The search is finally over. Maintain the digestive balance you've been seeking with the world's first whole probiotic engineered to tackle digestive plaque and support your optimal digestive health.
The search is finally over. Maintain the digestive balance you’ve been seeking with the world’s first whole probiotic engineered to tackle digestive plaque and support your optimal digestive health.
BIOHM is the next generation of probiotics that balances the total microbiome of bacteria and fungi in your gut. Our patent-pending formulation contains good bacteria, good fungi and a powerful enzyme that breaks through digestive plaque, allowing BIOHM’s 30 billion live cultures of good bacteria and good fungus to maintain, support and promote the balance of the total microbiome of bacteria and fungi in the digestive system.
Just like the plaque that coats your teeth, digestive plaque is a film that adheres to your gut’s wall. Digestive plaque protects bad bacteria and bad fungi allowing them to work together to upset your gut’s total balance, which can ultimately cause issues with your digestive health.
Digestive Plaque without BIOHMDigestive Plaque Destroyed by BIOHM
Start living well today.
Please select your purchase type below
$49.99
One Time
Subscription
$39.99
Per Bottle
Pay As You Go $39.99 [Save 20%] Ships Every 6 Weeks
Bi-Annual
$199.95
Per Bottle
Includes:
FREE BIOHM Gut Report Kit ($180 value)
Pre-Pay $199.95 [Save 20%] One-time Shipment Every 24 Weeks
Annual
$314.94
Per Bottle
Includes:
FREE BIOHM Gut Report Kit ($180 value)
FREE BIOHM Prebiotic ($29.99 value)
FREE BIOHM Colon Cleanser ($19.99 value)
Pre-Pay $314.94 [Save 30%] One-time Shipment Every 54 Weeks
Annual Subscriptions get complimentary deep DNA sequencing of your gut’s microbiome with a BIOHM Gut Report when you purchase the bi-annual or annual program. With the BIOHM Gut Report, you will receive a comprehensive report of the microorganisms in your gut.
When it comes to the trillions of microorganisms that inhabit our bodies, bacteria get almost all the attention. Changes
in our resident microbiota and their collective genome — called the microbiome — have been linked with a wide range
of diseases, from various forms of arthritis to depression.
At a workshop held at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) last September on the role of human microbiota in infectious
disease, I was disheartened not to hear a single talk on the fungal community—the mycobiome.
For the past few years doctors and nutritionists have been recommending probiotics as way to control gut health. The
little pills are filled with good bacteria, which have been shown to help improve digestion, boost mood and immune system and even help
clear up skin.
It all started about six months ago when my Dad wanted to share his latest research with me. He also promised lunch.
When I got to his lab, he was sorting through a stack of blown up pictures of Petri dishes on a conference table.
When it comes to the trillions of microorganisms that inhabit our bodies, bacteria get almost all the attention. Changes
in our resident microbiota and their collective genome — called the microbiome — have been linked with a wide range
of diseases, from various forms of arthritis to depression.
At a workshop held at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) last September on the role of human microbiota in infectious
disease, I was disheartened not to hear a single talk on the fungal community—the mycobiome.
For the past few years doctors and nutritionists have been recommending probiotics as way to control gut health. The
little pills are filled with good bacteria, which have been shown to help improve digestion, boost mood and immune system and even help
clear up skin.
It all started about six months ago when my Dad wanted to share his latest research with me. He also promised lunch.
When I got to his lab, he was sorting through a stack of blown up pictures of Petri dishes on a conference table.
When it comes to the trillions of microorganisms that inhabit our bodies, bacteria get almost all the attention. Changes
in our resident microbiota and their collective genome — called the microbiome — have been linked with a wide range
of diseases, from various forms of arthritis to depression.
At a workshop held at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) last September on the role of human microbiota in infectious
disease, I was disheartened not to hear a single talk on the fungal community—the mycobiome.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.