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Why muti-saccrite foods may disrupt the endocrine system and cut off the supply

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Why muti-saccrite foods may disrupt the endocrine system and cut off the supply

of

methylcobalamin to the body.

By: Stan Kurtz

(For this piece an ADHD writing style made sense.)

For as long as I can remember I have been battling high testosterone,

combination oily/dry

skin and acne. While healing myself I had seemingly gotten much of this under

control,

but after a night of holiday dietary cheating I was aroused all night when I

slept and woke

up with some acne once again and I think I understand why.

As a sophomore in high school having significant difficulty dating while raging

full of

hormones, I had the opportunity to obsess over female body types. One of my

favorite

types where ones with chronic skin issues. I noticed that they were typically

athletic, had

shapely bodies, and were (of course) a little insecure, which I appreciated back

then.

Fast forward to the spring 2006 Defeat Autism Now (DAN!) Think Tank when Dr.

Mark and

Geier presented data about how testosterone lowers glutathione and that

how many

of the therapies we use raise glutathione including MB12 and " azol " antifungal

medications like Difucan and Nizoral may be working to normalize testosterone

levels in

our kids. Raising glutathione and lower testosterone meant a lower

susceptibility to

toxins and pathogens.

Then flash over to making phone calls to research methylcobalamin for our UCLA

MB12

nasal spray research team. I was tasked with finding how methylcobalamin was

made. I

learned that methylcobalamin could be made by taking cyanocobalamin, the more

typical

type of B12, and adding proprionic bacteria to it. I then looked for common

sources of

proprionic bacteria and found it was in acne.

Flash back to a family event in the summer of 2006 when I was asking questions

about

fungal flares with antiviral therapy to Dr. Carol Marcus a notable physician /

researcher

who is responsible for things like developing national policy in the event of a

dirty bomb

attack. She explained to me the concept of how viruses, bacteria, and fungus

all play

biological warfare with each other. If you suppress one, you can end up with

more of

another.

Flash forward to August 14th, 2006 when I was interviewing Bill Shaw PhD. on

Autism One

and he also talked about fungus and bacteria are in constant battle. Then add a

touch of

common sense with the reality that antibiotics are actually fungus it begins to

become

even more clear.

As I look at snap shots in my head of eating things like soy and wheat and then

starting to

pick acne on my face within hours, I realize that it might not just be a direct

allergy to the

food. It could be a multisaccrite food fungal flair or an immune reaction

killing off

proprionic bacteria and then the dead bacteria being excreted through the skin

causing

pimples. Said differently, the food feeds the fungus that kill off proprionic

bacteria (or the

foods causes the immune system to kill the proprionic bacteria directly) and

then the dead

bacteria gets excreted through the pores.

If proprionic bacteria was decreased, then the internal manufacturing of MB12

would

potentially be decreased along with increased levels of testosterone.

Could this be the multi-saccrite food, endocrine, acne and toxicity connection?

Your thoughts?

(Muti-saccrite foods include complex carbodydrates, starches, soy, casien and

gluten)

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