Chris Kresser: To answer your questions, we do sometimes see patients who have a parasite and SIBO and other gut infections or issues that have fairly normal digestion, absorption, inflammation, and short-chain fatty acid markers. It seems counterintuitive, but there it is. We see that. It’s not super common. We’ll often see at least lysozyme elevated and sIgA either low or high, maybe one of the short-chain fatty acids out of range or something like that, but not always. In that situation, yes, that’s exactly what we would do. I would treat the SIBO and the parasite, confirm that they’re gone with retesting, and then I would do phase two of the protocol, which is rebuilding with probiotics and prebiotics, which I think we’re going to be talking about shortly. As I said, I think, earlier in this section, not all patients need enzymes and HCl. In fact, many of our patients don’t get it and don’t really notice much of a difference one way or the other, even though you would expect them to when you look at their overall presentation.
In terms of when to get a colonoscopy, that’s always very controversial. There have been some new guidelines in Canada, actually, that are pretty strongly recommending against routine colonoscopy as a screening procedure for colon cancer, and then there was a statement or a rebuttal published by some US authors, so it’s a controversial area. To some extent, it depends on the patient and where they feel the most comfortable, but if they have already decided to do a colonoscopy, certainly I think it would make sense to do it first and then do the protocol after that, but it depends what your goal is. If your goal is to actually figure out the effects of this protocol, then it would make sense to do it after you do the protocol. If your goal is to figure out if they have some structural gut issue that’s causing some of their symptoms that hasn’t been detected by the functional testing, then you should do the colonoscopy before the protocol.