Beat the Bloat with Max Digest Ease
From car rides to boat trips, no one wants to deal with nausea, digestive spasms or queasiness that ruins your day. Maxion’s Digest Ease Powder is a gentle, easy-to-take blend that combines organic milk thistle, ginger, cranberry and prickly pear leaf to help your digestive system stay calm and comfortable, wherever life takes you.
Key Medicinal Ingredients and How They Work
Organic Milk Thistle (Silybum marianum)
Best known for its liver-protective qualities, milk thistle seed extract also plays a role in supporting healthy bile flow. Lipase supplementation before a high-fat meal significantly reduced stomach fullness compared to placebo, although it did not affect other symptoms or gastric electrical activity. The study showed that a fatty meal (55% fat) caused marked fullness, bloating, and nausea shortly after ingestion in healthy individuals, which were alleviated by lipase that helps digest fats more efficiently (Levine et al., 2015).
Organic Ginger (Zingiber officinale, rhizome)
Ginger is one of nature’s most trusted nausea remedies. Clinical studies show that ginger helps prevent and reduce nausea and vomiting associated with motion sickness and seasickness. Its bioactive compounds like gingerol and shogaol work by blocking signals in the gut that trigger nausea (Giacosa et al., 2015).
Organic Cranberry (Vaccinium macrocarpon, fruit)
Cranberry is best known for urinary health, but it also offers digestive support. Its antioxidants help protect the gut lining and promote a healthy balance of digestive bacteria, which may help reduce the upset stomach that sometimes comes with long travel days.
Organic Prickly Pear (Opuntia ficus-indica, leaf)
Prickly pear leaf has been used traditionally in herbal medicine for digestive inflammation and mild nausea. Its high fiber and mucilage content helps soothe the stomach lining and reduce spasms. It is also shown to help maintain hydration and electrolyte balance, which can reduce nausea (Madrigal-Santillán et al., 2022).
What the Research Says
The herbal ingredients in Digest Ease Powder are supported by multiple studies for nausea relief. Ginger alone is backed by robust evidence showing that daily doses of 500–1000 mg help reduce nausea from motion sickness and seasickness (Grøntved et al., 1988). Milk thistle supports bile production for smoother digestion, while cranberry and prickly pear leaf help soothe the digestive tract and reduce spasms naturally.
Taken together, these organic botanicals work gently with your body’s natural processes, providing effective, safe support for people prone to motion-related nausea.
Why Digest Ease Powder Works Better Than Pills or Ointments
Unlike over-the-counter painkillers that only mask digestive cramps, Digest Ease supports your whole digestive system naturally. Topical ointments cannot calm the stomach from within, and pills can be hard to swallow when you are already feeling queasy. Digest Ease Powder mixes easily in water or juice for fast absorption, so you can take it on the road, on a plane or on the water with no fuss.
Powdered herbal blends also allow for more flexible dosing and better bioavailability compared to many tablets or hard pills (Sun et al., 2019).
Approved Uses You Can Trust
Maxion Digest Ease Powder is formulated with medicinal ingredients approved for:
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Helping prevent nausea and vomiting associated with motion sickness and seasickness
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Supporting healthy digestion and normal bile flow
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Reducing mild digestive spasms and queasiness naturally
Clean and Pleasant to Use
Digest Ease uses no synthetic additives or harsh flavors. The easy-to-mix powder form lets you adjust your dose to what your body needs, no hard pills, no chalky tablets, no artificial colors.
The Bottom Line
When your stomach feels calm, you feel free to go wherever life takes you. Maxion Digest Ease Powder blends trusted organic milk thistle, ginger, cranberry and prickly pear leaf to help you stay ahead of nausea and keep your digestion on track.
Stay balanced. Travel well. Digest Ease does the rest.
References
Giacosa, A., Morazzoni, P., Bombardelli, E., Riva, A., Porro, G. B., & Rondanelli, M. (2015). Can nausea and vomiting be treated with ginger extract?
Grøntved, A., Brask, T., Kambskard, J., & Hentzer, E. (1988). Ginger root against seasickness. A controlled trial on the open sea. Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 105(1–2), 45–49. https://doi.org/10.3109/00016488809119444
Levine, M. E., Koch, S. Y., & Koch, K. L. (2015). Lipase Supplementation before a High-Fat Meal Reduces Perceptions of Fullness in Healthy Subjects. 9(4), 464–469. https://doi.org/10.5009/gnl14005
Madrigal-Santillán, E., Portillo-Reyes, J., Madrigal-Bujaidar, E., & Sánchez-Gutiérrez, M. (2022). Opuntia spp. In Human Health: A Comprehensive Summary on Its Pharmacological, Therapeutic and Preventive Properties. Part 2—PMC. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9505094/
Sun, S., Wang, Y., Wu, A., Ding, Z., & Liu, X. (2019). Influence Factors of the Pharmacokinetics of Herbal Resourced Compounds in Clinical Practice. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine : eCAM, 2019, 1983780. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/1983780