Podcast 465: Tessamet
Histamine intolerance is a condition where the body has difficulty breaking down histamine, a compound that is naturally produced in the body and found in certain foods. When histamine builds up in the body, it can cause a variety of symptoms such as headaches, hives, digestive issues, and even difficulty breathing. People with histamine intolerance may experience these symptoms after consuming foods that are high in histamine or trigger the release of histamine in the body.
Tessamet helps decrease histamine production in the body. It may help to alleviate symptoms in the sinuses and lungs, skin, digestive system and brain.
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MARTIN: Hello everyone. This is Martin Pytela for Life Enthusiast podcast. With me today, Spencer Feldman of Remedy Link. Spencer is an inventor and developer and relentless researcher, and his main focus has been the detoxification of the humans. We all are under the bombardment of the fruits of the industrial age that we have rained upon us. What do you say of that, Spencer?
SPENCER: Uh, gosh. Let’s pose this in a more hopeful way. Let’s say the human body is very resilient, and we’re going to learn how to enjoy the conveniences of modern technology and still be healthy. How’s that?
MARTIN: Oh, that’s so hopeful. Oh, yes.
SPENCER: So today I wanted to talk about histamine. If that works for you.
MARTIN: It works great for me. My histamine is one miserable wench. She hits me hard, frequently.
SPENCER: Oh, well, let me tell you how I got into studying histamine and the kind of journey it took me on. So I had a good friend of mine, who had high histamine levels. So histamine, it’s the stuff that causes allergic reactions. Right? So itching, sneezing, wheezing, food sensitivities, but a lot more. And we’re going to get into it.
MARTIN: Skin eruptions. Yeah.
SPENCER: Yeah. You know, so here’s the thing. If you’re listening to this and saying, well, I don’t have skin problems and you know, I don’t have food intolerances. Keep listening because you’re going to find out that histamine might be behind some chronic things that are going on for you that you had no idea were allergies. It was certainly the case for me. So I started doing this when I was working on trying to help a friend who had mold sensitivities. Right. You know, 25% of the homes, at least in the United States, have mold in them. So as I’m studying mold sensitivity, what I realize is it’s part of something bigger. It’s a histamine problem. And so I started trying to figure it out. Then as I’m doing that, I’m realizing, wow, this is causing problems in a lot of people. Now, I knew initially that histamine was like skin itching and hives and sinus stuff. But like I said, it can cause trouble anywhere in the body. So histamine is both a hormone and a neurotransmitter, and there are receptors for histamine all throughout the body. And thankfully, they’re labeled H1, H2, H3 and H4. They made it easy for us to remember. Okay, so the H1 and H2 histamine receptors, they’re in the skin and the gut and the lungs. And these are the kind of allergic symptoms that you’re familiar with, right?