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SUSTham
post Apr 6 2012, 06:41 AM

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The Natrol Memory Complex is quite good, and was what
I had thought of giving my demented father in the nursing home.

Huperzine A, phosphatidylserine and vinpocetine have all been
tried at one time or another on Alzheimer's patients.

Note that the ginkgo dose is quite high, however, and it has been
known to cause bleeding disorders as well as high blood pressure
in some people.

Livewell's Memosential is also another one which I had been
urging my siblings to give him (nobody listens to me, however).

http://www.livewell2u.com/products.php?p=memosential
SUSTham
post Apr 9 2012, 01:43 AM

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You can try the Memosential above.

ALCAR AND PS are two brain nutrients well known
as nootropics amongst life extensionists. As far as I know,
Livewell is the only one who has brought in ALCAR here.

ALCAR wasn't even available in the US two decades ago, and
they had to order it at high cost from Europe then. I've given it
to my father before.

It's now a common supplement, along with PS, in health food
stores there. They have a better form now, acetyl l-carnitine arginate
(ALCA).

http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2004/dec200...p_acetyl_01.htm


I have Jarrow's CarnitALL on my office table, which includes ALCA
and was supposed to have been given to my father long ago, but
I can't get it past my brother.


Anyone familiar with life extension will automatically include
ALCAR in a protocol for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
You can read Annetta Freeman's protocol for her own Parkinson's here.

http://www.ceri.com/annett4.htm

Other well known brain supplements -

Citicholine, or CDP choline
Alpha GPC
The racetams - piracetam, aniracetam, pramiracetam, oxiracetam

http://www.longecity.org/forum/topic/27369...s-pramiracetam/


http://www.iherb.com/Jarrow-Formulas-Citic...-Capsules/27417


Here's one which you can order, with CDP choline, ALCAR and PS.

http://www.iherb.com/Jarrow-Formulas-Neuro...20-Capsules/350


First of all, you should have a good base to start off with.

Get a good B-complex formula first, vital for good brain function,
or a multivit with a fair amount of B vitamins.


Livewell's Dailysential 45+ is a good one here. Since it lacks
calcium and magnesium, complement it with Ostecal. You can
get them at any pharmacy.





SUSTham
post Apr 11 2012, 03:28 AM

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QUOTE(faezfahmi618 @ Apr 10 2012, 01:32 AM)
yeah same with me i also scared if using this supplement can make me depending on that supplement

*
Why do you start this thread and ask this question if you are so afraid ?

If you have so much fear, then the best is to play safe and not
take anything at all.

Apart from the racetams, and the choline-based nootropics
aggravating gastric ulcers, you can go ahead and try them.
They are just supplements.

Many life extensionists take "smart" DRUGS as nootropics,
including me. If you go to the Immortality Institute's supplements
and nootropics subforums (and I urge you to join in if you want
to learn more about nootropics), you will come across many of them
taking modafinil, aniracetam, pramiracetam, oxiracetam, piracetam,
CDP choline, alpha GPC, DMAE, Huperzine A, vinpocetine,
selegiline (Parkinson's drug) and even donepezil (Alzheimer's drug).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modafinil


Indeed, they take them as "stacks", i.e. combined together as a regimen.
You will also find these "stackers" in nootropic forums all over the world.

Those guys in the Brainmeta forum are particularly hard-core stackers.


http://www.longecity.org/forum/forum/412-nootropic-stacks/

http://brainmeta.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=22550

http://www.mindnutrition.com/nootropic-guide-stacks.html

http://www.reddit.com/r/Nootropics/comment...god_mode_stack/

http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.p...42207791&page=1



I am far more conservative (and also have a far smaller wallet), but
have taken at one time or another these drugs and supplements -

Piracetam
Hydergine
Selegiline
ALCAR
ALA
Jarrow's CarnitALL (bought for my father, but now on my office table
because I cannot get it past my elder brother, who has never heard
of life extension, to my father in the nursing home ) -
comprising ALCAR, ALCA, l-carnitine fumarate, ALCAR taurinate, GPLC.

http://www.jarrow.com/product.php?prodid=190


CDP choline is classified as a drug in Europe for strokes.
It is now found all over health food stores in the States.
It is the first one I would bring in for my post-stroke demented
91-year old father in the nursing home, if I had a free hand.

http://www.jarrow.com/product.php?prodid=288


My father has managed to make it to this age because at one time or
another years ago, before he was institutionalized and when he lived
with me, I was pumping him on the following :

Basic multivitamin/mineral
ALCAR
ALA
Hydergine
Piracetam
Hijuven (vitamin E nicotinate)
APG lysine (growth hormone releaser)
Cod liver oil
Hawthorn extract
Coenzyme Q10
Ribose
Magnesium malate
Grape seed extract








This post has been edited by Tham: Apr 11 2012, 03:44 AM
SUSTham
post Jul 23 2012, 11:33 PM

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For a start :

1. Go to your friendly pharmacy and buy this :

http://www.livewell2u.com/products.php?p=memosential


2. Add coriander and blueberries to his diet. Lemon balm as well.

3. Extract the blue colour from Clitoria ternatea (the Butterfly pea or bunga telang),
and color or dye his rice and porridge with it as often as you can. I'm not sure where
you can buy the flowers in bulk, but the Kelantanese Malays should know.


I'm a life extensionist. If you wish to ask a doctor, there are a few on this board.

The treatment of Alzheimer's is confined to a handful of drugs, if you take
your patient to see a doctor :

1. Tacrine, prototype anticholinesterase. Apparently discontinued.

2. Donepezil (Aricept), first generation anticholinesterase. Costs a bomb,
some $14 for a 10 mg tab. Blocks acetylcholinesterase.

3. Rivastigmine (Exelon), developed from physostigmine.

Blocks both acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase. The transdermal patch
costs some $20 each, or at least that was what Sunway Medical Center
charged my brother and sister when they took him there to see some
vaunted geriatrician. It was useless. ( " Oh, your father has Alzheimer's . "
was what I heard he exclaimed, on merely observing him, as any Tom,
d*** and Harry could have said. Nonsense. If he had bothered to find out
my father's stroke background a year or so before that, common sense would
have told him that my father has vascular dementia. )

4. Memantine, NMDA antagonist, also blocks 5HT3 and nicotinic receptors.
Probably your drug of choice if you wish to start him on one. Note that it has
its limitations.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/...20502184706.htm

http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%...al.pone.0035185



Check out this thread if you wish to know more about the countless
supplements, herbs and other drugs which can help dementia.

http://www.longecity.org/forum/topic/23093...imers-research/


As it is, I am unable to help my father as my elder brother, and secondly the
nursing home environment, has totally taken things out of my hands.









This post has been edited by Tham: Jul 23 2012, 11:41 PM
SUSTham
post Jul 24 2012, 02:31 AM

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Far better of course.

I had tbought that you, like most others here, were not into ordering
from health food stores, and just wanted to buy whatever you could
find in the local drugstores here.

The fact that you know about Jarrow's Neuro Optimizer indicates that
you have good knowledge of cutting edge supplements.

CDP choline was what I had wanted to get for my father right after his
stroke, but was barred from doing so by my elder brother, who thinks that
supplements are nonsense, has never heard of life extension, and can't
believe that supplements can possibly treat diseases, particularly a highly
complex degenerative one like Alzheimer's which even higlhy trained
"geriatricians" can't do anything about, let alone extend lifespan.

(He's never even heard of homeopathy.)

I can't even get a simple low-potency basic multivit across to my father.

Memosential is probably the best you can do here if you don't get anything
from the States or Europe. Combine it with Co Q10.

Go ahead and get him Jarrow's fast.

Another highly rated supp for the brain is Alpha GPC, but CDP choline has
been given for strokes as a drug in Europe before it became available as a
supp in the States.



SUSTham
post Jul 26 2012, 03:17 AM

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Coenzyme Q10 Decreases Amyloid Pathology and Improves Behavior in a
Transgenic Mouse Model of Alzheimer’s Disease.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3267988



Coenzyme Q10 in neuromuscular and neurodegenerative disorders.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/20017723



Anti-aging Studies on the Senescence Accelerated Mouse (SAM) Strains.

" All SAMP lines (from SAMP1 to SAMP11) are characterized by accelerated
accumulation of senile features, earlier onset and faster progress of age-associated
pathological phenotypes, such as amyloidosis, impaired immune response, senile
osteoporosis and deficits in learning and memory. These SAMP lines are useful for
evaluation of putative anti-aging therapies. For example, SAMP1 line is used to study
the anti-aging effect of the antioxidant containing foods and various anti-oxidants,
such as coenzyme Q10, vitamin C, lycopene. SAMP8 line exhibiting an early onset
of impaired learning and memory is often used for test strategies for therapeutic
intervention of dementia of early onset. "

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/yakush...0_1_11/_article



Coenzyme Q10 effects in neurodegenerative disease.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P...f/ndt-5-597.pdf



Rational basis for the development of coenzyme Q10 as a neurotherapeutic
agent for retinal protection.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/18929135



Alzheimer's disease: the pros and cons of pharmaceutical, nutritional, botanical,
and stimulatory therapies, with a discussion of treatment strategies from the
perspective of patients and practitioners.

http://www.altmedrev.com/publications/15/3/223.pdf


Non-cholinergic strategies for treating and preventing Alzheimer's disease.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/12421115



Lipoic acid as an anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective treatment
for Alzheimer's disease.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/18655815




The molecular basis of memantine action in Alzheimer's disease and other
neurologic disorders: low-affinity, uncompetitive antagonism.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/15974...6409164/related


Dementia of Alzheimer's disease and other neurodegenerative
disorders -- memantine, a new hope.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/15519530






This post has been edited by Tham: Jul 26 2012, 06:10 AM
SUSTham
post Jul 26 2012, 06:10 AM

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVmghfnOcP0



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citicoline



Citicoline in vascular cognitive impairment and vascular dementia after stroke.

http://stroke.ahajournals.org/content/42/1_suppl_1/S40.long



Neuroprotective effects of citidine-5-diphosphocholine on impaired spatial memory
in a rat model of cerebrovascular dementia.

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jphs/1...16_11013FP/_pdf



Retrospective and observational study to assess the efficacy of citicoline in
elderly patients suffering from stupor related to complex geriatric syndrome.


" It has been shown that, even soon after an ischemic stroke, administration of oral
citicoline (500-4000 mg/day) improves the general conditions evaluated with the
Rankin scale and the National Institute of Health Stroke Scale 12. In particular, it
has been shown that the CDP-choline improves the cognitive and mental
performance in Alzheimer's dementia and vascular dementia. "

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22654511



Oral administration of circulating precursors for membrane phosphatides
can promote the synthesis of new brain synapses.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18631994



Citicoline, use in cognitive decline: vascular and degenerative.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/20875651



Citicoline enhances frontal lobe bioenergetics as measured by phosphorus
magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

" These treatment-related alterations in phosphorus metabolites were not only
regionally specific, but tended to be of greater magnitude in subjects who
received the lower dose
.

Citicoline supplementation may therefore help to mitigate cognitive declines associated
with aging by increasing energy reserves and utilization, as well as increasing the
amount of essential phospholipid membrane components needed to synthesize and
maintain cell membranes. "


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/18816480

http://www.cognizin.com/article-brain-imaging-study.html




" Supplement naturally boosts ageing brain power "

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/02/24/1203788130776.html






SUSTham
post Jul 28 2012, 06:40 AM

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I thought you were familiar with Neuro Optimizer and had checked out
its components ?

If you look at the contents carefully, you wil find that CDP choline, or citicholine,
phosphatidylserine (PS), acetyl l-carnitine (ALCAR), alpha lipoic acid (ALA),
taurine, phosphatidylcholine (PC) and glutamine are there.

Memosential contains ALCAR and PS.

The one lacking is coenzyme Q-10.

You did not say earlier that your father has arrhythmias. I do not know how co Q10
will interact with amiodarone (Cordarone). This is because co Q10 has both positive
inotropic (makes the heart beat more forcefully) properties.

Anyway, it should be safe to give him a low dose of co Q10. Note that the Q-Gel
in the Livewell product is liposome-bound, and 3 times more potent than ordinary co Q10.
Thus 15 mg = 45 mg. Try giving him the lowest, 15 mg, say every alternate day for
a start.


Dharma Singh Khalsa, who runs an Alzheimer's treatment center in Tucson,
sent me an info pack some 15 years ago. He uses ALCAR, PS and co Q10,
among others.

http://www.alzheimersprevention.org/dr_dharma.htm


Added on July 28, 2012, 7:31 am



Put him on some magnesium, which supports both his heart and Alzheimer's.

Good ones are magnesium orotate, taurate or glycinate.


http://www.evitamins.com/magnesium-orotate-200mg-kal-895

http://www.iherb.com/Cardiovascular-Resear...-Capsules/23527

http://www.iherb.com/Magnesium-Glycinate-4...ggie-Caps/21315



Note that magnesium interacts with amiloride (Moduretic) and should not be taken
if your father is on it.

http://mdheal.org/articles/word2/drugsuppl....htm#_ednref111



Magnesium depletion and pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease.

http://www.mgwater.com/dur16.shtml


Mechanisms of Action on the Nervous System in Magnesium Deficiency and Dementia.

http://www.mgwater.com/dur30.shtml









This post has been edited by Tham: Jul 28 2012, 07:31 AM
SUSTham
post Jul 29 2012, 03:47 AM

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GHB, the so-called "date rape drug" against Alzheimer's.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma-Hydroxybutyric_acid

http://www.life-enhancement.com/article.aspx?ID=76




Sporadic Alzheimer's Disease: The Starving Brain.

" A reduction in cerebral glucose utilization is one of the earliest signs of
Alzheimer's disease.
Although the exact cause of this reduction is not known,
gathering evidence suggests that it is part of a complex metabolic adaptation to
oxidative stress during which glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation are turned
down, glucose metabolism is shifted to the pentose phosphate pathway
to generate antioxidant reducing factors such as nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
phosphate (NADPH) and glutathione, and the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
shunt is activated to provide glutamate as an alternate source of energy.

In the face of these adaptive metabolic changes, the Alzheimer brain runs short
of energy and begins to digest itself.


Evidence is presented that gammahydroxybutyrate, a natural product of the GABA
shunt, can provide the necessary energy, carbon, and antioxidant power and that
its use may be able to delay the onset and progress of Alzheimer's disease. "


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/22571985



Alzheimer' s disease, oxidative stress and gammahydroxybutyrate.

http://www.ncbi.nlm..../pubmed/1683710


Neurodegeneration, sleep, and cerebral energy metabolism: a testable hypothesis.

http://www.ncbi.nlm..../pubmed/9100156






This post has been edited by Tham: Jul 29 2012, 04:56 AM
SUSTham
post Jul 29 2012, 04:57 AM

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Melatonin comes immediately to mind.


Some of these sleep formulas has melatonin, magnestium, L-theanine
and lemon balm, all ol which help Alzheimer's.


http://www.iherb.com/Search?kw=MELATONIN+M...ALERIAN&x=0&y=0


This looks good.

http://www.iherb.com/Irwin-Naturals-Power-...-Soft-Gels/8068




SUSTham
post Jul 29 2012, 07:53 PM

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My late mum used to pick lemon balm leaves from our garden during my
childhood days to steam with egg yolk as a remedy for cough.

I never realized this lowly common plant was so versatile.

You will find time and again, members of the mint family being studied for
their potent therapeutic properties, such as rosemary, oregano, sage, basil,
lavender and thyme.


You are very lucky to get the full text of this study. Nature magazine normally
does not allow free access to most of their publications.


" These results suggest that doses of Melissa officinalis at or above the maximum
employed here can improve cognitive performance and mood and may therefore
be a valuable adjunct in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.

http://www.nature.com/npp/journal/v28/n10/full/1300230a.html "



Lemon balm -- Melissa officinalis; also known as lemon balm, bee balm,
garden balm, Melissa, melissengeist.

http://www.rnzcgp.org.nz/assets/documents/...sonJune2011.pdf



Modulation of mood and cognitive performance following acute
administration of Melissa officinalis (lemon balm).

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/12062586



Medicinal plants and dementia therapy: herbal hopes for brain aging ?

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/22070157



Effect of plant extracts on Alzheimer's disease: An insight into therapeutic avenues

http://www.ruralneuropractice.com/article....;aulast=Obulesu



The role of phytochemicals in the treatment and prevention of dementia.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/21639405/



The psychopharmacology of European herbs with cognition-enhancing properties.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/17168769


Salvia lavandulaefolia is Spanish sage, which has a minimal content of the
toxic essential oil, thujones, found in common sage, Salvia officinalis.




SUSTham
post Jul 31 2012, 05:08 AM

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How can you not have seen lemon balm before ? It is such a common plant.

I've seen it since I was a few years old. There was even a pot or two
in this Golden Age Nursing Home in Jalan SS3/39 where my father
stayed in a couple of years ago.

The leaves are maybe two inches long, thick and embossed, somewhat furry.


http://herba.herbal.my/?p=553


Melissa is also a virus fighter, including herpes and HIV.

Aqueous extracts from peppermint, sage and lemon balm leaves display potent anti-HIV-1 activity by increasing the virion density.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2288616


If you look again at this product, the inclusion of melissa extract was
why I selected it.

http://www.iherb.com/Irwin-Naturals-Power-...-Soft-Gels/8068



Lemon balm, raw.

http://www.iherb.com/Planetary-Herbals-Lem...-Capsules/40749

http://www.iherb.com/Oregon-s-Wild-Harvest...ggie-Caps/42968


Just Life organic shop, one of which is along Jln SS2/24, has lemon balm tea.

http://shop.justlifeshop.com/ProductDetail...de=780746058137













SUSTham
post Aug 1 2012, 12:52 AM

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The old thiamine (vitamin B1) derivative, sulbutiamine, which you can
buy as Arcalion in most drugstores, has some benefit in dementia, especially
when combined with a standard anticholinesterase drug like donepezil.

So if your father is already on Aricept, adding in Aracalion helps him
with episodic memory and attention.

By itself, Arcalion helps with attention, so no harm in giving him say one
200 mg tablet every other day or so.


Sulbutiamine can cause headache in some people, including my father,
when I gave him some years ago, before his dementia.


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/17675917/


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulbutiamine








SUSTham
post Aug 3 2012, 12:24 AM

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" Some older people have slow transmission through the AV node due to disease
within the AV node. When these people develop atrial fibrillation, their heart rates
remain normal or slower than normal. As disease in the AV node advances, these
people can even develop an excessively slow heart rate and require a permanent
pacemaker to increase the rate of ventricular contractions. "

http://www.medicinenet.com/atrial_fibrillation/article.htm


Added on August 3, 2012, 1:02 am


Magnesium is the first mineral you should think of in arrhythmias.

Just another reason to take magnesium for your grandpa, which as
given earlier will help his Alzheimer's as well.

The forms which come to mind would be :

Magnesium taurate
Magnesium orotate

Since taurine helps both his heart and his brain, magnesium taurate is
a good one.

The late and highly respected Dr Hans Nieper advocates magnesium orotate
exclusively for heart diseases.

Eastern European doctors know the value of magnesium orotate.


Magnesium orotate in severe congestive heart failure (MACH).

" After mean treatment duration of 1 year, the survival rate was 75.7% compared to
51.6% under placebo. Clinical symptoms improved in 38.5% of patients under
magnesium orotate, whereas they deteriorated in 56.3% of patients under placebo. "

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/19367681



Magnesium orotate in myocardial and neuronal protection.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/15523949


Response of the senescent heart to stress: clinical therapeutic strategies
and quest for mitochondrial predictors of biological age.

" We recently have devised a regimen of therapy to protect the senescent heart
against stress, combining metabolic therapy (coenzyme Q(10), alpha lipoic acid,
magnesium orotate, and omega 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids) with physical
exercise and mental stress reduction. "

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/15246998/


" An Atrial Fibrillation Cause That You Haven't Been Told "

http://www.easy-immune-health.com/atrial-f...tion-cause.html


"Anyone in A-Fib is almost certainly magnesium deficient."

http://www.a-fib.com/Treatments.htm



" I am 72 years young and have had A-fib for about a year. It wasn't until I
started taking magnesum, potassium and taruine that I stopped having
A-fib attacks and flutters. "

http://www.dailystrength.org/c/Atrial_Fibr...404-supplements


Twinlab's Cellmins would be a good choice for the guy above.

Twinlab claims their aspartate HCL salts outperform the orotates and aspartates.

http://www.hollyhillhealth.com/shop/produc...ivate_product=0


Now and Jarrow.

http://www.iherb.com/Now-Foods-Magnesium-P...20-Capsules/701

http://www.iherb.com/Jarrow-Formulas-Magne...olv-Tablets/261


The acetyl l-carnitine in Jarrow's which you are going to get him
will support his heart as well. However, the more active form of
carnitine for the heart is propionyl l-carnitine.

http://www.iherb.com/Jarrow-Formulas-GPLC-...-Caps/3305?at=0

http://tsangenterprise.com/news71.htm


This is likely taken from one of LEF's older protocols for arrhythmias.

http://www.preparemd.com/conditions/protoc...l-fibrillation/










This post has been edited by Tham: Aug 3 2012, 01:02 AM
SUSTham
post Aug 6 2012, 04:30 AM

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Firstly, there's a contraindication here.

Lemon balm should not be taken if your grandpa has glaucoma,
increase intraocular pressure.

" Lemon grass should not be taken by patients with
glaucoma, as it increases eye pressure. "

http://www.ellenskitchen.com/garden/lemonbalm.html

http://www.livestrong.com/article/98379-si...cts-lemon-balm/


Secondly, why didn't you search for some tea or other recipes ?



http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Lemon-Balm-Tea

http://www.ehow.com/how_4468711_lemon-balm-tea.html

http://www.cooksgarden.com/vegetables/cucu...ticle10100.html

http://www.cooks.com/rec/search/0,1-0,lemon_balm,FF.html

http://www.herbsociety.org/factsheets/Lemo...alm%20Guide.pdf

http://kingshillfarm.com/wp-content/upload...oup-A-Box-4.pdf



Thirdly, sometimes I wonder if you read any of the studies I posted.
Yes, as I mentioned earlier too, about my late mum preparing an egg stew
with lemon balm whenever I had a cough, that is one of the folk cures for this
condition.

But sure the studies would be very clear to tell you that this plant had other
powerful qualities that our old timers did not know about ?

We should respect the folk remedies that our parents and grandparents knew
about from their ancestors, of course, but later scientist found out properties
that the same herb had on other diseases.

If you don't have time to, or understand, the whole study, then read the title,
the introduction or abstract, then the results, and finally the conclusion. That's
what I do sometimes too.


In the meantime, I am having my hands full with another "demented" relative
whom I live with. Or more of a lunatic, rather. You can read it here :

http://www.pjnet.my/Disabled-Kids-Home-Nee...87669#pid387669


From the address I gave in the above post, you would be living not far from me,
since you mentioned that you live not far from the Just Life organic shop, which
means you are at SS2.

It is likely you've passed by my house before, since that narrow road is now used
as a short-cut transit between SS1 and SS3 by main traffic (lots of complaints by
the residents here).

He's just repainted the house a light cream, though. So it's no longer an eyesore yellow.


You could always drop by too, but then I am not at home most of the day, and
night as well (typing this from my office), as nobody wants to be around a person
who I am convinced suffers from overlapping schizoid, paranoid and narcissistic
personality disorders.

Your grandpa may be demented, but I am sure he doesn't behave the way
this sicko does. I am sure your grandpa is more of a joy to be around with,
if you stay with him, that is.

In fact, I'll become demented myself before long if I tolerate this any longer !

I've really had lost my patience with this guy, so am uploading this just to get
a little load of my back, and mind as well.

You may take a look at some of the "notices" and "orders" which he has stuck
on the front of my door over the months and years. I'm sure you or the others
here have never come across something like this before in your entire lives.

My apologies to the moderators if these uploads are out of order, you may
remove them if you wish.







SUSTham
post Aug 8 2012, 06:01 AM

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With all those mild symptoms you described, he seems pretty much normal.
Why did you think he has Alzheimer's ?

An Alzheimer's patient has much more severe symptoms. It's like trying to
communicate with and take care of a zombie, particularly in the late or advanced
stages.

They will repeat things over and over again, because their hippocampus, which
houses short term memories, has been damaged permanently. Their brains have
shrunk, and the neurons have all become tangled up into one hard mess, coated
with amyloid plaques.

Give him a good multivit for a start, like Livewell's DailySential 45+.


Regarding my brother's case - would you sell your share to him if he despised
and treated you like come worthless stray dog or concentration camp inmate ?

Would you sell your car to some scum who threatened to smash your windscreen
if you did not do so ?



I'm sure that you and me, and the other sane human beings here, have pride or
at least some self-respect. If you read the link I gave you again, he virtually tried
to starve me into submission, by locking me out of the kitchen, disposing of my
fridge not caring less about my knowledge or consent, and then barring me from
keeping even a jar of jam there for some bread after I had come home from a week's
stay at Tung Shin Hospital for a dangerous pleural effusion caused by a bacterial
infection - half my right lung was filled with fluid.

On consulting Richard Yong, the famous clairvoyant in SS2, as to what the hell
was wrong with this guy, he disclosed -

" Serious mental disorders."

" He's crazy. A SADIST. "

" Nobody in Western Digital (where he works) likes him."


How he managed to rise to the level of Principal Engineer (virtually a manager,
$15,000 a month with substantial shareholding rights) in Western Digital is beyond me.


Partly my own folly, when nearly two decades ago, struggling to get thru the third
year of his engineering degree at the University of Tasmania with failures in no less
than three subects (multiple failures in Computer Systems), I wrote several appeal
letters to his Dean and Head of Department pleading for clemency.








This post has been edited by Tham: Aug 8 2012, 06:02 AM
SUSTham
post Aug 10 2012, 06:24 AM

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Melatonin Antioxidative Defense: Therapeutical Implications for Aging and Neurodegenerative Processes.


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/22739839


Added on August 11, 2012, 3:45 am



Chyawanprash.

Antiamnesic activity of an ayurvedic formulation chyawanprash in mice.


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3137779



Beneficial effect of chyawanprash on cognitive function in aged mice.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20738179


Effect of Sonachandi Chyawanprash and Chyawanprash Plus--two herbal
formulations on immunomodulation.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16295744



"Sona Chandi Chyawanprash"


http://www.emamigroup.com/Sonachandi-Chyawanprash


I took this over a decade ago.

http://www.zanduayurveda.com/products/27/z...esari-jivan.php











This post has been edited by Tham: Aug 11 2012, 04:08 AM
SUSTham
post Aug 11 2012, 04:09 AM

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This is a very good website on the brain.

You can select beginner, intermediate or advanced learning,
as well as the level of organization.

I think it is under McGill University.


Short and long term memories.

http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_07/i_0..._07_cr_tra.html



Alzheimer's.

http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_08/i_0..._08_cr_alz.html





SUSTham
post Sep 30 2013, 06:17 PM

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Senior Member
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Joined: May 2007




The local Azheimer's Disease Foundation is giving a talk by a neurologist
on vascular dementia at its premises in PJ this Saturday at 2 pm.

http://adfmmalaysia.blogspot.com/2013/09/s...k-vascular.html



Vascular dementia, also called multi-infarct dementia, is different from normal
Alzheimer's in that it tends to occur in the elderly a year or two after a stroke.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vascular_dementia



SUSTham
post Oct 8 2013, 12:28 AM

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Joined: May 2007
QUOTE(Azurika @ Oct 7 2013, 07:11 AM)
thats bullshit , no offence to anyone.
I drank that the night before my SPM History Exam to study, end up i doze off after 5 mins.
*
That was what happened to me too, way back in 1974, the night before
the Maths paper in the MCE exam.

Worse, it caused diarrhea the next day, and I had to run to the toilet several
times before the paper. That was a day to remember for life.

That stupid product nearly caused me to fail that subject. I've never touched
it again ever since.

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