Detoxification Pathways
Cross-source consensus on Detoxification Pathways from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- The liver converts fat-soluble toxins into water-soluble metabolites for excretion. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview
- Phase 3 consists of bowel movements, urination, and sweating as physical elimination pathways. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview
- Upregulating Phase 1 without supporting Phase 2 is described as a critical error. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview
- If Phase 2 cannot keep up with Phase 1, reactive intermediate metabolites accumulate and generate damaging reactive oxygen species. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview
- Antioxidants are required to quench reactive intermediates from detoxification. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview
- A detox protocol should not begin in a constipated patient because toxins may be reabsorbed from the colon. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview
- MTHFR methylation is presented as only one Phase 2 route rather than a uniquely critical bottleneck. — Toxins and Detoxification Pathways: A Functional Medicine Overview