Ideas for knocking out "hidden" lymphatic bacterial infection
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The use of urea internally only improves the liver, as past the liver it is metabolized. Moreover, urea does little to change the acid-base balance. Having acid base balance is largely a result of producing adequate amounts of CO2 as a product of mitochondrial metabolism. That goes to say that anaerobic glycolysis, which produces lactic acid, is minimized. Likewise with depending too much on fatty acid oxidation, which produces keto acids.
What can contribute to more acidity is how the body responds to toxins and infections, and in the intake of drugs, which is something a perfectly healthy body does not have to be burdened with.
What is normal and allowable is the intake of meat, which is acidic, but is something which the normal regulation of pH with the lungs and kidneys, is equipped to handle. Which would explain the urine being acidic during the day but becomes alkaline at night, as it is during the night that the body catches up with getting the acid-base balance back from the acidity incurred from eating meat.
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@yerrag interesting. I'm definitely eating things and supplementing things that should be promoting CO2 production and general pro-metabolic
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@noodlecat59 Oh cool. I'll definitely add that! about to make Georgi a rich man, lol
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@yerrag You should be a psychologist too.
Would be the same advice for someone invaded with toxic people.
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@Regina hahh
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@NNight nuts:
Haidut:
Boron is HIGHLY estrogenic. The bodybuilding community was crazy about it in the 1990s, but then they found out first hand that it raises estrogen (I think all 3 types) and dumped it. Boron has similar effects to cadmium, nickel, cobalt, etc and they are all estrogenic and carcinogenic in higher doses.
Peat is right that unless you are deficient you'd better not mess with it. See below for a study in men.
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2FBF02785299
"...Supplementation with 10 mg B/d for 4 wk resulted in 84% of the supplemented dose being recovered in the urine. Plasma estradiol concentrations increased significantly as a result of supplementation (51.9±21.4 to 73.9±22.2 pmol/L;p<0.004) and there was a trend for plasma testosterone levels to be increased. However, there was no difference in plasma lipids or the oxidizability of low-density lipoprotein Our studies suggest that the absorption efficiency of B is very high and estimation of the urinary B concentration may provide a useful reflection of B intake. In addition, the elevation of endogenous estrogen as a result of supplementation suggests a protective role for B in atherosclerosis." -
@LetTheRedeemed To be fair, boron is also testosterogenic.
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interesting.
what do you think could be the mechanism? do you think it's actually just an increase of testosterone being aromatized?I'm also not beyond believing I could be deficient in it...
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@LetTheRedeemed
I think it could be a good explanation.What's your diet like?
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@NNight growing up was lots of raw veggies, got in to keto carnivore for a year and a half, then as close to Peat inspired diet as possible the last few years
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@Regina you know the human condition hexed by ideas like love thy enemy and take up your cross lol