Transfer Factors versus Regular Nutrients

Transfer Factors versus Regular Nutrients
 
Transfer factors work completely different in your body than nutrients. Each nutrient has a narrow range of function in the immune system. Nutrients can nourish immune system components, act as a catalyst and turn on certain receptors in immune system cells. Transfer factors regulate all of these immune system components. The influence of transfer factors on a particular immune system component is many times greater than any nutrient. Transfer factors, as smart cells, have feedback functions that nutrients do not have. Transfer factors actually enhance the efficiency of nutrients.

If you have transfer factors in your body now, why would you need to consume more? Our transfer factors have been conditioned over hundreds and even thousands of years to deal with their environment. Modern society developed over the past hundred years; before this, your immune system didn’t have to deal with the magnitude of pollution and stress. There were no pesticides and growth hormones in and on our food. We didn’t have fast foods with tons of sugar and trans-fats. Society wasn’t as stressful as our immune system was developed. The stress of our forefathers when they found animals for survival has become everyday modern man’s fight to exist in an abstract hostile environment of financial problems, relationship challenges and attacks against our self-esteem. Our bodies pump cortisol into our systems, which suppresses our immune systems.

Modern travel has created a problem for our immune systems. The immune systems of local natives had only the local germ species to deal with. Their immune systems were conditioned to handle the local types of germs. Now we travel within hours across the world, transporting foreign germs into local populations. The immune system is overwhelmed with invaders that it is not familiar with.
Because of all of these reasons, our immune systems require assistance to deal with all of these new threats. This is where transfer factors with small cytokines come into the picture.
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