That's one of the distinguishing characteristics of MC. The type of D associated with active MC is known as "secretory diarrhea". With secretory diarrhea, instead of the colon extracting and recycling water and electrolytes (as it's designed to do), it infuses water and electrolytes into the lumen (the interior), thus allowing for high volume output. Because of this characteristic, the D can continue even if nothing is ingested, until the body is completely dehydrated, which obviously illustrates that the disease is much more dangerous than the medical community claims.Rebecca wrote:I was wondering like how does it work when a person is eating NOTHING and they still are having many trips to the bathroom?
Sort of similar to the secretory diarrhea that's unique to MC, the medical profession is also unique. It's the only profession in existence where practitioners can bill people for their services regardless of whether or not the client/patient receives any benefit from the services.Rebecca wrote:You should be charging us for consulting on all this !
I'm pretty sure that if the requirements for becoming certified as a GI specialist included a 6-week trial of drug-induced MC, the official medical description of MC would probably change almost overnight from "a self-limiting benign disease" to "the worst damn diarrhea known to modern medicine". I'm guessing that it would dramatically change research priorities, also.Rebecca wrote:Not that I am wish anyone get this dreadful thing but you KWIM....
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