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Fungal Infection Symptoms

CANDIDA'S PREFERRED TARGETS 

Candida albicans primarily targets the nerves and muscles, yet it can attack any tissue or organ, depending on your body's genetic predisposition. Mild symptoms of yeast overgrowth are fatigue, gas, bloating, heartburn, brain fog, weight gain, constipation, arthritic pain, sinus infections, high and low blood sugar, allergies, depression, and anxiety. More severe conditions can eventually develop, including autoimmune diseases and cancer.
 


To understand how candida penetrates through your system, think of your body as having two skins of protection that keep out foreign invaders. One is the outside skin and the other your inside skin, which starts in your nasal passages and runs all the way down to your rectum. This tissue is the same from top to bottom, and if it becomes inflamed or irritated, the membranes become more porous, allowing foreign invaders to enter the bloodstream. In the journal Infection and Immunity, Michael J. Kennedy and Paul A. Volz explain, "The passage of viable Candida albicans through the gastrointestinal (GI) mucosa into the bloodstream is believed to be an important mechanism leading to systemic candidosis."
 
Cellular disruption occurs when Candida albicans and its mycotoxins have accumulated in the body. This disruption causes secondary body systems to deteriorate. Mycotoxins so severely debilitate the body that victims could become "easy prey for far more serious diseases such as acquired immune deficiency syndrome, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, colitis, regional ileitis, schizophrenia, and possibly death from candida septicemia," say Kennedy and Volz. Your genetic weaknesses usually determine which system or organs will be affected.
 
SETTING OFF A CASCADE OF IMBALANCES 

Candida overgrowth creates a cascade of imbalances in the body. Three major areas worth noting are the proliferation of other microorganisms, imbalances in the hormonal system, and emotional disturbances, especially anxiety and depression.
 
Bacteria, Parasites, and Viruses 

Unfortunately, once the body's internal environment is out of balance, not only does candida multiply but so do other microorganisms. Why? Because a poor diet and/or high stress levels elevate blood sugar in the body, which in turn feeds bacteria, parasites, and viruses. One of the most common viral infections, Epstein-Barr virus, also known as mononucleosis, cannot surface without the presence of yeast overgrowth. Therefore, when treating candida, I suggest using a broad-spectrum antimicrobial herbal remedy that addresses not only yeast and fungus but bacteria, parasites, and viruses as well.
 
Endocrine Imbalances 

Candida overgrowth indirectly impacts the functioning of the endocrine system, which releases hormones that regulate the body's metabolic activity. The endocrine system consists of the hypothalamus, pituitary, thyroid, thymus, adrenals, pancreas, and ovaries or testes.
 
Problems related to these glands and organs include low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), diabetes, and obesity, all of which are increasing at alarming proportions in the United States. Hypothyroidism is rampant, especially among women. And the ailment most common across the board with males and females is adrenal exhaustion, where the adrenals output chronically high cortisol levels, resulting in fatigue, low immunity, anxiety, insomnia, and weight gain.
 
The primary aggravators of these conditions are a poor diet, consisting of refined carbohydrates and sugar, and unmanaged stress. The secondary aggravator is yeast overgrowth.
 
Over the years, I have had many clients say to me, "Why can't I lose weight? I'm eating healthy foods and exercising and can't drop a pound." The missing link is clearing the body of infection by getting rid of candida overgrowth, which eliminates inflammation and allows the body systems to normalize. Eradicate candida and watch the inches and pounds drop as your endocrine system comes back into balance.

Emotional and Mental Imbalances
 
Depression and anxiety are widespread and can, in part, be related to chronic yeast overgrowth in the tissues. The reason, as described by J. P. Nolan in an article in the journal Hepatology, is the link between the gut and the brain: "An individual's ability to protect against brain-active substances depends upon the status of his or her intestinal flora, GI mucosal function and hepatic (liver) detoxification ability." This means that when leaky gut is present and the liver is overstressed, the door is open for toxins to reach the brain via the bloodstream.


Unfortunately, too many physicians assume that all mental and emotional imbalances have psychological causes, such as neuroses or psychoses, rather than brain-related causes, as Dr. Orian C. Truss points out in The Missing Diagnosis: 

I would like to make a special plea that we speak of manifestations of abnormal brain function not as "mental symptoms" but as "brain symptoms." Inherent in the term "mental symptom" is the connotation that somehow "the mind" is a separate entity from the brain, that "mental" symptoms are occurring (at least initially) in a brain that is functioning normally chemically and physiologically. We speak of kidney, liver, or intestinal symptoms when abnormal function manifests itself in these organs, but we use the term "mental symptoms" rather than "brain symptoms" when a similar problem occurs with brain physiology.


Having anxiety and/or depression can be debilitating, and it's important to understand that the cause may not be purely psychological but also chemical. Mycotoxins from fungus need to be considered when tackling these conditions. When this is a contributing factor, clearing fungal overgrowth from the system will help clear your mind and bring your body chemistry back into balance. To find out more, you can check out Fungal Infection Symptoms.

What Do You Get Yeast Infections From

ANTIBIOTICS: CREATING A VICIOUS YEAST CYCLE 

It takes only one dose of antibiotics in your lifetime to raise your yeast levels and create imbalances in your body. If you last took a course of antibiotics when you were ten years old, a poor diet and high stress levels will continue to feed the yeast over time until you begin to feel symptomatic.
 
What Do You Get Yeast Infections From

North America, especially the United States and Canada, and pockets of Europe, have the highest numbers of people with candidiasis because Western medicine's standard protocol is to use antibiotic therapy for common infections.
 
A vicious cycle starts with the use of antibiotics. For example, you have a cold or the flu and you visit your doctor, who prescribes antibiotics. The problem starts right there because colds and flu are viral infections, not bacterial ones, which is what antibiotics are designed for. Antibiotics are useless against colds and flu, yet many doctors prescribe them anyway. When you take the antibiotic it kills both good and bad bacteria in your gastrointestinal tract, as it cannot distinguish between them. Antibiotics do not affect Candida albicans, so without friendly bacteria like Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacteria, which keep the Candida albicans under control, the candida now multiplies.

There is no question that antibiotics have saved thousands of lives, but we've pushed a good thing too far by overprescribing these medications. Overuse also creates "super germs" that are resistant to common antibiotics, so germs that could once be killed off have now become life threatening.

As I mentioned, it takes only one dose of antibiotics to raise your yeast levels. Think about how many times you've taken antibiotics - not to mention the antibiotics you ingest from consuming dairy and animal products. The majority of antibiotics manufactured today are given to cows and chickens because they are infested with infection due to their poor housing conditions. So unless you are eating antibiotic-free and hormone-free animal protein, you are ingesting these drugs and hormones when you eat these foods.
 

CANDIDA'S TOXIC BY-PRODUCTS 

Once candida is in an overgrowth state, the body has to deal not only with the overgrowth but also with the toxic by-products, or mycotoxins, that Candida albicans puts out - "79 at latest count," according to C. Orian Truss, MD - all of which weaken your immune system and attack the body.

Mycotoxins are neurotoxins that destroy and decompose tissues and organs. They are so powerful that they upset the very communication of cell interactions, disrupt RNA and DNA synthesis, damage and destroy neurons, are carcinogenic, and cause ataxia (lack of coordination) and even convulsions. These pernicious yeast toxins confuse body systems, which accounts for the cross-wiring problems of the immune system whereby the body attacks itself, as in those with autoimmune diseases.
 

Candida toxins commonly get through the gut lining when it becomes leaky and enter the bloodstream, where the liver can detoxify them. However, if the liver's detoxification ability is impaired due to inadequate nutrition and toxic overload, these toxins will settle in other organs and tissues, such as the brain, nervous system, joints, skin, and so forth. Over time, chronic disease will occur. 

One of the major toxins produced from Candida albicans is acetaldehyde, which is transformed by the liver into ethanol (alcohol), creating feelings of intoxication, brain fog, vertigo, and a loss of equilibrium. Acetaldehyde also alters the structure of red blood cells and the transportation pathways of materials that are needed to feed the dendrites (nerve cell extensions), causing the dendrites to atrophy and die off. In addition, acetaldehyde creates a deficiency of thiamine (vitamin B1), a vitamin that is critical for brain and nerve function and essential for the production of acetylcholine, one of the braids major neurotransmitters. This deficiency brings on emotional apathy, depression, fatigue, insomnia, confusion, and memory loss. 


Acetaldehyde also depletes niacin (vitamin B3), which is key to helping the cells burn fat and sugar for energy. Niacin plays an important role in the production of serotonin, a neurotransmitter that affects mood and sleep, and in producing a coenzyme that breaks down alcohol. In addition, acetaldehyde reduces enzymes in the body that help to produce energy in all cells, including brain cells.

Gliotoxin, another mycotoxin, deactivates important enzymes that move toxins through the body and also causes DNA changes in the white blood cells, which suppresses the immune system. As your immune system continues to weaken from fungus and mycotoxins, more infections arise, and you end up at the doctor's office again - being prescribed more antibiotics and perpetuating the vicious cycle. To find out more, you can check out What Do You Get Yeast Infections From.

Candida Albicans Disease

Many of the most common symptoms and illnesses that plague us today - from fatigue, bloating, and weight gain to prostatitis, brain fog, arthritis, allergies, depression, and multiple sclerosis - can be traced back to a surprising source. Yeast.
 
Yeast overgrowth, called candida, is pandemic today and affects millions. Conservatively speaking, one in three people suffers from yeast-related symptoms or conditions. While women immediately associate candida with vaginal yeast infections, men hear the word fungus and think it's the problem they're having with their toenails. But it's much more.
 
Candida Albicans Disease

In addition to the conditions I've already named, candida is associated with persistent symptoms like ear and sinus problems, upper respiratory infections, PMS, fibroids, endometriosis, hypothyroidism, hypoglycemia, acne, and anxiety as well as more severe conditions such as autoimmune diseases, fibromyalgia, lupus, autism, mental illness, and even cancer.
 
How can yeast be such a significant health factor when so many don't even know about it? Simply because Western medicine continues to quietly ignore the connection between yeast overgrowth and the overuse of prescription drugs, especially antibiotics, and other common offenders, including diet and even the air we breathe.
 
WHAT IS CANDIDA

Candida albicans is a harmless yeast, a type of fungus, that lives naturally in everyone's body: male, female, and child alike. In a healthy body, it lives symbiotically in a balanced environment in the gastrointestinal tract, on the mucous membranes, and on the skin. Unfortunately, this harmless yeast can overgrow and turn into an opportunistic pathogen.
 
As Dr. Michael Goldberg states: "Because it is a commensal organism [one that benefits from another organism without damaging or benefiting it] present in virtually all human beings from birth, it is ideally positioned to take immediate advantage of any weakness or debility in the host, and probably has few equals in the variety and severity of the infections for which it is responsible."
 
Candida overgrowth and its by-products, mycotoxins, can attack any organ or system in your body. The attack is relentless, twenty-four hours a day, until treated. If not arrested, yeast, a single-celled organism, will change form - into a pathogenic fungus with roots that causes myriad symptoms. Throughout the blog, I will be using the words yeast and fungus interchangeably.
 
This fungus burrows its roots into the intestinal lining and creates leaky gut - porous openings in the gut lining - which allows the fungus and its by-products to escape into the bloodstream. According to an article in the journal Science, "Candida albicans is the most common human systemic pathogen, causing both mucosal and systemic infections, particularly in immunocompromised people." A systemic fungal infection is called candidiasis.
 
LIFESTYLE FACTORS THAT ENCOURAGE CANDIDA OVERGROWTH 

The major causes of Candida albicans overgrowth are antibiotics, steroids (e.g., cortisone and prednisone), birth control pills, estrogen replacement therapy, poor diet, chemotherapy, radiation, heavy metals, alcohol overuse, recreational drugs, and stress. Other contributing factors include heavy metals in our silver amalgam fillings and the lead and cadmium in polluted air. All of the above directly or indirectly destroy the good bacteria in our gastrointestinal tract, allowing yeast to take over.
 
Yeast overgrowth thrives in the presence of diets high in refined sugars, refined carbohydrates, dairy products, alcohol, processed foods, and hormones secreted as a result of high stress levels. Acute and chronic stress elevates cortisol, a hormone produced by the adrenal glands (small glands that sit on top of each kidney). Excessive cortisol, in turn, raises blood sugar. The fungus doesn't care whether the increased sugar in your body is due to eating a candy bar or to having an episode of extreme stress; it will use the sugar as fuel to reproduce itself.
 
Once an imbalance occurs, yeast continues to multiply as it is fed by sugar in any form - alcohol, desserts, white flour, dairy products like milk and cheese, and elevated sugar levels caused by high stress. As years go by, mild to severe health conditions appear.
 

It is easy to see why the incidence of candidiasis is so high - the main contributing factors are various mainstream Western medicine protocols, rampant poor diet, and the stress overload so prevalent in our society today.

Western medicine may deny that yeast causes these myriad conditions, but the truth is that fungal toxins - the by-products produced by the yeast - disrupt cellular communication. Once that happens, inflammation and infection settle wherever we are genetically weak. To find out more, you can check out Candida Albicans Disease.
 

Overgrowth Of Yeast On Skin - Success Story (Part 2)

Overgrowth Of Yeast On Skin

Everything changed the day I went to a bookstore and found Yeast Infection No More. The moment I opened the book, I recognized myself: The depression, mood swings, irritability, severe PMS, crying for no reason, needing a nap in the middle of the day.

I finally got serious about the Yeast-Fighting Program during the first week in March and I started visiting this blog, where I found lots more information and the support of people who are going through similar health crises.
 
Overgrowth Of Yeast On Skin

Within days of really eliminating yeast, I felt like a different person! I started losing weight at a very good pace. In just two months, the change in my mood was like night and day. I didn't feel depressed at all. For nearly 20 years, depression was like a black cloud in my head all the time. It just went away. It's not there anymore!

How To Treat Yeast Overgrowth - Success Story

How To Treat Yeast Overgrowth

All this talk about weight loss is intellectual until you see it applied to someone who is a real example and an inspiration. Let me introduce you to Michelle, a 37-year old woman who works as a caregiver at a training school for the developmentally disabled. She is also a budding artist. Michelle, who successfully utilized the Yeast-Fighting Program, generously, openly and honestly shares her dramatic story below.  

MICHELLE'S STORY 

I've spent most of my adult life profoundly depressed. I can trace it back now to the time I got my first urinary tract infection (UTI) right after I graduated from high school. Of course, my doctor put me on antibiotics. And I got more of the same every time I got another UTI - which has been about three times a year for nearly 20 years now. The doctors decided I had a short urethra and recommended surgery, but I resisted.

How To Treat Yeast Overgrowth

When I was in college, I was very depressed and unmotivated, despite my passion for my major, art. I just couldn't seem to concentrate and seemed to be walking around in a fog all the time. I couldn't keep up my studies, so I dropped out after two years.