Novel Approach to Autoimmune Diseases

Journal Title: Journal of Clinical Immunology & Microbiology - Year 2024, Vol 5, Issue 3

Abstract

The name autoimmune diseases means that the immune system is turned against itself. This cannot happen by itself. There should be a factor that turned the immune system against itself not to be bothered and this factor are the parasites in the body. How these small creatures can be so smart? All parasites in the body have one collective mind [1]. Proof of this is the following fact: the parasite pancreatic fluke (which lives on the pancreas) disable the pancreas. The pancreas cannot produce insulin, the blood sugar increases and this benefits the fungus (living in the intestines) that lives on sugar [1]. Thus, since the parasites in the body have collective mind, they are smart enough to turn the immune system of the body against itself, so that it wouldn’t bother them. This is known as autoimmune diseases. Presently, 80 different autoimmune diseases are known. I will list only 10 of them (the most popular ones): celiac, type 1 and 2 diabetes, Crohn’s disease, colitis, multiple sclerosis, alopecia, Addison disease, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, etc. The symptoms are: chronic fatigue, muscle aches, joint pain, skin rashes, dry mouth, dry eyes, weight loss, etc. About 80% of the people suffering autoimmune diseases are women, obviously their hormonal balance is more incline to developing autoimmune disorder [2]. Look at the symptoms: dry mouth (because the saliva is too thick and slimy), dry eyes (because the liquid that makes the eyes moist is too thick and slimy), joint pain and muscle aches (because the liquid that is supposed to lubricates them is too thick and slimy) [2]. This manifests itself as a chronic fatigue of the whole body. Now, the way we test if we have parasites is: we spit in water and if our saliva does not dissipate because it is thick and slimy, we have parasites [3]. It seems that all parasites dump their exhausts into the lymph system, which fills the space between the cells, called extracellular space. When the parasites are many, their exhaust makes the lymph stick and slimy, which (by making the extracellular space stick and slimy) makes the whole tissue stiff and difficult to move.

Authors and Affiliations

Maria Kuman

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP746264
  • DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.46889/JCIM.2024.5302
  • Views 109
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Maria Kuman (2024). Novel Approach to Autoimmune Diseases. Journal of Clinical Immunology & Microbiology, 5(3), -. https://www.europub.co.uk/articles/-A-746264