Hi Melly,

I remembered reading this from the Strauss Heart Drops Sept. newsletter.  I
thought you might like to read it also as it talks about decreasing plaques.

PT

 

 

"Vinpocetine Improves Memory 

My 88-year old mother-in-law takes an herb from a flower. It's called
Vinpocetine. She is as sharp as a tack and has the memory of a 20 year old.
She credits this flower pill for it. I'm only 50 and I can't remember
certain words or events in my own life. Have you heard of this, and can it
help everyone with memory loss? 

Answer: Vinpocetine is one of my favorite memory boosters which may account
for sharpness. It's a semi-synthetic derivative of "vincamine" which comes
from the beautiful periwinkle plant and increases blood flow to your brain.
There are many ways to increase blood flow in the body, but not many that
can get past the brain's outerwear, termed the "blood brain barrier." The
fact that vinpocetine can penetrate that, helps it deliver more precious
oxygen, glucose and nutrients to your brain. 

Vinpocetine can improve attention and alertness, and it may have a positive
effect on the damaged brain, like for people who have suffered a stroke.
Vinpocetine helps drive production of ATP, an energy molecule. Who couldn't
use a bit more brain energy?! Some fairly well-designed studies show that
vinpocetine can help with poor night vision, glaucoma or macular
degeneration. I think it is worth a try for people with some types of
hearing loss, vertigo and Reynaud's. 

Because vinpocetine is so adept at increasing circulation, it begs the
question, "Can it improve blood flow to my ailing heart?" I think it can,
but do approve this with your physician and cardiologist. Vinpocetine
dilates blood vessels, and seems to decrease plaque formation. 

I realize some of you will want to start vinpocetine, but please note that
like all drugs, even the plant-based ones, there are risks. By increasing
blood flow, vinpocetine will interact with all types of blood thinners
including warfarin, clopidogrel (brand Plavix), Lovenox and heparin among
others. I wouldn't combine vinpocetine with natural blood thinners either,
including ginkgo biloba or ginger. 

If you are scheduled for dental work, or surgery, please stop the herb two
weeks before your visit. Vinpocetine is generally well tolerated at lower
doses (like 10 mg per day), but when you get into higher doses (10 mg three
or four times daily) then you may begin to experience any of the following:
Nausea, indigestion, insomnia, dizziness, hot flashes, dry mouth or
headache. If you have any vascular or cardiac issues, please ask your
doctor. 

If your doctor approves of vinpocetine, buy it at any health food store. As
I always say, "Start low!" So begin taking 5 or 10 mg daily. Effects are
often noticed the first week. You can always titrate to higher doses if you
want to, over a few weeks. Most clinical research trials use about 10 mg
three times daily, but again, dosing is very individual and should be
customized to your personal medical history and drug regimen."

 

 

From: Melly Bag [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, September 03, 2011 5:16 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>Re: silver-digest Digest V2011 #241

 


Thanks Jane, i do give him a dash of cayenne, but maybe i will give him
capsules instead to increase his in-take.

 

PT, thanks, i just couldn't find the article.

 

Melly

--- On Sat, 9/3/11, [email protected]
<[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: silver-digest Digest V2011 #241
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, September 3, 2011, 11:32 AM

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