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Debra's avatar

This is important to know but it's not at the core of the problem which is genetic, epigentic, and mineral imbalances resulting in endocrine issues which leads to many migraines. I know from personal experience. Hormonal fluctuations play a huge role in migraines due to copper toxicity and mineral imbalances. Copper toxicity is a huge part of this and 80% of the population has this problem. PMS in women is due to copper toxicity because estrogen and copper work together and when there is unbound copper (not bound to ceruloplasmin - a protein) in the tissues of the body including the brain you end up with MANY different symptoms including migraines. The main reason one doesn't have enough ceruloplasmin (made in the liver) in the body to attach to the copper so that it works properly, is due to stress which causes adrenal and liver issues.

I get very concerned when these studies and scientists don't look at the full picture and resort to the most popular trending option. The body is a whole piece that needs multiple parts [minerals, hormones, neurotransmitters, microbiome (not only in the gut) etc] to be functioning in sync. Unfortunately, when scientists and studies just focus on one piece it, once again, doesn't help the women who suffer the most from these maladies. You can't just fix the microbiome which is complex in itself. Often the reason the microbiome is out of balance is because the minerals (which need to be balanced in order to survive) are out of balance.

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Sounds Like Nonsense's avatar

Jean Michel WENDLING

COVID a digestive disease

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/perm%C3%A9abilit%C3%A9-intestinale-covid-et-mis-c-le-r%C3%B4le-de-la-wendling/

Intestinal permeability - COVID and MIS-C: could the role of vitamin D deficiency be central?

Published July 9 2022

Active viral SARS-COV2 persistence in intestinal reservoir was recently shown.

Circulating S1 subunit, or spike protein, or circulating N nucleocapsid is found in approximately 65% of long COVID patients several months.

Yonker LM et al showed that in children with MIS-C, prolonged presence of SARS-CoV-2 in the gastrointestinal tract led to release of zonulin with passage of SARS-CoV-2 antigens into the bloodstream, resulting in

hyperinflammation.

Larazotide, a zonulin inhibitor used in the treatment of celiac disease, according to the authors prevents damage to tight junctions (TJ), limiting the passage of antigens: it is well tolerated and useful as an adjuvant to targeted therapies immune.

Vitamin D levels were also shown to be negatively correlated with symptom score and faecal zonulin .

These data highlight the close relationship between Vitamin D and the intestinal barrier

Vitamine D seems to be a good preventive treatment

⬇️⬇️⬇️

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