The Real Deficiencies: Supplementation Beyond the Veil
- Publicado
- Servidor
- Zenodo
- DOI
- 10.5281/zenodo.20330249
This essay analyzes the logical and causal inversion operated by contemporary dogmatic medicine regarding the biological role of organic acids, centering the investigation on the systematic undervaluation of citric acid compared to ascorbic acid. Through a rigorous review of international indexed biochemical and clinical literature, this work demonstrates that a cellular turnover estimated in tens of grams per day is not evidence of therapeutic marginality, but rather the indicator of an absolute metabolic dependence of the organism.
The causal link between the localized disappearance of free citrate (hypocitratemia) and the onset of severe systemic pathological processes—such as nephrolitiasis, aortic calcifications, and blood agglutination—is documented. The analysis extends to the paradigm shift in oncology and clinical microbiology, demonstrating that glycolytic acidosis (the Warburg Effect) does not constitute an autonomous anomaly of the cancer cell, but represents the stereotypic host response to mitochondrial sabotage induced by intracellular germs (e.g., Mycobacterium tuberculosis) and their toxins. In conclusion, this work identifies the restoration of the citrate entity as the essential therapeutic pivot to deprive pathogens of the metabolic microenvironment necessary for their persistence and proliferation.