Ackshually you should be using them as mouth wash. IIRC (from my microbiology courses) there is evidence that shows the gaps in between your gums is a direct route to your small intestine.
Many supplements are sub-lingual.
If stomach acid is an issue, just take an antacid calcium tablet.
But the biggest problems are simply lack of absorption by any route, and the fact that no one actually confirms that a supplement bottle actually contains that supplement. Supplements are a great way to make expensive pee, and basically thrive on a placebo effect. That’s why supplement companies make them look like real drugs.
The gums are not a direct route to the intestine, there is just a correlation between gum disease and bowel disease.
Ackshually you should be using them as mouth wash. IIRC (from my microbiology courses) there is evidence that shows the gaps in between your gums is a direct route to your small intestine.
Many supplements are sub-lingual. If stomach acid is an issue, just take an antacid calcium tablet.
But the biggest problems are simply lack of absorption by any route, and the fact that no one actually confirms that a supplement bottle actually contains that supplement. Supplements are a great way to make expensive pee, and basically thrive on a placebo effect. That’s why supplement companies make them look like real drugs.
The gums are not a direct route to the intestine, there is just a correlation between gum disease and bowel disease.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7933581/