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Re: is it true that if u have taing antibtics in your life u have candida?
 
Dr.Jeff Views: 1,520
Published: 15 y
 
This is a reply to # 1,346,122

Re: is it true that if u have taing antibtics in your life u have candida?


Apart from the use of antibiotics being responsible for thousands of deaths and over 140,000 visits to emergency rooms each year in the U.S. each year, the incidence of antibiotic resistance continues to escalate worldwide to the point that we are rapidly approaching a new era where antibiotics won't be useful for most people. As this continues to happen, we will see an increase in the use of natural methods that help restore balance without creating additional problems.

Antibiotics are definitely the best way to create systemic fungal infections and lifelong intestinal flora imbalances in the body, as well as an unlimited number of other problems.

Antibiotics kill good and bad bacteria. Killing these bacteria causes a massive hemorrhaging of the internal components of all types of bacteria. This is particularly problematic because our bodies respond to these internal components by producing acute and eventually chronic long-term inflammation that can affect all tissues and cells throughout the body. This massive inflammatory cascade can breakdown tissues and interfere with cellular function. One of these internal substances, Lipopolysaccaharide (LPS) is common in gram-negative bacteria and is a substance that most researchers use in labs or humans due to the overwhelming reliable strong immune response that it causes.

Some of these intracellular bacterial components, like Peptidoglycans (PGN) act directly on the cellular membrane of the yeast Candida Albicans causing it to transform into its pathogenic fungal form. This is in addition to eliminating millions of beneficial bacteria that help to keep the Candida Albicans yeast within ratios that benefit the overall health of the intestinal tract and therefore the rest of the body.

Antibiotics can also suppress the immune system response. This primarily affects the macrophages who go around cleaning up pathogenic organisms that would otherwise harm us. By suppressing macrophages, antibiotics can initially reduce the inflammatory cascade which macrophages play a big role in initiating. While this may seem beneficial, it actually aids in the spread of the pathogenic fungal form of C. Albicans. First, by suppressing the immune system, the fungal candida now can spread more rapidly without macrophages to inhibit it. Secondly, by suppressing the macrophages and the inflammatory response, the liver does not release positive acute-phase proteins which are necessary for preventing the spread of pathogenic organisms throughout the body. Three of these acute-phase proteins (Ferritin, Ceruloplasmin, & Haptoglobin) function by binding iron and making it unavailable to pathogenic fungal candida. Without these 3 proteins, fungal candida can now attach itself to our blood cells and feed on an unlimited source of iron to help it spread throughout the body. This also goes for other pathogenic microbes that will be spreading as a result of the effect of antibiotics in the body.

By killing off the beneficial bacteria that inhabit and help to regulate the normal healthy intestinal flora, we lose the beneficial enzymes and acids that these organisms produce. This causes the pH of the intestinal tract to become more alkaline. An alkaline intestinal pH also promotes the conversion of C. Albicans into its pathogenic fungal form. When the intestinal pH is acidic, candida remains in its normal yeast form.

Killing off the beneficial bacteria also leads to decreased absorption of nutrients that our cells and tissues need to function in a healthy state. Certain strains of acidophilus help to synthesize B vitamins. A deficiency of these alone would create innumerable problems within the body.

These are just some of the ways that antibiotics promote and maintain the ongoing growth and spread of fungal candida throughout the body.

There are an estimated 100 trillion micro-organisms within the intestinal tract. For many years, researchers were able to identify some 300-500 species of micro-organisms that were responsible for making up the 100 trillion cells. Recent advances in the use of technology have now identified close to 6,000 species in the large intestine alone. Most of what these organisms do and how they interact is unknown. As long as there is a sufficient amount of beneficial bacteria to keep everything in balance, then we have a better chance at staying healthy. Research now tells us that some these species are permanently eliminated from the body by the use of antibiotics.

Because of the antibiotics that you've done, I would guess that you have a systemic imbalance of candida, and an overall imbalance of the intestinal flora. Stool tests can show you whatever is detected in the stool, and organic acid tests look for breakdown products of organisms that may be detected in the urine. Does that cover all the tissues, cells, organs, byproducts, wastes, organisms, and possibilities? No, only what we know so far, and that's not too much.


 

 
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