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Inflammation driving disease
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<blockquote data-quote="timewerx" data-source="post: 77515116" data-attributes="member: 314730"><p>You're right. Too much sweets and pharmaceuticals (any kind) can potentially negative affect gut bacteria.</p><p></p><p>I've had many big wounds in the past from injuries. Many got infected but I've avoided antibiotics. One of them had advanced to an early stage of sepsis and started to get delirious and high fever but thankfully, it eventually healed without medical intervention.</p><p></p><p>Ironically, having good metabolism from good diet and sufficient exercise will make you quite resistant from infections by making your body environment inhospitable to harmful pathogens making it easier for the immune system to get rid of them. It makes you much less reliant on antibiotics and such. Doctors themselves recognize many cases of intervention don't require antibiotics but they do it anyway as part of protocols.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="timewerx, post: 77515116, member: 314730"] You're right. Too much sweets and pharmaceuticals (any kind) can potentially negative affect gut bacteria. I've had many big wounds in the past from injuries. Many got infected but I've avoided antibiotics. One of them had advanced to an early stage of sepsis and started to get delirious and high fever but thankfully, it eventually healed without medical intervention. Ironically, having good metabolism from good diet and sufficient exercise will make you quite resistant from infections by making your body environment inhospitable to harmful pathogens making it easier for the immune system to get rid of them. It makes you much less reliant on antibiotics and such. Doctors themselves recognize many cases of intervention don't require antibiotics but they do it anyway as part of protocols. [/QUOTE]
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