Bile can serve as a reservoir for funghi, making them harder to treat
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@Mauritio Dandelion root, one of the bitters, helped restore my liver's ability to conjugate or make bile. But I was also taking vco and taurine to help restore that ability.
I noticed my bowels were pale, and during that time, my skin was experiencing allergy. The pale color meant I don't have enough bile production to allow effective secretion of toxins fecally. And my skin became the alternative path for toxin clearance.
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@yerrag Interestingly I can't find a single study showing cholagogue or choleretic effects of dandelion.
I took dandelion extract for the first time yesterday and it seems to be quite stimulating. Not sure if that was a one time only effect, but I found a study showing that it increases dopamine, noradrenaline and adrenaline.
"T. officinale extract exerts it effects by significantly (p<0.05) decreasing the levels of corticosterone and increasing the concentrations of dopamine, noradrenaline, and adrenaline. "
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6340315/ -
I am quoting Deepseek AI on the choleretic effects. I haven't been quite doing personal deep research lately ao here goes:
Yes, dandelion root (Taraxacum officinale) is widely recognized as having choleretic effects.
Here’s a breakdown of what that means in practice:
How it works
Research, primarily in animal models, indicates that dandelion root extract can stimulate the liver to increase bile production. The effect is attributed to its bitter sesquiterpene lactones (like taraxacin) and other compounds. By increasing bile flow, it may help:
· Improve digestion of fats
· Gently relieve constipation linked to poor bile output
· Support the liver's natural detoxification pathwaysThe distinction you need to know
· Choleretic: Dandelion root is a choleretic — it increases bile production by the liver.
· Cholagogue: It is often also described as having mild cholagogue action — meaning it may also help stimulate the release of bile from the gallbladder.Evidence and traditional use
· Traditional herbalism: It’s a classic "bitter" digestive tonic and liver herb, approved by the German Commission E (a respected herbal regulatory body) for dyspeptic complaints and disturbances in bile flow.
· Clinical research: Human clinical trials are limited, but animal studies and pharmacological reviews consistently support its choleretic activity.
· Caveat: Because it stimulates bile flow, it is contraindicated for people with blocked bile ducts, active gallstones causing symptoms, or acute gallbladder inflammation unless under professional supervision.So, if you were connecting your previous queries — yes, the jump from the slang "cholalogic" to the real medical term "choleretic" leads directly here: dandelion root is one of the classic, evidence-backed examples.
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@yerrag I am not doubting that it has these effects, I was just surprised that there isnt any studies on it (as opposed to gentian for example)
BTW I took it again today and the stimulating effects seem to be a lot less pronounced already.
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