Meghan O'Rourke

  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    Susan Sontag pointedly observes in Illness as Metaphor
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    we all live in the nexus of radical interconnection
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. The HPA axis
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    fish oil capsules, which were huge—hard to swallow if I didn’t concentrate on getting a big enough gulp of water.

    Then I went through the supplements—glutathione, which reduced inflammation and helped detoxify my body (it helped me more than any other supplement I took); curcumin (concentrated turmeric), also to reduce inflammation; methylated folate and B12 because of the MTHFR polymorphisms; vitamin D; probiotics; pancreatic enzymes (to help absorb nutrients from my food); grapefruit seed extract; licorice to help with adrenal fatigue; and more.
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    petechiae, or hemorrhages of tiny capillaries.
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    n the bone marrow and the thymus, hordes of B and T cells, named for the parts of the body from which they come, are born and educated.
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    Inside my body, inflammation reigned, worsening at night, when the immune system’s production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and other T cells peaks. I
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    a 2005 study, researchers detected the presence of 287 industrial chemicals, including flame retardants, pesticides, and dioxins,
    in the fetal-cord blood of ten newborns. A 2021
    study identified 55 chemicals never before found in humans in maternal and fetal serum samples from pregnant women. Poignantly, breast milk has been shown to contain dry-cleaning chemicals, paint thinners, and flame retardants, among other chemicals.
  • Anischa Breytenbachhas quoted10 months ago
    But the question remains: why do women make up approximately 80 percent of people with autoimmune diseases? An answer may lie in the
    replicated X chromosome (which allows for a genetic mutation to happen twice) or in the role estrogen plays in regulating the immune system. Women generally have a stronger immune response to infections and vaccines than men do.
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