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Home » Article » Health-and-Fitness Psoriasis and Immune System Disorder
Jerry G. Scott filed under "Health-and-Fitness"
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Medical science is on the verge of declaring psoriasis to be
strictly the result of an immune system malfunction. This is
information that has been known for some time, actually, but the
conservative nature of medical science has kept it out of the
mainstream until recently. While the news is exciting because
the cause is being uncovered, the direction this is all taking
is not. The direction is toward a number of new drugs called
biologics that interfere with the immune system’s functioning
and create further risks in the process.
First a little background. The small intestine has the dual
function of being a digestive/absorptive organ as well as a
barrier to keep out toxic compounds and macromolecules. Either
one of these functions may be disrupted by various mechanisms,
resulting in problems with 'leakage' into the bloodstream. When
this happens, it is called intestinal permeability, or leaky
gut. The intestine contains numerous bacteria with toxic
properties. These include certain bacteria and bacterial
antigens capable of inducing antibodies, as well as food
antigens that can produce immune system reactions. Also, studies
have shown that Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs)
disrupt the intestinal barrier function and cause increased
permeability, or Leaky Gut Syndrome. This is relevant for those
people with arthritis who are taking NSAIDs because the
increased permeability may be a factor in their disease process.
What does all this mean? It means that large food particles as
well as other unwanted things pass through your intestinal walls
and create havoc (immune responses etc.) It also means that
organs like your kidneys, liver, and skin are working overtime
to compensate for this imbalance. It means that you are
immune-compromised, and it means that it is highly likely that
you have a bacterial imbalance in your gut, some of which is
getting inside the body where it doesn’t belong. Absorption of
these normally-excluded substances increases accordingly. This
results in distribution in the blood of invasive macromolecules,
which results in inflammation. Increased permeability of the
mucosal barrier in the gut allows for excessive absorption of
bacteria, food antigens, and large molecules. When this breaks
down, antigens are allowed to enter the system in excessive
amounts, which leads to an immune system response in individuals
with psoriasis. This response involves specific white blood
cells called T-cells, which travel to the site of the psoriasis
and populate it, causing rapid proliferation of the skin cells
and inflammation. At first it was thought that T-cells
themselves were responsible for psoriasis, but it turns out that
it is this over activity acting as a catalyst for the production
of skin cells.
This is where things take a turn for the worse, because instead
of working with the immune system, the thrust of modern medicine
and their backers is to develop new drugs to knock out the
T-cell function of the immune system, thereby allowing excessive
skin cell growth to ‘settle down’. As effective as this may be
in the short run, it comes with cautions, namely the reduction
in efficiency of the immune system. T-cells are in the front
lines of defence for the body. It would appear to make more
sense to stop the process that produces T-cell proliferation.
Healing the lining of the intestinal walls so that antigens are
no longer allowed to pass through the walls into the bloodstream
can do this. In this way the immune system will no longer have a
reason to go into overdrive, when antigens are no longer
present. New drugs will only serve to do what drugs have always
done, which is to suppress symptoms. In the case of the new
biologics, it is suppression of the immune system. The root
cause will remain as long as the lining of the intestine is
allowed to deteriorate. There is another way to deal with the
whole matter.
About the author:
The author is a nutritionist who founded The Psoriasis
Connection (PCI) in 1998 and has just published the book
'Psoriasis the Real Way Out'. PCI's information can be seen at
www.psoriasisUSA.com.
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