What Is Candida
Albicans?
Just what is candida albicans exactly? It is a
plant like fungus with an absence of any sexual form. Candida
begins its life as yeast, which all people have in their
digestive systems and other mucous membranes. It is kept under
control by the good bacteria that we received from the breasts
of our mothers and what entered our mouths as we passed thru
the birth canal. This good bacteria quickly sets up colonies
and becomes 75% of our immune system. It keeps bad bacteria,
viruses, and yeasts and fungi at bay so we remain healthy and
happy throughout our lives. These good guys compose 85% of our
bacterial colony and the other 15% is the bad bacteria and
yeasts.
However, they are fragile and can be easily
killed. The flip side of that is, they also reproduce quickly
and in the right environment, one bacteria can become billions
in a very short time. But the modern environment that we have
created for ourselves is not conducive for good bacterial
growth in most cases. We are exposed to toxins and junk foods
on a daily basis, both in the home and outside of the home.
The water we drink and the air we breathe are
full of chemicals. The foods we eat offer very little if any
nutritional value and we have depleted our farmlands of
nutrients. Then, if that wasn't enough, we take toxic medicines
at an alarming rate. So much so that the average American is
taking 3 prescription medications on a daily basis. All this
contributes to the balance of good bacteria to yeast within our
intestines.
The good bacteria can become depleted enough
that yeast, which is a single celled organism gets out of
control. If the food supply is good candida albicans lives as a
yeast that reproduces by budding. If the carbohydrate food
supply is limited it shifts to the mycelial form and sends out
root like hyphea in search of food. The mycelial form of
candida is usually how it first becomes invasive and infects
its host.
Candida albicans can mate by sending out hyphea
or root like legs. When two of these roots meet, they can split
one of their cells and combine to form a new cell or spore. It
mates with itself and passes on the genetic codes to the new
spore.
The single spore form actually creates a new
bud by splitting the nucleus and forming two spores. When the
new spore is fully grown it breaks off from the mother spore.
The single spore form is the most basic form of candida yeast.
Interestingly enough candida glabrata does not produce hyphea
but only spores.
It also has a form called pseudohyphae that is
not a bud form or mycelial form but is a chain of spores strung
together before the chain becomes a true hyphae.
Candida albicans also has the ability to shift
from a gray flat rod like colony to a smooth white colony, it
also has a rough or hairy form. This switching ability and the
different forms are a means of adaptation and survival and is
passed on to its offspring.
Studies have revealed that although the 200
different species of candida are very similiar, but they do
have slightly different dna structures. However, what is really
interesting about candida is that when mice were injected with
candida tropicalis and latter tested to see what species of
candida the mice were infected with, they would find only
candida albicans.
Even in invitro studies where candida was
subjected to ultraviolet light but not enough to kill it, the
candida adapted and shifted forms or changed species. In ideal
conditions this shifting ability can happen at rates as high as
10 to the 10th power. This switching ability is what leads us
to believe that candida uses this ability to infect a large
range of different body sites.
The most common species of candida that infect
humans are: Candida albicans, candida glabrata, candida
tropicalis, candida krusei, candida kefyr, candida
guilliermondii, candida parapsilosis and c. albicans has
actually been classified into two types. All these species grow
best at a temperature of 68 to 100.4 farenheight with 98.6
being ideal for albicans and tropicalis. They do prefer a ph
range of 2.5 to 7.5 and the human body perfectly matches this
environment.
This ph information flies in the face of the
acidity concept that making your body alkaline is the cure but
that is the way it is. However, over acidity caused by modern
day diets that sit in the intestine for up to 100 hours and
ferment create alcohols and toxins that kill good bacteria. The
death of these bacteria alter the 85 to 15% ratio and allow
candida yeast to get out of control. These bacteria also
regulate t-cell function and as their populations decline so
does immune function. Further more, candida does die at a ph
range of 8.2 or higher just like cancer, but it is almost
impossible to get the ph of the body that high.
The species are separated mostly on the basis
of their physiological properties. Each species of candida has
abilities and inabilities to assimilate various organic
compounds for growth. The preferred compound is carbohydrates
and is the sole source of carbon for growth.
Other than needing carbohydrates for the
production of carbon to grow, candida albicans needs certain
vitamins as well. Candida ablicans, candida tropicalis and
candida parapsilosis need biotin to grow.
Candida glabrata needs niacin and pyridoxine,
candida kefyr needs biotin and niacin pantothenate, and candida
krusei doesn't need any vitamins to grow. This would explain
why people with candida albicans are usually deficient in
biotin. It has been said that taking biotin while you treat
candida will keep yeast from morphing into candida, but I can
find no medical proof of this.
Candida albicans also likes thiamine,
pantothenate, nicotinic acid, p-aminobenzoic acid and vitamin
b12. Folic acid has no stimulatory or inhibitory effect but
xylitol suppresses its growth. Under optimal growth conditions
candida albicans, c. tropicalis, and c. glabrata can double in
just under one hour!
Candida is aerobic and can grow under
hyperbaric oxygen medical conditions but has been found to be
inhibited when oxygen pressure levels reach 2 atmospheres and
above. Ultrasound in the presence of sublethal hydrogen
peroxide was found to be lethal to candida.
Candida albicans eats by injecting the
surrounding areas with exo-enzymes. These dissolve the
surrounding area so the roots can suck up the nutrients,
glucose, like a plant when in the mycelial form! Candida is
like a plant since its cell walls are composed of mannachitin
which is composed of cellulose and hemicellulose, the same
substances that make a plant wall rigid. Beneath that plant
cell wall is a lipoprotein membrane like an animal. Lipo is
fat; protein is meat or flesh like. Below these layers is the
nucleus and they have mitochondria for energy production within
the cell just like animal cells.
The candida with the injection of exo-enzymes
as it tries to eat you, releases mycotoxins or poisons. These
poisons can affect many areas of the body and cause the
symptoms as described on the symptoms page. It also has the
ability to become resistant to the drugs that kill it and
eventually the drugs will not have any affect what so
ever.
Candida loves the toxic environment of the
colon when the good bacteria levels fall to low and can no
longer keep you cleaned out. High levels of mercury, lead,
aluminum, and iron help it to survive as it attaches to these
molecules like taking a ride in a cab and it travels throughout
your body. The general consensus is yeast is an immune response
to mercury poisoning because yeast is able to absorb its weight
in mercury; this is where chronic candida sufferers go wrong.
They don't remove the metals! As a result, they will fight this
beast for years with no success.
Pretty interesting stuff about candida albicans
isn't it? Or is it just sickening to know that you have a plant
animal life form growing within you causing the many problems
you may have? I think its both actually since this truly is its
own life form.
What is Candida Albicans and Natural
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