Table of Contents
Real Detox Support: How Nurse Practitioners and Integrative Chiropractors Help Your Body Do What It Already Does

“Detox” is one of the most overused words in health. Online, it can sound like your body is “full of toxins” and needs a quick cleanse to fix everything. In real clinical care, detox is much simpler—and much more practical.
Your body already has a built-in detox system that runs 24/7. The liver changes substances so they can be removed from the body. The kidneys filter blood and regulate fluid balance. The lungs breathe out waste gases. The gut moves waste out. The skin and lymphatic system also play supporting roles. For most people, the safest “detox” is not a harsh cleanse. It’s consistent daily habits that support the organs that already do the work. (MD Anderson Cancer Center, 2025).
Nurse Practitioners (NPs) and integrative chiropractors can support this process in two different but complementary ways:
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NPs focus on medical safety, health conditions, labs, medications, hydration, nutrition, sleep, and behavior change—especially when someone is trying to stop alcohol or drugs and needs medical monitoring.
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Integrative chiropractors focus on the nervous system, movement, posture, joint function, and circulation/lymph flow—supporting the body’s “plumbing and wiring” so daily elimination, recovery, and regulation work better.
This article explains what that looks like in real life—without “quick flush” myths.
First, a reality check: Your body is designed to detox
Many detox plans are marketed like your body can’t do the job without special teas, supplements, or colon cleanses. Major medical cancer centers and GI specialists regularly point out that the body naturally detoxifies through organs like the liver and kidneys, and most trendy detox products do not “clean” your body the way they claim. (MD Anderson Cancer Center, 2025; Lehigh Valley Health Network, n.d.).
Common detox myths (and what’s more accurate)
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Myth: “You must detox to remove toxins.”
More accurate: Your body already detoxes constantly; lifestyle habits matter more than short programs. (MD Anderson Cancer Center, 2020; 2025). -
Myth: “Colonics or colon cleanses wash out toxins.”
More accurate: GI experts note evidence is limited, and your liver/kidneys already handle detoxification; aggressive colon cleansing can carry risks. (Lehigh Valley Health Network, n.d.; 2024). -
Myth: “A chiropractic adjustment releases toxins.”
More accurate: Adjustments can support function, mobility, and the stress response, but “toxins released” is often misunderstood or overstated. Some chiropractic sources explicitly state that adjustments don’t directly “release toxins.”
Bottom line: A safe plan supports your normal biology instead of fighting it.
What “detox” means in healthcare (two different uses of the word)
The word “detox” gets used in two major ways:
Everyday detox = supporting normal elimination and metabolism
This is the common wellness meaning:
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Better hydration and nutrition
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Better sleep
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More movement
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Less alcohol, ultra-processed foods, and unnecessary exposures
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Stress reduction that helps digestion, hormones, and recovery
This is the “support your organs” approach. (MD Anderson Cancer Center, 2025; Baylor Scott & White Health, 2025).
Medical detox = managing substance withdrawal safely
This is a different category. If a person is stopping alcohol, benzodiazepines, opioids, or other substances, withdrawal can be dangerous. In medical detox settings, clinicians evaluate the person, stabilize them, and help them transition into treatment. (NCBI Bookshelf, n.d.-a).
NPs can play a major role here through assessment, monitoring, medication management, and coordination with addiction treatment teams.
How Nurse Practitioners support the body’s natural detox processes
NPs are trained to assess the whole person —medical history, medications, labs, nutrition, mental health, and lifestyle—and create a plan that is safe and realistic. (StatPearls, 2023).
Supporting liver and kidney function with practical nutrition (not extremes)
A “detox-supportive” diet usually looks boring—in a good way. It’s consistent, balanced, and anti-inflammatory, with enough protein, fiber, and fluids.
NPs commonly coach patients toward:
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Hydration that fits the person (kidney health, activity level, climate, meds)
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Fiber for bowel regularity (so waste exits on schedule)
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Adequate protein (supports repair and normal metabolism)
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Food quality upgrades (less ultra-processed food, more whole foods)
These are the kinds of steps emphasized in mainstream guidance about safe detox support: hydration, whole foods, and habits you can sustain. (MD Anderson Cancer Center, 2025; Care&, 2025).
Simple patient-friendly food goals an NP might use:
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Build meals around: protein + plants + fiber
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Add: berries, leafy greens, beans, whole grains
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Use healthy fats: olive oil, nuts, seeds
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Reduce “liquid calories” and excess alcohol
A University of Wisconsin integrative handout also frames detox support as a whole-person program (food, movement, self-reflection, and other supportive practices) rather than a harsh cleanse. (University of Wisconsin Integrative Health, n.d.).
Safety note: If someone has kidney disease, liver disease, heart failure, pregnancy, eating disorders, or complex medication regimens, “detox supplements” and extreme diets can be risky. That’s one reason NP-guided plans matter.
Hydration plans that match the real world
Hydration is not just “drink more water.” NPs tailor hydration to:
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Body size and activity
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Heat exposure
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Medications (like diuretics)
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Blood pressure history
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Kidney function labs
Some sources summarize hydration as a key support for liver/kidney function and urine-based elimination. (Care&, 2025).
Practical hydration tips NPs often teach:
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Aim for pale yellow urine (unless your clinician gives a different target)
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Add electrolytes when sweating heavily (as appropriate)
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Use hydrating foods (soups, cucumbers, citrus, melons)
Dr. Alexander Jimenez also highlights the idea that hydration can come from both fluids and hydrating foods—useful in hot climates or for people who struggle to drink enough. (Jimenez, n.d.).
Sleep support: the “overnight reset” that detox culture ignores
Sleep is when your body runs critical repair, immune regulation, and brain “clean-up” processes. Even non-medical wellness sources emphasize that sleep plus hydration beats trendy cleanses. (Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada, 2022).
Dr. Jimenez’s clinical content also frames sleep as a core “reset” habit in a practical detox approach (not extreme cleanses). (Jimenez, 2025).
NP sleep basics that support detox-related recovery:
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Keep a consistent sleep/wake time
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Reduce alcohol (it disrupts sleep architecture)
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Manage caffeine timing
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Address sleep apnea risk when appropriate
Stress reduction because stress can slow digestion and recovery
Chronic stress can shift hormone signaling (like cortisol), disrupt sleep, change food choices, and strain gut function—making people feel “toxic” even when the real issue is overload and poor recovery.
Some functional medicine sources describe how stress, sleep, and food choices interact in a loop that affects detoxification support behaviors. (Richmond Functional Medicine, 2025).
NP-friendly stress tools (simple, repeatable):
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2–5 minutes of slow breathing, 2–3x/day
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Daily walking (even 10 minutes)
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Brief “phone-free” time before bed
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Counseling referral when anxiety/trauma is driving symptoms
When detox means withdrawal: medication + monitoring + safety
When detox is about stopping a substance, the priority is stabilization and safety. Clinical guidance describes detoxification as a process with evaluation, stabilization, and readiness for ongoing treatment—not a standalone cure. (NCBI Bookshelf, n.d.-a).
NPs (and medical teams) may:
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Check vitals and symptoms on a schedule
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Order labs as needed
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Use medications when appropriate to reduce withdrawal risks
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Coordinate a higher level of care for severe withdrawal risk
For example, clinical references discuss benzodiazepines in withdrawal management and note clinical concerns such as seizure risk depending on medication type and detox context. (NCBI Bookshelf, n.d.-b).
If someone needs help finding treatment resources, SAMHSA’s national helpline is a well-known 24/7 referral option in the U.S. (SAMHSA, 2023).
How integrative chiropractors support detoxification (without “toxin flush” hype)
Chiropractic care is not a liver cleanse. It’s not a colon cleanse. And it does not magically pull toxins out of the body.
What it can do is support systems that influence:
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Movement and joint mechanics
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Stress physiology (fight-or-flight vs rest-and-digest)
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Circulation and lymph flow (which depend heavily on movement)
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Musculoskeletal tension that impacts breathing, posture, and activity tolerance
Nervous system support: helping the body shift into “rest-and-digest”
When people are in pain or under stress, their nervous system can stay in a protective state—tight muscles, shallow breathing, poor sleep, and limited movement. That pattern can indirectly slow the habits that matter most for detox support (sleep, hydration, activity, and digestion).
Some integrative chiropractic sources describe adjustments as reducing tension and supporting the stress response—especially when combined with movement and nutrition.
Movement is the “pump” for lymph flow
The lymphatic system does not have a heart-like pump. It relies on:
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Muscle contractions
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Joint motion
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Diaphragm breathing
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Posture and mobility
Dr. Jimenez’s clinical content emphasizes that movement and mechanical inputs (exercise, posture, breathing, and manual therapy) support lymph flow and circulation. (Jimenez, 2025).
So, chiropractic care that improves mobility and decreases pain can make it easier to:
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walk daily
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breathe deeper
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tolerate exercise
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recover better after activity
Those lifestyle actions help the body eliminate normal metabolic waste more efficiently.
Supporting digestion and elimination by improving mobility and reducing guarding
A tight diaphragm, rigid thoracic spine, or guarded abdominal wall can contribute to shallow breathing and poor trunk motion. Many integrative clinics combine:
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spinal adjustments
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soft tissue work
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breathing drills
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mobility exercises
These are not “detox hacks.” They are function and recovery tools. (Mountain Movement Center, n.d.).
Clearing up the “toxins released after adjustment” confusion
People sometimes feel sore, tired, or “off” after an adjustment—similar to how you might feel after a new workout. That does not automatically mean toxins were released.
Several chiropractic sources explicitly state the “toxins released” idea is a misconception or, at minimum, not a direct mechanism of adjustment.
A more grounded explanation is:
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you changed joint motion
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muscles relaxed or adapted
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your nervous system shifted
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you may need hydration, sleep, and gentle movement afterward
The best results come from a combined NP + chiropractic plan
In Dr. Alexander Jimenez’s clinical content, the consistent theme is detox support as daily habits, guided by chiropractic and NP-level integrative care—not extreme cleanses. Examples include hydration, sleep, whole foods, and gentle movement as “reset” habits. (Jimenez, 2025).
A practical “detox support” checklist (simple, sustainable)
Nutrition
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½ plate of vegetables most days
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Protein with each meal
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Fiber daily (beans, oats, berries, veggies)
Hydration
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Water throughout the day
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Add electrolytes if sweating heavily (as appropriate)
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Use hydrating foods when needed
Sleep
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Same bedtime/wake time most days
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Limit alcohol, especially at night
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Screen off 30–60 minutes before bed
Movement + lymph flow
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Walk 10–30 minutes daily
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Mobility work for the hips/thoracic spine
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Deep breathing (diaphragm)
Stress
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Short breath breaks
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Sunlight early in the day
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Support for anxiety/trauma when relevant
When you should not DIY a detox
Get medical guidance if you have:
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Alcohol or drug dependence (withdrawal can be dangerous)
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Severe anxiety, depression, or suicidality
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Liver disease, kidney disease, heart failure
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Pregnancy or breastfeeding
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An eating disorder history
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Complex medication regimens or chemotherapy
A clear, safe message to patients: Avoid risky “cleanses,” build strong habits
Colon cleanses and harsh detox regimens can be marketed as “natural,” but that doesn’t automatically make them safe or helpful. GI-focused guidance emphasizes that your body already has detox systems and that a balanced diet, hydration, and exercise are the real foundation. (Lehigh Valley Health Network, n.d.).
If a patient wants a “fresh start,” a clinician-guided plan is usually:
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less dramatic
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more personalized
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more effective long-term
That is what NPs and integrative chiropractors do best: they turn confusing detox talk into a sustainable health plan.
Clinical perspective from Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC
Across Dr. Jimenez’s educational content, the consistent clinical framing is:
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Detox support works best when it focuses on hydration, whole foods, sleep, and gentle movement, rather than extreme cleanses.
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Integrative care can connect circulation, lymph flow, posture, movement, and nervous system regulation to practical daily steps that improve how people feel.
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“Detox” is most useful when it means reducing the burden (alcohol, excess sugar/processed foods, poor sleep, high stress) and building the body’s capacity to recover.
(Dr. Jimenez’s LinkedIn profile also emphasizes integrative and functional medicine as a root-cause, whole-person approach.)

Reference
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Care&. (2025). The Truth About Detox: Science-Based Ways to Support Liver + Kidney Health.
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Comprehensive Cancer Centers of Nevada. (2022). Sleep and Detoxes | Good Sleep.
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Jimenez, A. (n.d.). Hydrating Foods, Intense Heat, Body Health.
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Jimenez, A. (2021). Exercising To Detoxify and Cleanse The Body.
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Jimenez, A. (2023). Support Full Body Detox With Chiropractic.
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Jimenez, A. (2025). Holiday Detox Reset: Chiropractic + NP Guidance for Recovery.
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Jimenez, A. (2025). Improve Circulation With Chiropractic Integrative Detox Support.
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Jimenez, A. (2025). Chiropractic Gut Health and Detox for Bloating & Reflux Relief.
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Lehigh Valley Health Network. (n.d.). 5 Things to Know About Colonic Cleanses.
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MD Anderson Cancer Center. (2020). The facts behind 4 detox myths: should you detox your body?
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MD Anderson Cancer Center. (2025). Detoxes, cleanses and fasts: What you should know.
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Mountain Movement Center. (n.d.). Holistic Healing with Nutrition & Chiropractic Care.
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NCBI Bookshelf. (n.d.-a). Detoxification and Substance Abuse Treatment: Overview, Essential Concepts, and Definitions in Detoxification.
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NCBI Bookshelf. (n.d.-b). Detoxification and Substance Abuse Treatment: Physical Detoxification Services for Withdrawal From Specific Substances.
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Richmond Functional Medicine. (2025). WARNING: Stress Is Sabotaging Your Body’s Detox System.
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SAMHSA. (2023). SAMHSA’s National Helpline.
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StatPearls. (2023). Advanced Practice Registered Nurse Roles.
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University of Wisconsin Integrative Health. (n.d.). Detoxification to Promote Health: A 7-Day Program (Patient Handout).
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Victory Spinal Care. (2025). Does your body release toxins after chiropractic adjustment?
Professional Scope of Practice *
The information herein on "Real Detox Support for Your Body's Needs" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
Blog Information & Scope Discussions
Welcome to El Paso's Premier Wellness and Injury Care Clinic & Wellness Blog, where Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, FNP-C, a Multi-State board-certified Family Practice Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC) and Chiropractor (DC), presents insights on how our multidisciplinary team is dedicated to holistic healing and personalized care. Our practice aligns with evidence-based treatment protocols inspired by integrative medicine principles, similar to those found on this site and our family practice-based chiromed.com site, focusing on restoring health naturally for patients of all ages.
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email: coach@elpasofunctionalmedicine.com
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Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC*, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST
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