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Serotonin syndromehow do you know? Are you using breath test strips?
I realize you may just be posting a study and not have any further knowledge on this, but I thought I would ask: if I react poorly to thiamine, specifically with regard to breathing, where it makes my breathing feel uncomfortable, would that be an indicator that too high NO is a not a problem for me, but just the opposite?
I really don't know if there is some kind of minimum NO level that is necessary, but that's an interesting question. Perhaps it could also be an allergic reaction?I realize you may just be posting a study and not have any further knowledge on this, but I thought I would ask: if I react poorly to thiamine, specifically with regard to breathing, where it makes my breathing feel uncomfortable, would that be an indicator that too high NO is a not a problem for me, but just the opposite?
This has been a topic that has been discussed recently in some threads, that maybe too low NO is possible. I'm not claiming I know, because I don't and am just researching it when possible.
This is very likely, as I don't take well to many supplements. So, maybe the poor breathing is due to that and has nothing to do with improper NO.Perhaps it could also be an allergic reaction?
Would Mucuna Pruriens help?@Blake
BEST THINGS FOR LOWERING NITRIC OXIDE:
- b2r5p
- methylene blue
- Niacinamide
- b1 thiamine
- zinc
- hydroxy b12
- caffeine
- lysine
- Agmatine
- tetracycline / minocycline
- aspirin
- Pau D'arco
- coq10
- vitamin E
- carbon dioxide
- magnesium
- GABA (theanine/Progesterone)
- anthraquinones
- emodin
- MSM
- adamantine (diamant)
- NAC/ L-cysteine