"We discussed that a leading cause of death is, in my view, endotoxemia resulting in septic shock. This occurs when you secrete endotoxin from facultative anaerobes, otherwise called oxygen-tolerant bacteria, which shouldn't be in your gut. These pathogenic bacteria secrete a very virulent form of endotoxin, also known as lipopolysaccharides (LPS), which cause inflammation if they translocate across the compromised gut barrier into the systemic circulation. Leaky gut, or a disturbed microbiome, is therefore one of the foundational causes of all disease."
"Herskowitz explains, "I think that everyone that's doing poorly and failing to thrive has a biome issue and a leaky gut issue, almost 100% ... And in the standard allopathic intensive care units, it's not considered a foundational issue." When Herskowitz treats cancer patients, he says, they're often in a state of failure to thrive. "They've gotten so burdened by so many different layers of toxicity, that their system cannot keep up anymore enough," he says. "And ... that's eventually due to mitochondrial failure throughout the body.""
Microbiome disturbances and leaky gut permit translocation of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) from facultative anaerobes into the systemic circulation, provoking inflammation and risk of septic shock. These oxygen-tolerant bacteria produce a virulent form of endotoxin that should not be present in the gut. Chronic toxicity burdens and nutritional depletion drive mitochondrial failure, leading to failure to thrive in severely ill patients, including many with cancer. Intensive care commonly overlooks the gut microbiome as a foundational issue. Restorative approaches focus on identifying and correcting biome imbalance, reducing toxic burden, supporting mitochondrial function, and addressing nutritional deficits to improve outcomes.
Read at Natural Health News
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