Deposits and toxins
Where do deposits and toxins come from?
Deposits and toxins are chemical substances that are produced in the body as a result of incomplete digestion of food and incomplete metabolism or that enter the body from outside. Deposits accumulate in cells and in the extracellular space, lymph (tissue fluid), and on the intestinal walls as ballast that burdens the body. In this way they can accumulate for years. Unlike deposits, toxins are more aggressive and quickly cause a general state of poor well-being, cause irritability, sleep and appetite disorders, and also a decrease in the body's performance without any clear symptoms of a specific disease. In the vast majority, deposits are fat-soluble and acidic compounds, therefore they are transported in the body mainly via the lymphatic route, with the help of lymph, which contains more fat than blood. For this reason lymph becomes thick and sticky and its flow slows down, so it does not fulfill its function related to nourishing tissues and cleansing them of harmful products of metabolism. Deposits and toxins accumulate not only in extracellular fluid, but also in cells containing fat structures, mainly in the brain. Nerve cells are inhibited by harmful substances, so they work inefficiently and slowly. The protective action against infections slows down and during convalescence after acute illnesses, which causes the disease to become chronic. These substances cause some of the most serious disorders of metabolic processes, inhibit the production of a sufficient amount of energy that is necessary for effective physical and mental work and for fighting diseases attacking the body. Therefore, even despite the lack of clear signs of disease, the body works with disruptions and is not at full capacity, and when the disease begins, it is not able to fight it on its own. The disease becomes chronic, which forces us to take medications that cause the accumulation of an ever larger amount of deposits.



