Marco
Grrrrrrr!
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[quote="Bob, post: 497540, member: 558"
I think your response, above, explores what usually happens in the gut, when everything is running as it should do (i.e. in a healthy person.)
But I'm exploring the possibility of (localised or general) dysfunction of the cells lining the gut, whereby the contents of the gut might suddenly be treated as a foreign invader, for whatever reason. (Perhaps mild damage to the gut wall, or a dysfunction of the immune/protective processes within the gut? Or perhaps there could be an autoimmune issue that attacks the gut lining?)[/quote]
Hi Bob.
This paper might be of interest to you.
Alcohol, inflammation, and gut-liver-brain interactions in tissue damage and disease development
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842521/
While it discusses the specific case of the gut's contribution to systemic inflammation in chronic alcohol use it does also outline more generally how a 'defect' in permeability and detox capacity may interact and many pathological findings in alcohol abuse overlap with ME/CFS (ironically)..
Nothing to do with autoimmunity though!
I think your response, above, explores what usually happens in the gut, when everything is running as it should do (i.e. in a healthy person.)
But I'm exploring the possibility of (localised or general) dysfunction of the cells lining the gut, whereby the contents of the gut might suddenly be treated as a foreign invader, for whatever reason. (Perhaps mild damage to the gut wall, or a dysfunction of the immune/protective processes within the gut? Or perhaps there could be an autoimmune issue that attacks the gut lining?)[/quote]
Hi Bob.
This paper might be of interest to you.
Alcohol, inflammation, and gut-liver-brain interactions in tissue damage and disease development
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842521/
While it discusses the specific case of the gut's contribution to systemic inflammation in chronic alcohol use it does also outline more generally how a 'defect' in permeability and detox capacity may interact and many pathological findings in alcohol abuse overlap with ME/CFS (ironically)..
Nothing to do with autoimmunity though!