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Front Page
Excerpts
Causes of Large Intestine
dysfunction
Signs of Large Intestine
dysfunction
Our colons were intended by nature to function as a smoothly flowing sewer
systems in order to promptly flush digestive wastes from the body.
Unfortunately over the years this sewer systems tends to become blocked with
materials, causing all sorts of problems to the physical, mental and spiritual
body.
- Slow transit time can cause colon dysfunction. Ideally, food that enters
your body should pass through within 24-36 hours. If not gas, putrefaction and
fermentation can set in. Causes of slow transit time can be lack of roughage
in the diet, not drinking enough water, eating in between meals, eating too
many refined foods. If your transit time is over 36 hours, you may have a
colon problem (or it could be elsewhere in the gastrointestinal tract). To
check your transit time chew 10 charcoal tablets before a meal, record the
time you ingested them. Watch your faeces and record the time the last of the
charcoal leaves (should appear black). The time between ingestion and the last
bit leaving is your transit time. After you’ve been treating your colon for
1-2 months you may want to recheck and see if it has improved.
- A diet low in roughage and high in refined carbohydrates can also cause
diverticulitis (the faeces are hardened and the extra strain to move them
causes the outpocketing), constipation, and bacterial changes (due to the
fermentation and putrefaction).
- People on a high fiber diet have lactobacillus and streptococcus as their
main intestinal flora. On a low fiber diet, E. coli proliferate (especially if
your refined carbohydrate intake - white flour, white sugar, etc., is high)
and can lead to diverticulitis, cystitis, appendicitis, gallbladder
inflammation. Antibiotic taking can also change the bacterial flora for the
worse.
- In a colon with a slowed transit time, bacterial imbalance, and low
roughage; bile acids upon reaching the colon can be converted into
carcinogenic substances. Staying in contact with the colon walls for long
periods of time, these substances can possibly be a cause of colon cancer.
This bile acid breakdown product (lithocholate) also signals the liver to
decrease bile acid production. Since cholesterol is used to synthesize bile
acids, a decreased synthesis will raise cholesterol levels and also increase
susceptibility to gallstones.
- People in "primitive" societies on diets of unrefined foods exhibit very
low incidences of colon problems.
- Causes of colitis include hypoadrenia, a weak immune system,
hypochlorhydria, decreased roughage, increased use of refined carbohydrates,
stress, antibiotics, eating food you’re allergic to.
- Besides an imbalance in intestinal flora, a high fat intake is correlated
to a high incidence of colon cancer. This includes refined animal and
vegetable fat. Meat fat when exposed to air can form malonaldehyde which is
especially suspect of causing colon cancer. Spices, beer, high protein diets,
and alcohol are also suspect in colon cancer.
- Nerve pressure in the lumbar spine can cause colon dysfunction
- Haemorrhoids can be caused by a congested liver, hypoadrenia, and a low
roughage, high refined carbohydrate diet.
- If your stomach or small intestine are malfunctioning or you don’t chew
well, and partially undigested food reaches the colon, it will putrefy and
could damage the colon as a result.
- Diarrhea can be a sign of colon dysfunction. It can also be due to eating
something you’re allergic to, a stuck open ileocecal valve, vitamin B
deficiency, medication side effects. It could also be your body’s effort to
flush through a harmful substance as quickly as possible.
- Constipation can injure the colon or be a sign of a malfunctioning colon.
Causes include a low roughage diet, allergy to milk, wearing restrictive
clothing, not drinking enough water, lack of exercise, chronic use of
laxatives, exhausting bowel tone, spastic ileocecal valve, worrying, side
effect of certain medications.
- Voluntarily inhibiting your external sphincter muscle too often, to
prevent defecation, can cause constipation and retard the reflex, leading to
an atonic colon. Establishing regularity is very important in preventing
constipation.
- The thyroid, adrenals, liver and parathyroid should also be evaluated in
cases of constipation as possible causes.
- Some also believe that a bowel movement should occur regular, aiding and
abetting nutritional cycles. Infrequent movements or periods of constipation
(especially those extending beyond 72 hours) can result in a partial
decomposition of waste, which can encrust the colon walls and hinder
elimination.
When we don't eliminate our waste, toxins back up in the colon which can
cause "auto-intoxication", or self-poisoning. This occurs when the bowel walls
become encrusted with uneliminated fecal matter, hampering the absorption of
vital nutrients and providing a breeding ground for unhealthy bacteria. Blood
capillaries lining the bowel wall absorb these toxins into the bloodstream,
consequently polluting all our organs and cells. When the walls of the colon are
packed (or lined) with accumulated faeces, the colon cannot absorb nutrients or
eliminate wastes properly. Food cannot be processed efficiently in the colon, if
unfriendly bacteria begins to grow. Fermentation and putrefaction of undigested
food results, and toxins (poisons) are formed.
There are some 36 poisons that pollute the body. They include
indole, skatole, phenol, creosole, putrescine, cadaverine, sepsin and others. In
cases of alimentary toxemia, one or several of these poisons are constantly
bombarding the delicate body cells. This can cause disease, one of which is the
dreaded colon cancer.
If the bowel is overworked or malfunctioning, the body will try to find other
areas of elimination, thus skin and other organ problems can all be symptoms.
Here is just a short list:
- Allergies
- Appendicitis
- Poor appetite
- Back and muscle aches
- Bad breath and body odors coated tongue
- Bloating
- Increased cholesterol levels
- Colitis or inflammation of the colon is marked by fever, weight loss,
weakness, abdominal pain, diarrhea. Inflammation of the mucous membrane lining
of the intestines that can lead to both diarrhea and constipation.
- Constipation: The infrequent or difficult elimination of faeces,
associated with the presence of dry hardened stools. Constipation can lead to
intestinal toxemia, which is a form of blood poisoning. Caused by the
absorption of bacteria and their toxins through the intestinal wall.
- Diarrhea: (frequent passage of watery bowel movements)
- Digestive difficulties
- Diverticulitis: little pockets (small herniations) formed in the weakend
colon wall that push out into the side of the bowel. Fecal material lodges in
the pockets to rot and irritate the colon. If they inflame it is called
diverticulitis and symptoms can include pain, tenderness, diarrhea or
constipation, fever.
- Eyesight problems
- Fatigue
- Gallstones
- Headaches
- Haemorrhoids are actually varicose veins in the rectal area. They can be
marked by pain, itching, bleeding, and distention upon straining to defecate.
Straining to eliminate hard, dry fecal material can irritate the rectum and
give rise to Haemorrhoids.
- The flora of the colon can become imbalanced which can manifest as a
burning pain somewhere in the body, especially the feet.
- Inflammation: Toxic material in the colon can inflame the lining. If you
have any doubt that this material is injurious to the body consider a little
baby and how you have to keep its diaper changed. If its bowel movement sits
too long against its tender skin, the skin becomes red, irritated and
inflamed. The body is pushing it out because it is toxic and irritating. That
is why it is important for bowel elimination to be quick and efficient.
- Irritable bowl: A disturbance of the intestinal contractions that move
food down the intestinal tract. This disorder cases constipation, gas,
colitis, diarrhea.
- Lethargy
- Memory loss
- Moodiness and irritability
- Sallow skin
- Skin rash
- Sinusitis
- Spastic Colon Muscular spasms in the colon can cause constipation. This
makes the elimination pattern erratic, with alternating periods of diarrhea
and constipation. Stress will increase Constipation.
- Stiff joints (especially knees),
- Stomach heaviness
- Weight problems
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