Antibiotics and fasting
I am really interested in your opinion about my hypothesis, which has been ripening in my head for the past several years. The idea is that by combining an antibiotic therapy with fasting one can greatly increase the efficiency of fasting as a health improvement method.
A very interesting idea.
due to some personal history, I have never had faith in "autoimmune" paradigm, having been the follower of the pathogen etiology of all diseases (aside from obvious poisonings, trauma and genetic mishaps, of course).
Autoimmunity and infectious pathogens are intimately related, and it is quite probably that most, if not all, autoimmune states and diseases are directly caused by chronic infections with pathogens. Many microbes are known to ramp up autoimmunity once they enter the body, particularly enteroviruses. Autoimmunity is your own body attacking itself in error, but evidence suggests that it is the pathogens in your body that precipitates and maintains this autoimmunity in the first place.
So autoimmunity, which drives numerous diseases, is likely just another facet of the pernicious effects that infectious pathogens have in the body. If you wiped out the pathogens in your body, I suspect all autoimmunity you have would soon subside.
There are ruffly two types of the bugs: those that succumb to autophagy and those that exploit it for their own growth. Thus, if you only have bugs of the first type, a week or two of fasting should cure you. But if you have both types then you are basically screwed, because as you upregulate autophagy to fight the first type of bugs, the second type proliferates, and visa versa.
So your idea would, in theory, work best to fight intracellular bacterial pathogens that are the type that succumb to autophagy, rather than the ones that exploit it for their own growth.
You need to make a list of which intracellular bacterial pathogens are the ones that succumb to autophagy, as these are perhaps the ones that your approach would work on.
I noticed long ago that fasting immediately after a course of antibiotics not only prevents such unpleasant problem from occurring in the first place, but that the fast itself proceeds much easier and gives better results.
Very interesting. Perhaps taking high dose prebiotics and probiotics before a fast might achieve similar results, by reducing pathogenic bacteria in the gut.
I believe that combining antibiotics with fasting, we can achieve remarkable results. (I never used antibiotics during a fast, but only just before or the first couple of days going into).
Remember though that intracellular bacteria are just one class of pathogen. Autophagy would not work for killing extracellular bacteria that live outside of human cells (which is a large set of bacteria).
Autophagy perhaps might work for killing viruses in their latent state. Latent viruses wait inside your cells for a chance to reactivate; some just wait until the immune system, is weak, and then they reactivate and break out of the human cell they were hiding in, and go off to infect more cells. This is how herpes simplex virus works: it waits inside your cells for the right moment, and then when your immune system is weak, it activates, breaks out of your cells, and you get a cold sore.
Viral latency is the mechanism that allows viral infections to remain in our bodies for life.
It would also be interesting to find which viruses succumb to autophagy, and then, adapting your idea, use fasting plus the appropriate antivirals to attack those viruses.
This fasting plus antivirals will not work for enteroviruses, because I just checked, and found out that enteroviruses exploit autophagy for replication, so fasting is not going to fight off lifelong enteroviruses infections. Shame because enteroviruses are linked to lots of diseases, including chronic fatigue syndrome, which I have.
Edited by Hip, 11 October 2012 - 06:39 AM.