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Dettagli Bibliografici
Autore principale: Hendiyani Irjanti, Henny
Natura: Recurso digital
Lingua:inglese
Pubblicazione: Zenodo 2026
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18440744
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Sommario:
  • <p>The Collapse of Microbial Architecture in Host Health presents a unifying conceptual framework for understanding chronic disease, degeneration, and loss of regenerative capacity beyond cell-centric and organ-centric models.</p> <p><br>Rather than framing illness as isolated cellular failure, this paper proposes that many modern health disorders arise from the collapse of microbial architecture—the integrated ecological system formed by microbial populations, enzymatic cycles, immune calibration, extracellular matrices, and developmental conditioning processes that govern physiological coherence.</p> <p><br>By synthesizing Microbial Integration Architecture Theory (MIAT), Microbial Enzymatic Cycles (MEC), Microbial Immune Calibration Theory (MICT), Microbial Axis Theory (MAT), and extracellular matrix (ECM) governance, the paper traces a consistent sequence of breakdown: microbial extinction, enzymatic loss, immune miscalibration, axis disintegration, ECM and fascia failure, and subsequent cellular confusion.</p> <p><br>Within this framework, cells are understood not as primary governors of health, but as late-stage executors responding to upstream ecological and energetic conditions. Chronic disease is reframed as a predictable outcome of architectural disintegration rather than molecular defect.</p> <p><br>This work serves as a conceptual capstone to a broader series on microbial ecology, physiology, and regeneration, offering an ecological foundation for future approaches to medicine, nutrition, and public health that prioritize continuity, coherence, and restoration over isolated intervention.</p>