk-benefit profile. Venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk increases with age and estrogen exposure (Stegeman et al., 2013).

Our approach:

  • Ask “Why the prescription?” If pregnancy prevention is no longer needed, can local options (e.g., intrauterine progestin) or non-hormonal strategies address symptoms more safely?
  • When PMS or dysmenorrhea is the primary complaint, we favor:
    • Lumbopelvic adjustments to normalize segmental mobility
    • Pelvic floor down-training and diaphragmatic breathing to reduce sympathetic dominance and visceral pain amplification
    • Anti-inflammatory nutrition (omega-3s, magnesium-rich foods) and sleep optimization

Rationale:

  • Estrogen-containing contraception elevates hepatic production of clotting factors, increasing VTE risk; local progestin IUDs often reduce bleeding with minimal systemic effects (Baber et al., 2016).
  • Reducing nociceptive input from the spine and pelvis modulates central pain processing and autonomic arousal, relieving cramps and mood lability.

Clinical observation

Women who switch from systemic estrogen combinations to local progestin or non-hormonal options frequently report improved energy and fewer headaches within one to two cycles when we pair the change with ribcage stacking, gentle thoracic adjustments, and a progressive walking program.

Post-Bariatric and Malabsorptive Considerations: Keeping Strength Without Sacrificing Absorption

Patients after gastric bypass or with malabsorption face unique challenges: iron, B12, folate, calcium, and fat-soluble vitamins can plummet, derailing connective tissue repair and nerve health.

Physiology to consider:

  • Reduced gastric acid and a bypassed duodenum impair iron and B12 absorption (Mechanick et al., 2020).
  • Low vitamin D/calcium compromises bone remodeling, lengthening recovery from mechanical stress.
  • Altered bile acids and shifts in the microbiome can affect micronutrient handling and inflammation.

Conservative care priorities:

  • Joint-friendly loading (sled pushes, isometric mid-thigh pull variations, water-based conditioning) to build muscle without excessive eccentric soreness.
  • Soft-tissue therapy to address rapid body composition changes and scar-adjacent adhesions.
  • Close communication with medical providers for iron and B12 repletion; if oral iron fails, medical teams consider IV protocols.

Clinical observation

A well-structured, low-joint-stress strength program combined with breathing retraining minimizes flare-ups. When labs confirm iron repletion, perceived exertion during the same workouts drops by 1–2 RPE points within weeks.

Progesterone Across the Lifespan: Why “Progestogens” Differ from Body-Identical Progesterone

Patients often ask why progestins are used in contraceptives, but body-identical progesterone is favored in perimenopause and menopause for symptom relief and sleep.

Key distinctions:

  • Contraceptives use progestins (synthetic progestogens) to suppress ovulation and alter cervical mucus; they are not designed to mimic endogenous progesterone’s neurosteroid effects.
  • Body-identical progesterone engages GABAergic pathways, improving sleep quality and reducing anxiety in some patients; it can balance endometrial exposure when estrogen is used for menopause symptoms (Prior, 2018).

Chiropractic synergy:

  • Sleep and autonomic tone are major recovery levers. By reducing mechanical pain and teaching downshift techniques (nasal breathing, ribcage mobility), we amplify the natural calming effects of progesterone-like states, whether or not medication is used.

Clinical observation

In perimenopausal patients with new-onset neck or low-back tightness, evening breath work and thoracic mobilization reduce nocturnal awakenings and tension headaches even before any medication changes are finalized.

Environmental Factors, SHBG, and Practical Limits Set Expectations You Can Stand On

Patients ask about supplements claiming to “fix SHBG” or rapidly optimize hormone balance. While certain nutrients may modestly shift sex hormone-binding globulin, changes of 10–15% rarely move the needle on symptoms without upstream lifestyle and mechanical changes.

Our stance:

  • We prioritize proven pillars: alignment, strength, sleep, iron status, protein sufficiency, and aerobic capacity.
  • We use supplements to “polish,” not replace, the fundamentals. For example, curcumin and omega-3s can support the resolution of inflammation; magnesium aids sleep and muscle relaxation. But none substitute for consistent movement and recovery practices.

Clinical observation

When we fix posture under load, improve hip power, and dial in sleep, patients often report better mood, cycle regularity, and training capacity—before we touch niche supplements.

A Practical, Stepwise Care Map From Assessment to Action

  1. Screen and baseline
  • Red flags: DVT symptoms, severe anemia signs, sudden neurologic changes.
  • Labs via primary care: CBC, ferritin, transferrin saturation; B12; TSH; vitamin D; metabolic panel if indicated.
  • Movement screen: gait, ribcage-pelvis stacking, hip IR/ER, single-leg stance, pelvic floor cues.
  1. Stabilize mechanics
  • Chiropractic adjustments for regional interdependence (cervical-thoracic-lumbar-pelvic).
  • Soft-tissue: iliopsoas, QL, adductors, glute med/min, and abdominal wall scars.
  • Breathing: 5 minutes twice daily of nasal, diaphragmatic breathing with 4-6 second exhales.
  1. Build capacity
  • Strength 2–3 days/week: hinges, squats (box or goblet), carries, horizontal pulls; begin with isometrics if painful.
  • Conditioning 2 days/week: 10–20 minutes zone 2 work; progress intervals as tolerated.
  • Pelvic support: lateral band walks, Copenhagen planks (modified), and adductor sliders when appropriate.
  1. Support recovery
  • Protein 1.2–1.6 g/kg/day, ferritin-guided iron repletion under medical supervision, hydration, and sleep routines.
  • If contraceptive-related risks or hormone side effects exist, coordinate with the medical team for safer alternatives while continuing conservative care.
  1. Reassess and personalize
  • Track symptoms (bleeding volume, RPE, sleep), retest iron/ferritin at clinician-recommended intervals, and recalibrate training.
  • Only escalate to pharmacologic or procedural options when conservative pillars are genuinely optimized and still insufficient.

Real-World Cases: What We Commonly See

  • Heavy bleeding and back pain: After 4–6 visits focusing on ribcage-pelvis stacking, sacroiliac mobilization, adductor control, and iron repletion via PCP, patients typically report less cramping and improved stair tolerance.
  • PCOS and weight fluctuation: Strength plus thoracic mobility yields steadier energy and better glycemic control markers over 8–12 weeks.
  • Post-bypass fatigue: With IV iron managed by the medical team and low-joint-stress loading, energy and tissue tolerance rebound, and soft-tissue complaints diminish.

Putting It All Together: Why Conservative First Works

  • The musculoskeletal system is the largest endocrine-sensitive organ in terms of mass. Training and alignment change hormonal signals from muscle, bone, and fascia (myokines, osteokines), improving insulin sensitivity and inflammatory tone.
  • The autonomic nervous system links breath, posture, and pain to endocrine rhythms. By restoring parasympathetic capacity, we lower cortisol spikes and stabilize cycles and recovery.
  • Iron and sleep are non-negotiables. Without oxygen delivery and nightly repair, no program—exercise or medical—reaches full potential.

Call to Action

If you’re experiencing heavy periods, fatigue, or a difficult training plateau, start with alignment, breath, and strength—and check iron with your clinician. Our team at El Paso Back Clinic works side by side with your primary care or specialist to optimize these foundations before medications are considered.


References

Functional Neurology: Iron Deficiency Anemia and Brain Health

Functional Neurology: Iron Deficiency Anemia and Brain Health

Do you often feel energy level drops in the afternoon? Do you often crave sugar and sweets in the afternoon? Do you often have difficulty concentrating before eating? Various medical conditions can affect the overall health of our body and mind. However, research studies have found that anemia caused by iron deficiency can tremendously affect our brain health. �

 

Iron deficiency is considered to be one of the most prevalent nutritional health issues, affecting approximately 2.5 billion people worldwide. In developing countries, about 40 percent of children and 50 percent of pregnant women have an iron deficiency. Iron is an essential mineral found in approximately 5 percent of the earth�s crust, however, inefficiency in absorption, low iron levels in staple grain foods, and a variety of medical conditions can make iron deficiency a common problem among humans. In first world countries, iron deficiency is still one of the most common nutrient deficiencies. �

 

What Causes Iron Deficiency and Anemia?

Poor iron intake and increased iron loss, generally through bleeding or breastfeeding, are several of the main causes of iron deficiency. Pregnant women, breastfeeding women, women with heavy periods, children or picky eaters, vegetarians and vegans, as well as people with digestion health issues which cause decreased iron absorption like celiac disease or post gastric bypass, and people with increased bleeding, such as cancer, ulcers, gastritis, or parasites, are generally at higher risk for iron deficiency. High calcium intake, by way of instance, children who drink a lot of milk, can also affect iron absorption, together with drugs and/or medications, such as antacids and proton-pump inhibitors for gastroesophageal reflux disease. �

 

Although low iron levels are well-known for causing anemia because red blood cells need iron as a part of hemoglobin, iron is also needed for the brain and nerves. Severe iron deficiency in younger children can ultimately cause irreversible damage to cognition and result in lower IQ and developmental delays, especially during the most fundamental stages of human development and up to 16 months of age. Even in adults. the most common symptoms associated with iron deficiency are generally neurological symptoms, including fatigue, brain fog, and restless legs that cause insomnia, among other symptoms. �

 

Pica, the abnormal behavioral compulsion to eat non-nutritional foods like dirt or clay, is tremendously prevalent in regions of the world where iron deficiency is common. In the developed world, pica is a rare health issue, however, it still frequently occurs in children, pregnant women, and among other groups of people that are at higher risk for iron deficiency, including people who have had gastric bypass. Non-neurological symptoms associated with iron deficiency ultimately include pallor, generalized weakness, and higher than usual heart rate along with shortness of breath, especially with exertion. �

 

What are the Symptoms of Iron Deficiency?

As previously mentioned above, iron deficiency can cause problems associated with cognition and neurological health issues, such as restless legs and insomnia. The exact mechanisms of why this happens are unknown, however, without enough iron in the brain and nerves, there are problems with neurotransmitter signaling, the development of nerve insulation known as myelin, and brain energy metabolism. Reduced central neuron processing is considered to be one of the most critical problems associated with iron deficiency, which can be a cause of psychiatric symptoms and ongoing psychiatric problems. �

 

Occasionally, iron deficiency may also cause anxiety, depression, irritability, and even poor concentration and restlessness. By way of instance, iron deficiency has a much higher prevalence in children with ADHD but the symptoms can improve with iron supplements. People with iron deficiency have higher risks of developing psychiatric disorders, especially ADHD, and developmental disorders. Evidence has demonstrated that iron deficiency can cause a variety of other health issues. �

 

Iron enters the brain through the blood-brain barrier via transferrin receptors. Iron uptake into the brain is highly regulated but it also does highly depend on the iron status of the human body. Therefore, people with low iron levels will have much less iron going into the brain and people with high iron levels will have much more iron going into the brain. Several regions of the brain also appear to gather iron and have higher levels than others. Moreover, neurological symptoms can manifest before developing iron deficiency anemia. Thus, healthcare professionals can’t rule out iron deficiency anemia from the most commonly utilized basic screening test, a complete blood count. A better general screen involves ferritin levels, where less than 15 ng/ml presents the diagnosis for iron deficiency but less than 40 ng/ml presents with fatigue, brain fog, restless legs, and other neurological symptoms. Ferritin on its own can be misleading in populations of people with chronic inflammation, including people on dialysis, where ferritin can be high even if the person is diagnosed with iron deficiency. Furthermore, a full iron workup includes hemoglobin, MCV, ferritin, total iron-binding capacity, serum iron, and transferrin saturation. �

 

What is the Treatment for Iron Deficiency Anemia?

Treating iron deficiency is considerably simple through the utilization of iron supplements or in mild or moderate cases by encouraging the consumption of foods that are high in iron. Occasionally, people with severe absorption health issues will need iron transfusions intravenously. Meat and seafood are the best sources of easily absorbable heme iron, however, non-heme iron is naturally found in leafy greens, beans, and nuts. Make sure to talk to your doctor if you have iron deficiency. �

 

It is ultimately essential to make sure if you have iron deficiency before treating it with increased amounts of iron supplements. With the exception of blood loss, the only way to reduce excess iron is through the process of skin cells flaking off. Therefore, adult men who take a lot of iron supplements and people with a genetic tendency to absorb more iron from foods are at a higher risk of developing a medical condition, known as hemochromatosis or severe iron overload. �

 

Excess iron is stored in the liver and can lead to scarring of the liver, known as cirrhosis. Iron overload can also lead to joint and hormonal problems and it can also cause a bronze-ish skin color. Symptoms of hemochromatosis include joint pain, fatigue, and low sex drive as well as a higher risk of developing diabetes. High serum iron is associated with health issues like high blood pressure. People who aren�t iron deficient can consider regular blood donations to prevent accidental iron overload. Iron is one of those types of minerals that should neither be too high or too low but rather, just right. More research studies, especially clinical trials analyzing common medical conditions, such as restless legs, insomnia, and ADHD, are fundamental to help healthcare professionals understand the relationship between iron deficiency anemia and brain health. �

 

Dr. Alex Jimenez Insights Image

Recent research studies have demonstrated that iron deficiency anemia may be associated with brain health issues. Because the brain and nerves need iron for many functions, iron deficiency can cause a variety of symptoms and medical conditions, including brain fog, fatigue, restless legs with insomnia, anxiety, depression, and cognitive problems, besides anemia or lack of healthy red blood cells. Treatment for iron deficiency anemia may utilize iron supplements, however, it’s important to make sure to talk to a qualified healthcare professional in order to avoid risks and side effects through iron supplementation.� – Dr. Alex Jimenez D.C., C.C.S.T. Insight

 


 

Neurotransmitter Assessment Form

 

The following Neurotransmitter Assessment Form can be filled out and presented to Dr. Alex Jimenez. Symptoms listed on this form are not intended to be utilized as a diagnosis of any type of disease, condition, or any other type of health issue. �

 


 

Do you often feel energy level drops in the afternoon? Do you often crave sugar and sweets in the afternoon? Do you often have difficulty concentrating before eating? Various medical conditions can affect the overall health of our body and mind. However, research studies have found that anemia caused by iron deficiency can tremendously affect our brain health. � Iron deficiency is considered to be one of the most prevalent nutritional health issues, affecting approximately 2.5 billion people worldwide. In developing countries, about 40 percent of children and 50 percent of pregnant women have an iron deficiency. Iron is an essential mineral found in approximately 5 percent of the earth�s crust, however, inefficiency in absorption, low iron levels in staple grain foods, and a variety of medical conditions can make iron deficiency a common problem among humans. In first world countries, iron is still considered to be the most common nutrient deficiency. �

 

The scope of our information is limited to chiropractic, musculoskeletal, and nervous health issues or functional medicine articles, topics, and discussions. We use functional health protocols to treat injuries or disorders of the musculoskeletal system. Our office has made a reasonable attempt to provide supportive citations and has identified the relevant research study or studies supporting our posts. We also make copies of supporting research studies available to the board and or the public upon request. To further discuss the subject matter above, please feel free to ask Dr. Alex Jimenez or contact us at 915-850-0900.�

 

Curated by Dr. Alex Jimenez �

 

References:

  • Deans, Emily. �Heavy Metal: Iron and the Brain.� Psychology Today, Sussex Publishers, 29 Nov. 2015, www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/evolutionary-psychiatry/201511/heavy-metal-iron-and-the-brain.

 


 

Additional Topic Discussion: Chronic Pain

Sudden pain is a natural response of the nervous system which helps to demonstrate possible injury. By way of instance, pain signals travel from an injured region through the nerves and spinal cord to the brain. Pain is generally less severe as the injury heals, however, chronic pain is different than the average type of pain. With chronic pain, the human body will continue sending pain signals to the brain, regardless if the injury has healed. Chronic pain can last for several weeks to even several years. Chronic pain can tremendously affect a patient’s mobility and it can reduce flexibility, strength, and endurance.

 

 


 

Neural Zoomer Plus for Neurological Disease

Neural Zoomer Plus | El Paso, TX Chiropractor

 

Dr. Alex Jimenez utilizes a series of tests to help evaluate neurological diseases. The Neural ZoomerTM Plus is an array of neurological autoantibodies which offers specific antibody-to-antigen recognition. The Vibrant Neural ZoomerTM Plus is designed to assess an individual�s reactivity to 48 neurological antigens with connections to a variety of neurologically related diseases. The Vibrant Neural ZoomerTM Plus aims to reduce neurological conditions by empowering patients and physicians with a vital resource for early risk detection and an enhanced focus on personalized primary prevention. �

 

Food Sensitivity for the IgG & IgA Immune Response

Food Sensitivity Zoomer | El Paso, TX Chiropractor

 

Dr. Alex Jimenez utilizes a series of tests to help evaluate health issues associated with food sensitivities. The Food Sensitivity ZoomerTM is an array of 180 commonly consumed food antigens that offers very specific antibody-to-antigen recognition. This panel measures an individual�s IgG and IgA sensitivity to food antigens. Being able to test IgA antibodies provides additional information to foods that may be causing mucosal damage. Additionally, this test is ideal for patients who might be suffering from delayed reactions to certain foods. Utilizing an antibody-based food sensitivity test can help prioritize the necessary foods to eliminate and create a customized diet plan around the patient�s specific needs. �

 

Formulas for Methylation Support

Xymogen Formulas - El Paso, TX

 

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If you are a patient of Injury Medical & Chiropractic�Clinic, you may inquire about XYMOGEN by calling 915-850-0900.

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