Posts Tagged ‘Bacteria’
The importance of the lymphatic system in whole fitness
General physical condition, or what some call the “health”, according to the fineness of the lymphatic system. Without this flow, we will not waste our body. The lymphatic system functions as a sewer system, and this system is more important than the circulatory system of the body.
Many people are too concerned about what they put into their bodies, they worry if it’s good for them or not. They do not even think about removing or flushing of waste, particularly the cellular waste and dead cells.
The waste is not only what was in the large intestine. The trash in the large intestine is not as important as eliminating waste in the cells. There are about 100 trillion cells in the body that secrete waste. They also die in the body. All this must be conducted in the lymphatic system and be removed from the body, otherwise the waste will remain whole and make the infection. And when the infection there long enough he will do an attack viruses, bacteria and yeasts or fungi — kind of investment / infections that people do not know what to do.
What Causes Infection?
Contact with potentially infectious micro-organisms such as bacteria, viruses, and fungi is common. The body’s normal resistance is usually enough to prevent the organisms from taking hold in the body, but if the organisms are very virulent or if a your resistance is low, then an infectious illness results. Infections spread from person to person, sometimes directly and sometimes via food or another medium.
Bacteria
Bacteria come in three basic shapes: spherical (such as the streptococci and staphylococci), rod-shaped (such as E. coli and whooping cough bacilli) and spiral (such as cholera bacteria). Bacteria can live in a wide variety of environments such as in soil, food and in the body. Certain types are normally present in parts of the body such as the bowel and on the skin, and many perform useful functions, helping the body to run smoothly. Illness can be caused by an overgrowth of these ‘normal’ bacterial colonies or by invasion of the body by disease-provoking or ‘pathogenic’ bacteria. Bacterial infections can be treated with antibiotics.
