...excessively dry lips, gas, bloating, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, jaundice.
Thank you for this very informative post, in which you mentioned #diabetes. You are right, there are many parasites that affect humans. Most of these are innocuous, but some can be deadly. I was wondering, is there any specific scientific evidence to support the claim of parasites causing diabetes though? There have been some great ethnobotanical and ethnomedicine studies done recently in some countries, to validate traditional and indigenous knowledge, using the scientific method, with such tools as taxonomy, microbiology, cytology, phytochemistry, etc. It would be great to see some verifiable results of such a study to validate the claim that parasites can cause diabetes.
Your post has been curated by @frittro of the Hive Diabetes Peer Support (HDPS) Community. We are a new HIVE Community and curation account created recently, and officially launched on 1-Apr-2022, here on the social blockchain and on Discord. Our goal is to become a place to discuss your own or a loved one's experience of diabetes, for shared mutual peer support and encouragement.
What is claimed is that when the parasites enter the pancreas, which is responsible for the secretion of insulin, which in turn is involved in regulating the metabolism of carbohydrates and fats by stimulating the absorption of glucose from the blood by storing fat. We can imagine what happens when there are worms or another type of parasite. When this function of the pancreas is impaired, it weakens our entire immune system. When something is wrong with the body, the entire circulatory system responds by raising blood pressure to deliver the oxygen and nutrients it needs to heal the affected area, while interferon in the blood destroys the infection. High blood pressure, therefore, is simply a consequence, not a disease in itself. I will look for more information