Insatiable hunger

Symptom
  • Viral cause: Caused by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) inside the liver. When EBV spends a long time in the liver, it requires a lot of energy from the organ, which means the liver burns through fuel and can easily become deficient in glycogen.
  • Liver glucose deficiency: Glycogen storage deficiency in the liver. When livers weaken, you lose your glucose storage and glycogen storage starts to dissolve in the liver.
  • Primary cause: Starving liver that needs critical, clean carbohydrates (CCC). The liver is hungry for glucose to restore its glucose reserves.
  • Fat in blood: Too much fat in the blood stops sugars from building up in the liver. If you can't build up sugar in the liver, you can't get glycogen storage back up
  • Too much fat interference: Too much fat in the blood stops sugars from building up in the liver. If you can't build up sugar in the liver, you can't get your glycogen storage back up to par inside the liver.
  • Stress-related eating: Under stress, the liver needs more fuel because it's using glucose to sop up adrenaline from being backstabbed, betrayed, loss, broken hearted, damaged or injured.
  • Sluggish liver location: When sluggish liver is in the left side of the liver, it can cause insatiable hunger (along with lack of hunger, feelings of weakness in left leg or arm, nausea, anxiousness).

Sources(2)