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Trying bromelain

I've used Bromelain tablets between meals for years because it cleans up garbage left over in the bloodstream. (Plus it reduces inflammation systemically.) But I had read that it makes women's juices taste neutral so I gave some to my gf at the time and she didn't take it regularly but I have to confess, her juices were fine! Not sweet or fruity tasting, just not "off" or strong. Since I love to eat pussy, I was a happy camper!

She didn't comment on the taste of my cum because, frankly, I rarely cum whilst making out. (The benefit is that I can stay hard with the help of a cock ring for over an hour. My unofficial record is about an hour and 15 minutes, give or take.)

So the bottom line is that bromelain works its magic on pussy juices. ;-)

mayhem8Veteran
Auburn, NH, Us

So at 90 days later, I'd say, subjectively of course, there appears to be an improvement. What made me think of this post is that my wife was on the phone to one of our daughters the other day and I overheard her mention that she notices a huge improvement. She had more issues with floaters than I did.

If this works the way it's supposed to, it sounds like the type of thing that you do once or maybe twice a year, if and as needed. I bought enough for a 100 day supply for each of us and will stop when those are gone and see how it goes.

mayhem8Veteran
Auburn, NH, Us

VA - One of the things that I didn't realize is that they can apparently both count and measure the size of floaters. If that's the case and a person started with say 10 floaters and the biggest was a certain size, and at the end the study there were less floaters and/or the biggest was measuarably smaller, that would seem pretty objective to me.

I agree that they do have a certain expectation, but an actual count/measurement shouldn't change due to a bias unless they were intentionally mis-counting/measuring.

I get how the study participants could be subjective about the improvement (or not), but they really didn't need that input in this case since they had an actual thing that they could measure.

Windermere, FL, Us

I see little potential for harm in trying it, although high doses of bromelain can cause GI irritation and bleeding.

All studies which have actually shown anticoagulant (blood thinning) activity have been as a result of injected bromelain, not oral. This is much more plausible because the bromelain would not have to somehow cross the GI linings without being degraded.

Topical usage is perfectly reasonable because it is already where it needs to go. I dont know about promoting collagen growth directly; more like clearing away dead tissue so collagen has a place to grow.

The problem with results like the eye doc reports is that they are never blinded. The doc knows that the person got it so is biased in what they are looking for. If you had even 15 people each in placebo v bromelain - where both the patients and the doc didn't know who got what - and the bromelain group saw noticeable differences from the placebo group, that would be much more compelling.

mayhem8Veteran
Auburn, NH, Us

Thanks VA. I have already seen conflicting claims. For example, I saw one claim that, when used as a topical/facial, it promoted collagen growth. If that were the case, how could it do that, but dissolve the collagen based floaters in ones eyes?

There are however very few side effects and there may be more of an advantage for using it as a natural blood thinner. The claim I saw about floaters was made was from an eye doc that examined (counted) floaters before and after the 90 day course and found them greatly reduced or eliminated. As mentioned, it's very inexpensive, so thought it was worth a try, at least for a short period.

Windermere, FL, Us

I have never used bromelain for anything other than a meat tenderizer.

Because it is a protein itself, it strains credibility to me that eaten bromelain could be absorbed intact through the digestive tract and find itself in other places such as your eyes or reproductive tract. I know there are many articles written about this, but none of them that I have seen cite a high quality study to support any use other than those related to digestion.

Not saying it's impossible, but the evidence to support this is very poor. If it did in fact work to resolve eye floaters or another medically useful reason (aside from tasty jizz) I can't see why a pharma company wouldn't develop it for this reason.

And before anyone says they couldn't patent it- hell yes they could. Bromelain-based "Debrase" is already in use in Europe and in phase III in the US for debridement (removal of dead tissue from wounds or burns).

mayhem8Veteran
Auburn, NH, Us

This has been sort of discussed under a thread about pineapple making cum taste better. Bromelain is the ingredient in pineapple thought to do that, but that's not why I'm trying it.

Most eye floaters consist of collagen. Bromelain taken daily for 90 days is supposed to break down that collagen and eliminate 70% or more of floaters. I do have them, as does the Mrs, and they are annoying at times. It's cheap enough and doesn't have many side effects associated with it so figured I'd give it a try, at least for the 90 days.

Bromelain is also supposed to aid with digestion, along with some other benefits. It is a blood thinner, so may help reduce stroke risk and possibly lower BP, if caused by thick blood. Figured it was worth a shot for the floaters, and if my cum tastes better after this I guess that's a bonus. Wondering if anyone else has tried it, and if Yes, what was your experience with it?