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The Ultimate Guide to Lowering Endotoxin (LPS)

The Ultimate Guide to Lowering Endotoxin (LPS)

You can't be optimally healthy with elevated endotoxin

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Hans
Jun 20, 2025
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The Ultimate Guide to Lowering Endotoxin (LPS)
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What Are Endotoxins — and Why They Matter

Endotoxins, or lipopolysaccharides (LPS), are components of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria.

Bacterial Endotoxin Assay Kit

If they stay in the gut, they won’t inflame you. However, if you have an overgrowth of highly toxic LPS-producing bacteria like E. Coli, then it will inflame the intestine and contribute to leaky gut.

But even if you have “normal levels” of lesser toxic endotoxin in the gut and your gut is leaky, those endotoxins will enter the body.

Once inside, they bind to toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) on immune cells and activate a cascade of inflammation. This isn’t just a local reaction.

LPS can:

  • Disrupt thyroid and testosterone production (think Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and hypogonadism)

  • Impair insulin sensitivity and mitochondrial function (high blood glucose and insulin resistance)

  • Promote systemic fibrosis and scar tissue (stiff and tight muscles and joints)

  • Trigger brain fog, fatigue, and depressive symptoms

  • Create liver stress, especially by overwhelming Kupffer cells (resident liver macrophages)

  • Contributes to obesity, metabolic syndrome, atherosclerosis, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s disease, etc.

In essence, endotoxin promotes rapid aging and it’s impossible to be healthy when endotoxin is elevated.

And you can be doing everything “right”, but still have elevated endotoxin.

A healthy gut lining keeps these endotoxins trapped. But when your gut barrier breaks down, LPS leaks into your system, leading to a low-grade but chronic inflammatory state. This is known as metabolic endotoxemia, and it's a silent root cause of many modern health issues.

And it doesn’t take much. Research shows that even levels >5 pg/mL can create measurable immune stress. After intense endurance races, levels can spike over 200–300 pg/mL, often with symptoms like bloating, diarrhea, cramping, or even exertional heatstroke.

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