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by darkclouds
1033 days ago
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I dont think you will whilst inflammation is seen as something bad. If you look at what causes inflammation, like zinc, inflammation not only destroys the pathogen, but also destroys surrounding host "healthy" tissue. Now if elevated levels of zinc cause this inflammation, the new tissue that replaces the destroyed host healthy tissue will have elevated levels of zinc in the cells compared to the previously destroyed "healthy" tissue. Ergo, is this the body's way of using minerals to increase the anti bacterial nature of the cells in that part of the body, and why all inflammation should not be seen as a default bad thing? |
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