Blog 78: Understanding Your Body’s
True Detoxification System
By: Cody Vagle, PAC
Every January, the wellness industry promotes short-term “detox” programs—juice fasts, herbal laxative teas, and expensive supplement stacks. Clinical evidence shows these rarely enhance the body’s natural pathways and can sometimes cause harm. Your liver and kidneys already process and eliminate thousands of compounds daily through a sophisticated, three-phase system. When properly supported, this system far outperforms any commercial cleanse.
Phase I: Biotransformation (Cytochrome P450 Enzymes)
Fat-soluble toxins—pesticides, phthalates, benzene, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), pharmaceutical metabolites, caffeine, alcohol, and excess steroid hormones—enter liver cells. A large family of enzymes called cytochrome P450 adds oxygen, making the compounds more chemically reactive and partially water-soluble. This phase produces reactive oxygen species, also known as free radicals. Without sufficient antioxidants (vitamins C and E, selenium, flavonoids from berries and green tea), these toxic byproducts can damage liver tissue.
Phase II: Conjugation Pathways
The reactive intermediates are quickly neutralized by six conjugation reactions that attach water-soluble groups. The most important and versatile is glutathione conjugation. Glutathione (GSH), a tripeptide synthesized from glutamate, cysteine, and glycine, is the cell’s primary defense against toxins and oxidative stress. Glutathione S-transferase enzymes (GSTs) catalyze the direct binding of GSH to toxins such as medication byproducts, mycotoxins, heavy metals, chemotherapy agents, and environmental pollutants. Research shows cruciferous vegetables can increase GST activity (Hodges & Minich, 2015). High-quality protein provides the amino acids, like cysteine and glycine, which help to produce glutathione.
Other Phase II pathways include sulfation, glucuronidation, methylation, acetylation, and amino-acid conjugation, each requiring specific cofactors (B-vitamins, magnesium, sulfur compounds).
Phase III & Renal Clearance
Conjugated compounds are actively transported out of hepatocytes (liver cells) by energy-dependent pumps (MRP2, BCRP). They enter either bile for fecal excretion or blood for glomerular filtration in the kidneys. Constipation or low bile flow allows enterohepatic recirculation—toxins are reabsorbed and returned to the liver. Adequate dietary fiber, hydration, and regular bowel movements prevent this recycling.
Evidence-Based Daily Practices to Optimize Detoxification
- Protein intake of 1.6–2.2 g/kg body weight daily from whole-food sources (eggs, fish, poultry, collagen) to supply glycine, cysteine, and taurine.
- Cruciferous vegetables 4–7 servings weekly
- 80-100 fl oz of filtered water + physiological electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium) to support renal filtration.
- Daily exercise inducing mild sweating (20–40 minutes moderate cardio or infrared sauna) for additional transdermal elimination.
- Targeted precursors when needed: N-acetylcysteine (NAC) 600–1800 mg/day or glycine 3–10 g/night to rapidly restore glutathione.
True detoxification is a continuous physiological process, not a seasonal event. Consistent nutrition and lifestyle habits that supply cofactors and maintain elimination pathways are the only proven way to enhance your body’s natural ability to neutralize and remove toxins year-round.
References
Hodges, R. E., & Minich, D. M. (2015). Modulation of Metabolic Detoxification Pathways Using Foods and Food-Derived Components: A Scientific Review with Clinical Application. Journal of nutrition and metabolism, 2015, 760689. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/760689
Author Note
This article was originally drafted using the artificial intelligence system Grok 4 (xAI, December 2025). The final content was reviewed, revised, and approved by Cody Vagle, PA-C.

