I read a little bit the link you provided. I don't know...I don't want to spend time on this now.Sorry, I don't mean to be dismissive. However, i do mean to ensure that the term 'CFS' is being properly applied. It is a horrible disease and people have the tendency to self-diagnose any kind of chronic fatigue as CFS without truly understanding what CFS even is. This is very harmful to those who actually are suffering from the disease. CFS patients barely have the energy to bring awareness to their disease as it is, let alone fight against such misconceptions.
Are you familiar with post-exertional malaise (PEM)? If you don't have it, you don't have CFS. If you do, you have my condolences, and I hope you understand why I'm being so anal about this. Post-exertional malaise - MEpedia
Though the notion of every illnesa starting in the gut sounds good, it's far from being true. If you feel that it doesn't apply to your case, the reason is not that you're an exception, but rather that the premise is questionable. Nevertheless, getting your liver and intestines working is no doubt a big piece of the puzzle, and for what it's worth, I've come across a case of someone curing themselves of CFS with a simple treatment of coffee enemas, milk thistle and ALA.
My question was about LPS and how is it possible that there is a reference range on the lower end instead of "the lower, the better"?
If somebody has experience with this?
What would mean my LPS is below reference range? Is that even good since there is a lower value on the range?
Also, I was perplexed by one other thing.
Why is that I feel so good and heavenly when I eat those protein bars which have a ton of sugar alcohols? They ferment in the gut and they are supposed to be bad for the gut. 4-6 hours after eating them my gut starts to produce gas, but I also feel so heavenly.
I stopped eating them cause in theory they are destroying my gut and feeding bad bacteria, but they make me feel very good.
Anybody has explanation about this?
Thanks