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Phase
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Description
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Excretion phase
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In this phase the body's defensive system is intact and can excrete homotoxins in various ways such as through diarrhoea or rhinitis (a runny nose).
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Inflammation phase
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If excretion is not sufficient, the body has an inflammatory response (such as a fever) in an attempt to neutralise toxins.
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Deposition phase
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If homotoxins are not sufficiently excreted and continue to flow into the body, the toxic products are stored in the extracellular space. This phase often occurs without symptoms.
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Impregnation phase
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Once toxins have invaded the cell and the toxins themselves become part of the connective tissue and matrix. Increasingly severe symptoms are typical of this stage and indicate damage to organ cells.
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Degeneration
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Abundant toxins within the cells destroy large cellular groups within an organ, resulting in organ degeneration.
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Differentiation
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Illnesses in this phase are characterised by the creation of undifferentiated, non-specialised cell forms. Malignant diseases lie at the end of this phase.
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