This work is part of the Lantern of Sulfur (LoS) framework, a systems-level model describing physiological stability as a function of load, pacing, and coordinated system capacity. This paper represents the clinical translation layer of the LoS framework, demonstrating how system-level principles of load, pacing, and capacity manifest as reproducible patterns in real physiological systems. Patients presenting with histamine reactivity, estrogen sensitivity, gastrointestinal instability, and fluctuating fluid and electrolyte patterns are interpreted within a unified model of terrain instability rather than as isolated conditions. Symptom expression is framed as a downstream consequence of disrupted coordination across hydration, bile flow, buffering, hormonal clearance, and autonomic regulation. The central claim is that symptom expression reflects mismatch between input load and system capacity. A sequence-dependent clinical stack is described as a practical framework for organizing stabilization, in which hydration, buffering, clearance, and pacing are aligned before introducing increased system demand. This work emphasizes state-dependent variability, showing how identical inputs may be tolerated or destabilizing depending on system condition. Symptoms are interpreted as indicators of system state rather than fixed pathology. This paper is hypothesis-generating and provides a structured approach for recognizing and stabilizing complex, fluctuating clinical patterns. Within the LoS framework, this work demonstrates clinical translation (real-world manifestation), complementing structure (clinical stack) and control (metabolic pacing). For a complete index of related works, see: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17915492
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Beth A. Martell
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Beth A. Martell (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69db38274fe01fead37c6595 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19497404