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Herbal Axis™

Derek Clontz says, "The human gut, specifically the gut microbiome, is a complex ecosystem with intricate, bidirectional connections to virtually every organ system in the body.
"Your grandmother, great grandmother, and great-grandmother probably would have put it this way, 'Live begins in the colon, honey—and you better take care of it, because so does death.'
"Traditional herbalists then and now would tell you the same. Here, for our purposes, is up-to-the-minute that you can read and consider and discuss with your doctor. I encourage you read on and even research the matter further. 
"If you gut is sick, struggling, or stressed, it won't be long before you have pituary, heart, vision, liver, kidney, pancreatic, brain and other failures that could wreck you life or even worse.
 
"Everybody's heard about the gut-brain axis, but fewer are aware of the gut-eyes, gut-lungs, gut-liver, gut-heart and other axes, axes being the plural form of axis. That's a shame. Knowledge is, as they say, power, in this context, meaning the power to enjoy glowing good, feel-good health instead of slogging through your days and tossing and turning through your nights wondering if your suffering will ever end."
 
Consumer Advisory. Statements and information are for informational purposes only and they are not to be construed as medical advice. If you are sick, consult a doctor you trust before trying to diagnose and treat yourself. Dietary supplements that appear on this Web site are foods, not drugs, and they have not been evaluated as drugs by the FDA. They are not intended to help you diagnose, treat, mitigate, prevent or cure any illness.
 
The gut-brain axis
 
This is a complex communication system between the central nervous system (CNS), which includes the brain and spinal cord, and the enteric nervous system (ENS), or "second brain," in the gut. 
 
The gut-liver axis
 
This is a bidirectional relationship involving the gut, the gut microbiota, and the liver. 
 
The gut-immune system axis
 
This axis is crucial for training and regulating the immune system, with 70-80% of the body's immune cells located in the gut.
 
The gut-cardiovascular axis
 
The gut and its microbiome significantly influence heart and vascular health. 

The gut-kidney axis

The kidney and gut share a reciprocal relationship, with dysfunction in one affecting the other.

 
The gut-lung axis
 
This bidirectional communication pathway links the gut microbiome and lung health.
The gut-skin axis
 
The gut microbiome influences skin health through communication involving the immune system and metabolites.
The gut-endocrine axis
 
This axis involves the bidirectional communication between the gut microbiome and the body's hormonal systems.