Diet is the foundation of the living.
Although diseases in various organ systems can be life-threatening, there are two organs that are most critical and play a domino effect in the progression of human diseases. One is the spleen and stomach. For those who have been ill for a long time, once their diet is significantly reduced and they cannot eat, it is a precursor to the worsening of their condition; The second is the lungs. When the condition is critical, once combined with pulmonary infection or respiratory failure, it is often a precursor that is difficult to treat.

The reason why we say this is because a decrease in diet is often a manifestation of poor spleen and stomach function. If the spleen and stomach function fails, a person cannot obtain nutrients from their diet, just like burning grease paste in a lamp, gradually leading to exhaustion and exhaustion; Moreover, due to insufficient energy supply, it is difficult for various system organs to maintain normal operation, which can lead to numerous problems and be difficult to prevent. The lungs are organs in the human body that directly exchange gases with the outside world. When the condition is critical, the immune system and resistance are completely lost, just like being "unguarded", facing the invasion of various pathogenic microorganisms, resulting in a decrease in oxygen supply capacity; Oxygen is essential for human beings, and a lack of oxygen will inevitably lead to the passing of life.
Although the functions of the spleen, stomach, and lungs are different, according to the theory of dissipative structure, they both introduce "negative entropy" into the human body. A dissipative structure is a self stabilizing structure that spontaneously generates entropy, causing the structure to gradually become disordered until it collapses and annihilates. Therefore, dissipative structures require the introduction of negative entropy to maintain orderliness and organization. Life is also a dissipative structure. In his book "What is Life," the famous physicist Schr ö dinger explicitly put forward the famous saying "organisms rely on negative entropy for their livelihoods," saying that "the only way to escape death... is to continuously absorb negative entropy from the environment