1. OXIDOSIS
Oxidosis (oxi-do-sis) is excessive loss of energy
through rapid loss of electrons. In the context of aging, oxidosis causes disease and
premature aging. Oxidation is loss of electrons. In chemical reactions, electrons are
transferred from one atom or molecule to the other. The donor substance loses electrons
and is so oxidized. The recipient gains electrons and so is reduced. The gainer becoming
reduced seems strange but that is the awkwardness of the scientific terminology.
People see electrons every day. There is a spark when the
plug on an electric appliance is pulled without first turning the unit off. That spark is
a storm of electrons. In this example, a running appliance gains electrons from the
source in the power company and uses it to produce energy for its function. That is
exactly what happens in oxygen-driven oxidative reactions in the body. Oxygen first gains
(steals) electrons from other substances and so begins the process of generation of
energy. Those substances, in turn, are oxidized. Light is produced by a light bulb in a
similar way. A high-energy beam of electrons loses some energy as light particles called
photons and turns into a low energy beam of electrons.
Butter turns rancid, a flower wilts, meat decomposesthat is
oxidation. A person develops a cataract and loses his eyesight. That happens when the
proteins in the lens become oxidized. When a heart fails after a heart attack, that is
because oxidosis in the heart muscle cells interferes with their function. In all tissues,
excessive oxidation means a rapid breakdown in tissues. Thus, I see the hand of oxidosis
at autopsy in each and every case, regardless of whether the death was caused by
cancer or by chemotherapy, by coronary artery spasm or by a cardiologist's stent, by
hepatitis or by pneumonia.2
Oxidosis leads to dysfunctional oxygen metabolism, which is the
basis of all symptoms of fibromyalgia and
chronic fatigue syndrome.2 It is the molecular
basis of pain, fatigue, and brain fog in those syndromes.
2. DYSOXYGENOSIS
Dysoxygenosis (dys-oxy-gen-o-sis) is my term for dysfunctional
oxygen metabolism.2 It is not merely lack of oxygen due to heart disease or asthma, nor
poor transport of oxygen due to anemia. The scientific term for that is anoxia.
Dysoxygenosis is the failure of cellular oxygen metabolism due to damage to the
enzymes of oxygen metabolism. Thus, dysoxygenosis threatens the health of every cell,
every tissue, every body organ.
Dysoxygenosis in muscle cells causes severe fatigue. In brain cells,
it causes problems of mood, memory, and mentation. In the skin and eyes, it causes
advanced dryness. In the cell membrane, it causes leaky membrane dysfunction, so that what
is inside the cell hemorrhages out and what is outside floods the cell innards. Thus, the
cell becomes dehydrated, shrunken, and loaded with toxins. Such a cell cannot function
well.
3. ACIDOSIS
Acidosis (acid-o-sis) is excess acidity. Acidosis slows or
blocks the enzyme systems of the body, including those involved with energy, digestion and
absorption, detoxification, muscle function, and neurotransmitters. Enzymes are catalysts
that facilitate life processes. Acidosis fans the flames of both oxidosis and
dysoxygenosis which, in turn, cause more acidosis. As in the case of dysoxygenosis,
acidosis in muscle cells causes severe fatigue.3 In brain cells, it causes problems of
mood, memory, and mentation. In the skin and eyes, it causes advanced dryness. And so on.
4. OXIDATIVE COAGULOPATHY
Oxidative coagulopathy (co-ag-u-lop-athy) is the
process by which clean blood turns into "dirty" blood.
In health, the red blood cells are rounded, smooth in
outline, and do not stick to each other. The hunter immune cells have irregular but sharp
boundaries and move around like amoebae, searching for microbes to kill and digest. The
antibody-forming immune cells are also smooth, rounded, and free of debris stuck to their
surfaces. The plasma (fluid part of the blood) is clear and without any areas of
congealing. There is no microclot or microplaque formations.
In 1997, my colleague, Omar Ali, M.D., and I introduced
the term oxidative coagulopathy to describe a range of abnormalities in the blood of
patients with coronary heart disease.4 We observed the following changes in blood slides:
deformities and clustering of red blood cells, death of immune cells, zones of congealed
plasma, and microclot and microplaque formation. The blood clots and unclots all the time.
However, in oxidative coagulopathy, microclot formation occurs at a rapid rate and
unclotting cannot keep pace with clotting. Thus, microclots and microplaques accumulate in
the blood and get stuck to the inside of small arteries in the heart and brain, causing
heart attacks and strokes.
Later I described similar changes in fibromyalgia and
chronic fatigue syndrome.5 Adding bacterial culture to milk turns it into yogurt. Lemon
juice squeezed into milk curdles it. That happens because microbes and certain acids
solidify the proteins in milk, the same way microbes and certain acids entering the
circulating blood curdle it. In health, such curdles (microclots) are readily dissolved by
clot-busting enzymes. In fibromyalgia, a large number of microbes and large quantities of
toxic oxidants enter the blood from the bowel, causing excessive microclot formation.
5. OXIDATIVE LYMPHOPATHY
Oxidative lymphopathy (lym-phop-athy) is my term for a process
by which lymph becomes oxidized, rancid, thick and gluey. Lymph is the pale fluid
that drains toxins from tissues. Such fluid stagnates in muscles and other tissues,
preventing the free flow of oxygen-rich blood, causing soreness in tissues, and producing
trigger points in muscles. I introduced this term in 1998 to focus on issues of stagnant
lymph in tissues4 and described its clinical significance in fibromyalgia in 1999.6
Blood and lymph channels exist in all body organs. Thus, damage
caused by oxidative coagulopathy and oxidative lymphopathy quickly spreads to all cells of
the body. 3M oxidopathy is my term for oxidative damage to cell membranes,
matrix,
and mitochondria. Matrix is the cement that holds cells together. Membranes are
coverings of cells and their inner structures. Mitochondria are tiny power batteries of
the cells. Since all three are continuously exposed to oxidized (rancid) blood and lymph,
it should not surprise us that the oxidative coals in the blood and lymph (microclots)
will also sear the 3M (matrix, membranes, and mitochondria).5
6. OXIDATIVE-DYSOXYGENATIVE DYSFUNCTION (ODD)
ODD is a state in which: (1) oxidosis is caused by oxidants of
all
three types (metabolic, microbial, and man-made) that threaten health; (2) oxidosis
leads to dysoxygenosis (abnormal oxygen metabolism), which slows or blocks all
life
processes; (3) oxidosis and dysoxygenosis together cause acidosis; (4) all three elements
(oxidosis, dysoxygenosis, and acidosis) feed upon each other and together fan the flames
of oxidative injury. In fibromyalgia, an oxidative-dysoxygenative (OD) state leads to
injury to every microecologic cellular and macroecologic tissue-organ ecosystem of the
body.6
7. OXYOLOGY
Oxyology (oxy-olo-gy) is the study of oxygen, just as pathology
is the study of diseases.7 A sound knowledge of oxygen metabolism in health and of
dysfunctional oxygen metabolism in dis-ease and premature aging is of fundamental
importance. Indeed, I believe neither health nor the aging process can be understood
without such knowledge. In this volume, I present many aspects of oxygen that seldom, if
ever, are discussed in medical textbooks.