Not exact matches
I have a son with inflammatory issues, and night - shade plants can be a real
trigger for both
gut & joint
reactions... so thank God for Tapioca Starch!
I can't help but suggest that the single word «Iraq» might
trigger some sort of an emotional response, perhaps an instinctive
gut reaction of horror, or regret, or - anything.
This allows food particles and fragments of the normal and unhealthy
gut flora that inhabit our intestines to get across our
gut lining, into our bloodstream, and
trigger food sensitivities, inflammatory, and even autoimmune
reactions.
It also signals a high probability of intestinal permeability, or leaky
gut (which allows undigested foods and pathogens to escape into the bloodstream, where they
trigger an immune
reaction).
This aids in digestion, reduces leaky
gut probability and decreases the inflammatory response (this inflammatory response is what
triggers the allergic
reaction).
They help maintain the integrity of the
gut wall so that no perforations exist for undigested foods and toxins to spill into the blood and
trigger allergic
reactions.
Unfriendly to G.I tract: The toxins present in grains
trigger inflammatory
reactions in the
gut.
As Dr. Fasano explains in the YouTube mentioned above, «Cross Talk Between
Gut & Brain — A Fasano, MD,» and in his presentation for the Autoimmune Summit, hosted by Dr. Amy Myers, MD, that aired a few weeks ago, «If you stop the leakage
triggering the overstimulated immune
reaction, we think you can stop the progression of this self attack by the immune system.»
What's concerning is some experts believe leaky
gut can
trigger inflammation, oxidative stress, and even autoimmune
reactions as proteins from the leaky intestinal tract enter the bloodstream.
The
trigger for the «
reaction» is generally a combination of foreign or reactive proteins, like wheat gluten and dairy proteins or denatured meat proteins, a high carbohydrate diet, and poor
gut flora (intestinal tummydysbiosis).
In most pets the «
trigger» of the
reaction within the intestinal tract (
gut) is due to:
It's your unconscious brain picking up on numerous cues, which
trigger a «
gut reaction» you've had in the past to those very same cues.