Inflamatory Disease
Your Platform for Online Success (EN)
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2m 31s
When unexpected spots appear or we feel pain in certain parts of the body, we are likely experiencing a condition in which the immune system attacks the skin, joints, or intestines, causing chronic inflammation. In the intestines, for example, this can lead to symptoms such as abdominal pain, diarrhea, and weight loss, all of which negatively affect a person’s quality of life.
In a healthy intestine, there are protective layers:
A mucus layer that acts as the first barrier.
An epithelial layer, made up of tightly joined cells that prevent harmful bacteria from entering.
Additionally, there are special cells, like regulatory T cells, that produce calming substances to keep the immune system balanced, ensuring it doesn’t overreact to the normal bacteria in the gut.
When our intestines are disrupted, as occurs in inflammatory bowel disease, these protective layers become compromised:
The mucus layer may be reduced or damaged.
The epithelial layer may develop gaps or holes, allowing bacteria to penetrate deeper layers. That’s why we call it a “leaky gut.”
This triggers the immune system, but in inflammatory bowel disease, the response is disproportionate. Immune cells—especially effector T cells—produce substances that maintain a prolonged inflammatory cycle, damaging intestinal tissues.
To help you understand better, imagine the immune system as an army. In a normal state, the army stays in its barracks and only acts when there’s a real threat. In inflammatory disease, it’s as if the army is always in combat, attacking even when there’s no enemy—causing damage to the body’s own tissues, as if it were harming civilians.
Understanding this is crucial so you can follow treatments that calm the immune system or help repair the protective layers. And if you cheat, the inflammation comes back stronger and becomes harder to control.
If you skip using the creams, don’t take the pills, or avoid the immune-regulating injections within the one-month period—not because you ran out, but because you think you have to wait until they run out to pay again—you’re cheating your body.
The recommended products are most effective within one month of production, when they are most stable. To help you stay on track with treatment, specialized medical centers offer payment plans. You must subscribe to make monthly payments that are not tied to the products themselves. This means you’ll receive the products when the next cycle begins, and your payment continues monthly—because you chose not to pay everything at once.
Don’t cheat your immune system—it will come back stronger.
I recommend watching the video about the iodine clock reaction. That video explains why you shouldn’t use certain treatments outside the recommended time frame.
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