Dude, your vitamin C in sepsis example is stupid as f**k.HouseMD wrote: ↑October 24th, 2020, 1:09 pmBasic chemistry and field results do not often match. The vitamin C in sepsis theory was based on humans being one of the only mammals that doesn't create vitamin C as a stress hormone. The theory went bust on testing. Anyone who conflates basic science with clinic results is uneducated at best and dangeroys at worst. Time and again various dietary and supplemental nutrition modifications have been utilized for various diseases, usually to little effect. Vitamin D may well have a poaitive effect on COVID but a scientist doesn't say a theory is true until they have proof. I actually know quite a bit about diet and nutrition and lifestyle modifications are a xlcore part of every outpatient treatment plan I create. You are the fool that is saying things are true without comprehensive studiesItalianman wrote: ↑October 24th, 2020, 12:52 pmLol, just because you know next to nothing about human biology and nutrition doesn't mean we all suffer that condition. You need to take some biochemistry classes https://culturewhiz.org/forum/topic/sum ... l-research and then maybe you'll have some idea of what is out there. Anyway, the results are ALREADY in... https://www.newhope.com/vitamins-and-su ... s-covid-19
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-sho ... for-sepsis
And your claim that various dietary and supplemental nutrition modifications have been utilized for various diseases, usually to little effect is also stupid. You literally have no idea what you're talking about AT ALL. Your body is full of billions of bacteria, viruses and fungi. They are collectively referred to as the microbiome. While some bacteria are associated with disease, others are actually extremely essential for your immune system, your heart, your weight, and many other aspects of your health. The knowledge of the Gut / microbiome is evolving at an increasing rate, and more and more scientists are becoming aware of the profound connections between our gut and our mental health and our overall well-being. We all know that the type of bacteria in our gut influences or affects a very significant part of who we are. As well as extracting energy from our food, the gut account for most of our immune system and generates more than two dozen hormones that affect everything from our appetite to our mood..
For instance, buried in our intestines, deep inside its tissue, is a very thin layer of brain. It’s called the enteric system and it is made up of the same cells, neurons, which are found in the brain. There are over 100 million neurons in the gut, as many as you would find in the brain of a cat. So, the saying the gut is our second brain can be interpreted literally in fact.
Your gut can decide how much energy your body absorbs from the food you eat; it can regulate the signs of hunger; it can help you decide which food you want; and it can determine how much your blood sugar spikes in reaction to a meal. Your microbiome can make you fat, make you feel unhappy, or make you healthy and happy, depending on your eating habits.
The microbiome takes the bits of food that our body can't digest and turns them into a wide range of hormones and chemicals. These, it seems, can control our mood, as well as our appetite and general health. Changing your biome may also reduce anxiety and lessen depression.
Most people's conventional thinking in terms of weight loss and health can thus also go into the trash, as new research on bacteria points out.
We like to think that we are in charge of the decisions we make, from what we decide to eat to where we go on vacation, but we neglect the fact that our microbes certainly have the opportunity, the motivation and the tools to manipulate us. Microbes have the ability to manipulate actions and mood by altering the neural signals in the vagus nerve, modifying taste receptors, generating toxins to make us feel bad, and releasing chemical incentives to make us feel good.' They also produce hunger hormones and neurotransmitters that they can use to influence our cravings and behavior. Changing the microbes in your gut may also change your cravings.
Microbes are influencing our immune system. The 'good ones' are especially important when it comes to teaching our immune system how to behave. Lack of good bacteria leads to overactive immune systems and an increased risk of allergies.
Each food decision you make(' Do I have that slice of cake or that handful of almonds?') determines the fate of the countless trillions who live in your colon. It's quite a responsibility.
Apparently all the autism stuff is just messed up, low serotonin levels, because that’s what improves the speed of the muscle movements to get the food through the intestines. Once you get the disruption to the serotonin levels in the intestines, it messes with your brain’s serotonin levels too... because your brain is working overtime to produce a hard to produce molecule. If the foods stay in the intestines too long the immune system activity goes up way too much. This cause artificially high synapse pruning rates due to the reuse of the same "tag" function of the protein being produced that then interacts with glia cells that create or kill synapses/neurons, aka if the damage is in the "social" region of the brain's white matter it is called autism, if it is in the general white matter part of the brain it is called schizophrenia (reduced coherence between regions), it if is white matter connection between (corpus callisum) the hemispheres of the brain it is bipolar, etc.
The other bacteria that help the brain produce butyrate, the healthy people have lots of the types that produce that and that butyrate helps keep cells in the brain from being damaged during inflammation. The researchers are tracing down the bacteria that induce more serotonin and which ones disrupt the production of serotonin in the cells that surround the intestines.
The problem is all of this is variable to the person, they can have kidney dysfunction from this or thyroid dysfunction or pancreas dysfunction... any of which can lead to other problems. So, people trying green tea extract can die of liver failure or other health problems like cardiovascular disease due to how little exercise they get and the accumulating years of disease/dysfunction. Systematically, the whole body's repair processes are being impaired in all of those diseases and diabetes, which has been shown to lead to earlier dementia too, so it gets lumped into these brain disorders now. Lower energy, chronic issues leads to brain and anxiety (immune system upregulated by norepinephrine hormone in the body, anxiety in the brain) issues.
Seriously, an overactive immune system spikes the norepinephrine neurotransmitter as it upregulates the immune system using norepinephrine as a hormone in the body. These psychotic drugs just stimulate the brain tissue to produce neurotransmitters, which it might be low due to how much it’s more concerned with fighting an infection... or they block the transmitters that are overpresent due to an infection. Hmmm these drug companies need to die!
Go back to school before I embarrass you some more, boy.