Apoptosis is programmed cell death, a natural and controlled process where a cell intentionally self-destructs to remove old or damaged cells. This process is essential for health, development (like forming fingers), and preventing diseases like cancer, where it removes abnormal cells. During apoptosis, the cell shrinks, its contents are packaged into "apoptotic bodies," and it is then safely cleared away by scavenger cells without causing inflammation, unlike the destructive process of necrosis.

In my case, the apoptosis is caused by the reversal of the Na/K pump. This causes the cell to shrink and eventually die, resulting in candidiasis pecked in salts wrapped in a cell membrane.

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Wait I thought this was called Autophagy?

nostr:npub1pm5z0gmw3wcvl3yreuv8y7q3stz2zmzc4jar4ckhk927qdcwjwuq3txe07 help me here

The reversal of the Na/K pump, while having been documented in research, is not something that normally happens in the course of any known medical condition.

So, normal apoptosis is the first paragraph, mine is significantly different in that the cells are not consumed in the process (no autophagy). Eventually, if they are exposed to sugars and fluid, they are instead consumed by the candida that is locked within the cellular membrane which caused the reversal of the Na/K pump in the first place. Intracellular penetration of the candida allowed and caused by the dramatic shifts in gradients and altered immune response brought on by the change in pituitary function is what sets off the process.