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General Health & Fitness
Nutrition and Supplements
Can Oral Glutathione Supplements Work?
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<blockquote data-quote="b19h65" data-source="post: 237528" data-attributes="member: 44546"><p>You only want glutantione when you are dealing with lots of toxins. For example a lot of people from the 70s and 80s before the eco wave and environmental regulations or from countries like Iran are lead poisoned for life. It accumulates in the bones from where it has a half-life of 30 years. Amalgam fillings are also bad, in some people 100 and 1000 times the amounts of mercury have been released than what safety studies reference to be supposedly true about those fillings. Aluminum has the same poisonous effect as mercury, but it is not as potent and nowhere near as easily absorbed from food.</p><p></p><p>Glutanthione also helps against alcohol hangover, though, I find that loading your body with vitamin C beforehand (like a heaped teaspoon every 2 hours) works just as well as NAC (=glutanthione source) but without the side-effects. </p><p></p><p>I personally believe from experience that NAC can weaken certain types of tissues in the body, such as found in cartilages or spinal discs, maybe by making the fluids within them less viscous or something, but also blood vessels especially or mostly so if combined with alcohol. NAC does inhibit coagulation at smal aneurysm sites, which could theoretically unusually promote intercranial aneurysm formation/rupture if taken every day for a lifetime, but that's just a theory. I mean I know NAC is a pretty safe supplement, but when you are in a situation where something fails in your body, like a herniated disc or unusual headaches, then maybe like me you notice it seems to have a bad effect on it on the very long run which would usually go totally unnoticed or not be a problem had not something been weakened that was unusually sensitive to further damage.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="b19h65, post: 237528, member: 44546"] You only want glutantione when you are dealing with lots of toxins. For example a lot of people from the 70s and 80s before the eco wave and environmental regulations or from countries like Iran are lead poisoned for life. It accumulates in the bones from where it has a half-life of 30 years. Amalgam fillings are also bad, in some people 100 and 1000 times the amounts of mercury have been released than what safety studies reference to be supposedly true about those fillings. Aluminum has the same poisonous effect as mercury, but it is not as potent and nowhere near as easily absorbed from food. Glutanthione also helps against alcohol hangover, though, I find that loading your body with vitamin C beforehand (like a heaped teaspoon every 2 hours) works just as well as NAC (=glutanthione source) but without the side-effects. I personally believe from experience that NAC can weaken certain types of tissues in the body, such as found in cartilages or spinal discs, maybe by making the fluids within them less viscous or something, but also blood vessels especially or mostly so if combined with alcohol. NAC does inhibit coagulation at smal aneurysm sites, which could theoretically unusually promote intercranial aneurysm formation/rupture if taken every day for a lifetime, but that's just a theory. I mean I know NAC is a pretty safe supplement, but when you are in a situation where something fails in your body, like a herniated disc or unusual headaches, then maybe like me you notice it seems to have a bad effect on it on the very long run which would usually go totally unnoticed or not be a problem had not something been weakened that was unusually sensitive to further damage. [/QUOTE]
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Can Oral Glutathione Supplements Work?
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