Atman
Member
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2016
- Messages
- 393
The Aspirin might already be absorbed, but why do you think it has to work necessarily directly through the intestinal fluids?Seems like it would depend where exactly the biofilm is. I doubt there's any in the stomach, it's probably a lot further down in the GI tract. Aspirin is probably going to be totally absorbed long before it gets there.
So, where exactly is the biofilm, and how do you get something that breaks it up to where it needs to be?
It might as well work through systemic circulation, which also affects the mucous membranes of the small intestine and colon.
Ray mentioned that even small, regular doses of Aspirin can make the intestines very resistant to irritants.