The root cause: digestion-slowing bacteria

Our world is increasingly filled digestion-slowing bacteria that make our digestive system vulnerable. Bacteria will take advantage of this fragile state and colonize the small intestine.

What’s worst about nasty gut invaders, they can turn our intestines into an even more hospitable place and wreck havoc on our gut.

The culprit that slows down digestion: methane

Methane hinders two essential processes responsible for gut motility (digestive speed). It damages the sensitive nerve endings of our gut, slowing down the movement of food through our digestive tract and dramatically decreasing the frequency of “waves” meant to help flush out our system.

Emma offers relief: a  healthy gut for healthy bowel movements*

Emma is a science-backed breakthrough that helps eliminate bloating and gas while strengthening the gut microbiome.*

Emma’s mighty, ingredients work together in four powerful ways to address methane build-up so you can normalize your bathroom habits and achieve “perfect poops.”*

Most digestive “remedies” do more harm than good.

Most people who struggle with digestive health are given “remedies” that temporarily relieve symptoms but the root cause never gets addressed. The symptoms come back in a couple days, and the gut becomes more and more degraded, suffering from constipation, bloating, and embarrassing gas, with hours spent squeezing and straining on the toilet.

“My husband and I eat the same exact things, and while he never gains weight, I can practically look at a donut and it goes straight to my hips!“

The Surprising Root Cause of Bloating and Constipation

Bad Bacteria Takes Hold

For example, stress, antacids, antibiotics, and artificial sweeteners weaken defenses, allowing pathogenic bacteria, parasites, or archaea (single-cell organisms) to take hold.

Bacteria Produces Methane

Gas archaea and other bacteria begin to release methane gas which causes bloating and constipation.

Digestion is Slowed

Methane gas damages the sensitive nerves of the gut, slowing the movement of food through the intestines. This slows or even halts your pooping and elimination.

Our nerve cells take their time.

Sex-related features in the brain cause women's and men’s guts to behave differently. Research by Dr. Tanja Babic at Penn State College of Medicine has shown that the nerve cells that control the movement of food through the intestines are slower and more sluggish in women than in men. Research has also found that women are 6 times more likely to suffer digestive upsets, and these problems increase over time as we age.

      •  
         

        Introducing Emma, a world of differencefor digestion

      A Clogged Colon: The Hidden Cause

      Microbiome balance is not often checked in standard health screenings, yet it quietly drains energy, vitality, and health. These bacteria produce methane gas and send signals to the brain to overeat, fueling their colonies and slowing digestion.