Resurrecting the Rat: Highly effective cog...
StevesPetRat
27 May 2016
Nausea can indeed be a symptom of elevated ACh.
Yes, fisetin should work fast; if it does anything for you, you'll know within the first couple of days.
Good luck.
I am increasingly of the view that diet and lifestyle should be first addressed before messing with any additional supplementation. Those were the changes that netted the greatest overall benefits for me, even considering the great results I've had from this stack or things like NSI-189 or vorinostat.
Ark
27 May 2016
Edited by Ark, 27 May 2016 - 04:53 AM.
Jochen
27 May 2016
Try capping GTS-21 with NSI-189 phosphate w/ about 18-28 Celastrus Paniculatus seeds per capsule.
I am curious, why the Celastrus Paniculatus seeds?
Ark
27 May 2016
Try capping GTS-21 with NSI-189 phosphate w/ about 18-28 Celastrus Paniculatus seeds per capsule.
I am curious, why the Celastrus Paniculatus seeds?
It has a uniqie action that increases acetylcholine levels in the brain. It feels like Celastrus Paniculatus seeds amplifie the effects of both GTD-21 and NSI-189.
tolerant
27 May 2016
I'm trying to treat anxiety, not cognitive problems. If all that I get from increasing acetylcholine is nausea, then I guess I'm not deficient. Then my thinking is, if I am not deficient, then my c-Fos is not upregulated. But I will try fesitin anyway, based on the StevesPetRat's feedback. Perhaps it has useful properties other than downregulation of c-Fos. I hope that it won't downregulate a gene that doesn't need downregulation. Does anybody know? If it is downregulated unnecessarily from fesitin, will it come back down?


