Revere the Exclusion Nature of the Human Body

Cheng En, Liu, Gang Song, Rong Li
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Abstract

Overusing artificial interventions such as intravenous infusion of antimicrobial agents or chemotherapy drugs can lead to adverse reactions (ADRs). The underlying biochemical mechanisms of these ADRs are widely studied but rarely from the evolutionary perspective. Extending the concept of evolution that man must adapt to nature to survive, we propose that medicine should adapt to the nature of the human body. It enables us to point out a mechanism that unnatural drugs entering the body in an unnatural way will trigger excessive free radicals to attack the body, which may be the common source of adverse reactions to infusion and chemotherapy. On the contrary, due to the long-term adaptation of the human body, intestinal digestion of herbal medicines is relatively less likely to stimulate excessive free radicals, and tea drinking is significantly beneficial to clearing excessive free radicals. Our research supports a shift towards an evolutionary-aware medicinal approach that aligns with human physiology to minimize ADRs. Further investigation is required to verify and incorporate this mechanism into clinical practice, which could significantly enhance treatment safety and effectiveness.
敬畏人体的排他性
过度使用人工干预(如静脉注射抗菌剂或化疗药物)会导致不良反应(ADRs)。这些不良反应的生化机制已被广泛研究,但很少从进化论的角度进行研究。进化论认为,人类必须适应自然才能生存,从这一概念出发,我们提出医学应适应人体的性质。这使我们能够指出一种机制,即非自然的药物以非自然的方式进入人体,会引发过多的自由基攻击人体,这可能是输液和化疗不良反应的常见根源。相反,由于人体的长期适应性,肠道消化中药相对不容易激发过多的自由基,饮茶对清除过多的自由基有明显的好处。我们的研究支持向符合人体生理学的进化意识药物方法转变,以最大限度地减少 ADR。我们还需要进一步的研究来验证这一机制,并将其应用于临床实践,从而大大提高治疗的安全性和有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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