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How are Endotoxins Metabolized?

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Jay M

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Apr 9, 2013, 12:02:32 PM4/9/13
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Once endotoxin-containing animal fats are absorbed by the gut, how are
they metabolized, what is their ultimate fate? Do they ride along with
cholesterol and get incorporated into cell walls? How long do they
stay in the body? Do white-cell eat them up? Does HDL transport them
back from tissues to the liver for disposal? Any references to such
info? Thx.


Recently tried to incorporate dairy back in my diet in the form of
home-made fresh/farmer's cheese made with organic, whole milk. To
avoid letcins, I haven't eaten (all but miniscule amounts) of grains
for at least 5 years and have not eaten legumes for about a year, I
starting getting a reaction to milk after about a month. It is now
starting to wake me up at night, with heart racing, feeling warm &
itchy/crawly sensation on face, scalp and veins :(


Farmer's cheese:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJBO1pSclK0

Background info on endotoxins:
http://nutritionfacts.org/video/dead-meat-bacteria-endotoxemia/
http://nutritionfacts.org/video/the-exogenous-endotoxin-theory/
http://nutritionfacts.org/video/the-leaky-gut-theory-of-why-animal-products-cause-inflammation/

JRStern

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Apr 10, 2013, 9:55:11 PM4/10/13
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On Tue, 9 Apr 2013 09:02:32 -0700 (PDT), Jay M <jay4...@gmail.com>
wrote:
If you haven't been eating dairy for a while your digestive system may
stop producing enzymes and bacteria needed to digest it, so go easy
for a few days and let things adjust.

You'll have to go to your favorite endotoxin theorist to get an
opinion on clearing, I'm sure you'll find a variety of answers, and
that may be right given the variety of potential toxins and the
variability in individual metabolisms.

J.

John H. Gohde

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Apr 11, 2013, 9:33:54 AM4/11/13
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Bohgosity BumaskiL

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Apr 11, 2013, 12:33:02 PM4/11/13
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On 2013-04-09 10:02 AM, Jay M wrote:
> Once endotoxin-containing animal fats are absorbed by the gut, how are
> they metabolized, what is their ultimate fate? Do they ride along with
> cholesterol and get incorporated into cell walls? How long do they
> stay in the body? Do white-cell eat them up? Does HDL transport them
> back from tissues to the liver for disposal? Any references to such
> info? Thx.
>
I do not understand "endotoxin" in the context of foreign animal
fat. Endo- means "from within" -- products of your own metabolism.
An example iz ammonia. I hav nohtist that even when I do not eat
meat, if I wrap a wet sock around a patch of P-Vulgaris on my arm,
then after it haz been on for a few hours, it will start to smell
like ammonia. That's bad, because my liver iz suppozed to be
converting ammonia to urea.

I wunder if fungus and ammonia smell similar to Julie Bove, because
she wuz writing about P smelling like fungus some time ago.

I sujest that if you are reading material that confuses animal fat
with endotoxin, then maybe put more salt into your interpretation of
it than usual.
>
> Recently tried to incorporate dairy back in my diet in the form of
> home-made fresh/farmer's cheese made with organic, whole milk. To
> avoid letcins, I haven't eaten (all but miniscule amounts) of grains
> for at least 5 years and have not eaten legumes for about a year, I
> starting getting a reaction to milk after about a month. It is now
> starting to wake me up at night, with heart racing, feeling warm &
> itchy/crawly sensation on face, scalp and veins :(
>
Stop eating dairy, then.
Dairy iz not paleo.
Can you imajin sucking on an udder for food?
Dairy contains a lot of saturated fat, and with the psoriatic
comorbidity with stroke, you do not need that.
3>
http://nutritionfacts.org/video/the-leaky-gut-theory-of-why-animal-products-cause-inflammation/
>
Oh, I get it now. So, if you eat bacteria, and they create toxins in
your gut, then they are endotoxins -- not to my way of thinking,
since the bacteria are foreign. When bacteria eat meat, then they
hav no reazon to prefer a burger to your bowelz. The safest food for
any man iz a plant.

John H. Gohde

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Apr 11, 2013, 1:58:07 PM4/11/13
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On Apr 11, 12:33 pm, Bohgosity BumaskiL
<brewh...@freenet.edmonton.ab.ca> wrote:
>
> The safest food for any man [or female] is a plant.

Ditto!
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