Guest guest Posted September 25, 2004 Report Share Posted September 25, 2004 > Just curious, are there any patents for the whey? The Glutathione > info on your website are all generic. Do you know what's the > pasturization temperature for the whey? Method of use patents exist for Immunocal for cancer for its use on example. regards, Duncan Crow http://profiles./duncancrow/ --- live and help live... --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2004 Report Share Posted September 25, 2004 Oh really? Interesting. The Immunocal I know doesn't have any taste or flavor in it. So is your whey "the same" as Immunocal, "different from" Immunocal, or "an imitation" of Immunocal?? Or is your whey totally different from Immunocal? So that means your whey product is NOT the same as Immunocal, but you're just using Immunocal as an example? Immunocal has patents. Does your whey have patents? These are interesting things that people want to know just for comparison purposes. Regards, D Duncan Crow <duncancrow wrote: > Just curious, are there any patents for the whey? The Glutathione> info on your website are all generic. Do you know what's the> pasturization temperature for the whey? Method of use patents exist for Immunocal for cancer for its use on example.regards,Duncan Crow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 27, 2004 Report Share Posted September 27, 2004 > Oh really? Interesting. The Immunocal I know doesn't have any taste > or flavor in it. So is your whey " the same " as Immunocal, " different > from " Immunocal, or " an imitation " of Immunocal?? Or is your whey > totally different from Immunocal? Immunocal is more refined - a pharmaceutically pure isolate - and the company has taken the steps to get their product medically recognised. This would explain why their product is 4-6 times as expensive as competitors. The cold-processed whey I recommend is a blend of concentrate and isolate; the isolate component is pretty much the same, but the total is probably only about 2/3 to 3/4 as good as a glutathione promoter. All undenatured wheys contain components that produce glutathione; I prefer to recommend something that provides more high-biological value protein and something people can afford to dose properly on. One needs 3 pouches - 30 grams of Immunocal; I tell prople to take 40-60 grams of Dyna Whey. > > So that means your whey product is NOT the same as Immunocal, but > you're just using Immunocal as an example? Immunocal has patents. > Does your whey have patents? These are interesting things that people > want to know just for comparison purposes. > > Regards, I used Immunocal as an example I guess (can't remember), but much of the research used a generic whey, or even generic glutathione levels. If I can answer more fully, please let me know. Duncan Crow Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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