Submitted:
02 February 2026
Posted:
03 February 2026
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Abstract
Systemic Leaky Barrier Syndrome (SLBS) is a conceptual framework in which loss of integrity across multiple biological barriers — intestinal, vascular, blood–brain, pulmonary, renal, and skin — is driven by shared structural, metabolic, and inflammatory mechanisms. This hypothesis unifies disparate chronic diseases and aging processes by focusing on common upstream drivers (oxidative stress, micronutrient insufficiency, mitochondrial dysfunction, and chronic inflammation) that impair tight junctions and cell–matrix adhesion across tissues. SLBS reframes chronic disease not as isolated organ dysfunction, but as systemic failure of barrier integrity, with clinical implications for early detection, prevention, and integrative therapeutic strategies. This framework also has implications for cancer progression, where invasion and metastasis require coordinated failure of multiple host barrier systems.
Keywords:
1. Introduction: Biological Barriers and the Paradox of Permeability
2. SLBS Defined
- Intestinal permeability → immune activation and bacterial translocation.
- Endothelial barrier loss (vasculature, glyco-calyx) → atherogenesis and thrombosis.
- Blood–brain barrier disruption → neuroinflammation and cognitive disorders.
- Pulmonary barrier compromise → ARDS and chronic airway disease.
- Renal filtration failure → proteinuria and CKD progression.
- Skin barrier dysfunction → inflammatory dermatoses.
3. Systemic “Leaky” Barriers Documented in the Literature
3.1. Leaky Gut (Intestinal Barrier)
3.2. Leaky Brain (Blood–Brain Barrier, BBB)
3.3. Leaky Vasculature / Endothelium (Including Glycocalyx)
3.4. Leaky Lung (Alveolar–Capillary Barrier)
3.5. Leaky Kidney (Glomerular Filtration Barrier)
3.6. Leaky Eye (Blood–Retinal Barrier)
3.7. Leaky Skin (Epidermal Barrier)
3.8. Leaky Placenta (Placental Barrier)
3.9. Leaky Liver (Sinusoidal Endothelium)
4. Shared Mechanisms of Barrier Dysfunction
4.1. Tight Junctions and Cell–Cell Adhesion
4.2. Systemic Inflammation and Redox Stress
4.3. Micronutrient and Metabolic Dependencies
5. SLBS Across Clinical Phenotypes
- Metabolic and cardiovascular disease: Impaired endothelial junctions and glycocalyx damage promote leukocyte adhesion, lipid infiltration, and plaque genesis.
- Autoimmunity and chronic inflammation: Barrier leakage allows persistent antigen trafficking and immune dysregulation.
- Neurological disorders: BBB disruption enables peripheral cytokines and toxins to affect CNS function.
- Gastrointestinal disorders: Gut permeability facilitates microbial product translocation, fueling systemic inflammation and metabolic dysregulation.
5.1. Systemic Barrier Failure in Cancer Invasion and Metastasis
6. Integrative Implications
- Barrier-centric biomarkers
- Foundational interventions that support redox balance, micronutrient sufficiency, mitochondrial energy, and inflammation control
- Reduced reliance on symptom suppression alone
7. Conclusion
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