Monday, July 29, 2013

Immune System Part 2

Disorders of the immune system
Because it fights to ward off disease and infections every day, the immune system plays an essential role in protecting our health. It is involved in every thing from repairing a paper cut to killing life-threatening parasites. Every illness, injury, and threat to the body requires an immune response in order to heal.

When compromised, however, the immune system may lead in bacteria and viruses, which cause conditions like coals and flus.. If overworked, protective immune responses may even harm the body – causing issues like chronic inflammation and autoimmune disease, which occur when the immune system attacks healthy body tissues. The development of cancer is also links to a compromised immune system.

Common viral and bacterial infections
the immune system is the body’s first line of protection against viruses like the common cold and influenza, as well as bacterial infections like pneumonia, salmonella, urinary tract infection, and ear infection. While some of these conditions can eventually sort themselves out, others can be quite serious and demand medical attention.
Inflammation
inflammation is part of our normal immune response. When the body is harmed, it says lymph and white blood cells through the lymphatic system to flood the area of concern. This fluid uses chemical reactions to separate and remove the harmful substances, restoring the cells back to their normal state.

While brief periods of inflammation – known as acute inflammation – work to heal the body, inflammation that extends for long periods of time or chronic inflammation puts a strain on the circulatory and immune systems, damages body tissues, and destroys cells. Chronic inflammation can be attributed to a diet high in processed foods and/or to food sensitivities and allergies. Chronic inflammation makes the body more prone to contracting other illnesses that may cause autoimmune diseases – health problems that occur when the immune system attacks healthy tissues in the body. 

Autoimmune diseases include celiac disease (gluten), cirrhosis of the liver, Crohn’s disease, lupus, anemia, psoriasis, arthritis, and type I diabetes among others. Eating properly can drastically reduce and reverse chronic inflammation, while eating processed foods can cause its development.

Cancer occurs when mutated cells reproduce uncontrollably, forming malignancies tumors that can invade and eventually take over other parts of the body. There are over 100 types of cancer, and the disease can occur in virtually any body part.
The risk of developing cancer depends on both genetics and your surrounding environment. Having a family history of the disease, smoking, being exposed to radiation, and eating a poor diet all increase a person’s risk of cancer. However, much evidence suggests that eating natural, high nutritious foods can swing even the most at risk individuals back to the other side of the spectrum.

Free radicals and antioxidants
The theory that links the presence of free radicals in the body to an increased cancer risk is gaining support in both medical and holistic healing circles. Free radicals are molecules taken in from the environment that lack an electron. This missing electron makes the free radical molecule unstable and prone to stealing electrons from other surrounding atoms. When ingested, free radicals steal electrons from the Adams of healthy cells. This process has been cited as a cause of premature aging and a host of illnesses and diseases including cancer.


Antioxidants neutralize free radicals. They do this by donating one of their own electrons to the free radical, so the free radical stops looking for an electron to steal. Antioxidants remain stable, even after they give an electron to a free radical. Certain nutrients, like vitamin C and E are particularly good for protecting the body against destructive free radicals. The best way to ensure you are getting a sufficient intake of antioxidants is by eating a balanced diet can of at least eight servings of fruits and vegetables per day.

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