Friday, May 24, 2013

Effects of Sea Water in the Body

March 30, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

Effects of Sea Water in the BodyThe close collaboration between the peptides as seawater and explain the action so deep that sea water exerts on our bodies.

In the mid-eighties, a group of researchers led by neuroscientist Candace Pert U.S., discovered that a group of molecules called peptides (derived protein) are the molecular messengers that facilitate conversation between the nervous, immune and endocrine systems. That is, these messengers connect three separate systems into one network.

It has always been considered that these three systems are separate and have different functions. The nervous system consists of the brain and a network of nerve cells, is the seat of memory, thought, body sensation and emotion.

The endocrine system consists of glands and their hormone secretions, and integrates controls as the main regulatory system of the body, various body functions. The immune system, consisting of the spleen, bone marrow, lymph nodes and immune cells, is the body’s defense system, responsible for the integrity of the cells, tissues and organs.

Research on peptides have shown that these conceptual gaps can no longer stay with a single psychosomatic network.

The peptides are a family of sixty to seventy macromolecules that traditionally received different names: hormones, neurotransmitters, endorphins, growth factors and so on. Is now seen to actually form a single family of molecular messengers. These messengers are short chains of amino acids that bind to specific receptors abundantly on the surfaces of all body cells.

In uniting the three systems on the same network, the peptides are the messengers that circulate freely in this network reaching all corners of the body. Are transformed into biochemical manifestation of memory, thought, bodily sensation, emotion, hormone levels, the defensive capacity of the integrity of cells, tissues and organs. All parts of the body and mind “know” what is happening in all other parts of the body and mind. It is an integrated information system.

But not only that. The following findings further expanded the concept and role of peptides. It turned out that hormones, supposedly produced exclusively by the glands, are also peptides that are produced and battlements in the brain. One type of neurotransmitters called endorphins, which, it was thought, were produced only in the brain, are peptides and are also produced by immune cells. Were followed more and more identified peptides and receptors was known that virtually any peptide is produced in the brain and body parts simultaneously varis.

In the words of Candace Pert:

“I can not make a clear distinction between brain and body.”

The peptides of the nervous system are not only produced by neurons and play a key role in communication throughout the nervous system, but, away from fixed receivers that originated neurons are active in various other parts of the body.

In the immune system’s white blood cells not only have receptors for all peptides, but they make themselves peptides. Peptides control the pattern of migration of immune cells and all vital functions. Remember that all leukocytes are motile cells, allowing them to exit the capillaries slipping through the intercellular spaces of the wall (diapedesis) and migrate by amoeboid movement toward any microorganisms or foreign particles that have invaded the tissues. Therefore, not only are able to reach all corners of the body carried by the blood, but also escape from the blood and move through the interstitial fluids which bathe the cells.

Another important finding is that the peptides are the biochemical manifestation of emotions. The majority of the peptides, if not all, alter behavior and mood, so that each peptide can evoke an emotional one. The peptides are the biochemical universal language of emotions. The brain area associated with emotions is the limbic system. The limbic system is highly enriched with peptides, but not the only body area is rich in peptides. The entire intestine also is lined with receptor peptides. So what happens is colloquially called “the gut feeling.” Literally feel our emotions to the intestine.

This wealth of peptide receptors in white blood cells in the intestine may explain the action of sea water, both by intravenous injection (white blood cell receptor), as in eating (receiving the intestine and blood) and by enema (recipients of intestinal and blood) is capable of producing changes not only physically but also mentally, to directly influence emotional states. All sensory perceptions, all thoughts and all bodily functions would be “touched by the emotion through the peptides and the peptides act as messengers from seawater directly into the body.

According to Candace Pert: “The white blood cells are floating pieces of the brain throughout the body.”

The peptides would capture molecular messages from seawater and would become, for his tremendous wealth and spread throughout the body, the transmitters of these ancient messages.

This very close collaboration between the peptides and seawater explain the action exerted so deep seawater in the body, not only physically but also mentally and simultaneously.

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