[/quote]Wonderfulworld wrote:with some VINPOCETINE 10 mg treee times a day. It helps the voiding problem and it cures MS, makes you very smart and cures several other minor diseases.
Sorry but this just sounds too like a snake oil routine to me.
Cures MS!???
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If anyone else would like to reply re. Green Tea and Bladder issues I'd very much like to hear your experiences.
Thanks
Here is HOW Vinpocetine and other Phosphodiesterase inhibitors help protect the nervous system. Of course you MUST know HOW MS progresses in order to understand this.
jackD
Mult Scler. 1999 Apr;5(2):126-33.
Effects of phosphodiesterase inhibitors on cytokine production by microglia.
Yoshikawa M, Suzumura A, Tamaru T, Takayanagi T, Sawada M.
Department of Neurology, Nara Medical University, Kashihara, Japan.
Type III and IV phosphodiesterase inhibitors (PDEIs) have recently been shown to suppress the production of TNF-alpha in several types of cells.
In the present study, we have shown that all the types of PDEIs, from type I- to V-specific and non-specific, suppress the production of TNF-alpha by mouse microglia stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in a dose-dependent manner.
Certain combinations of three different types of PDEIs synergistically suppressed TNF-alpha production by microglia at a very low concentration (1 microM).
Since some PDEIs reportedly pass through the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the combination of three PDEIs may be worth trying in neurological diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and HIV-related neurological diseases in which TNF-alpha may play a critical role.
Some PDEIs also suppressed interleukin-I (IL-I) and IL-6 production by mouse microglia stimulated with LPS.
In contrast, the production of IL-10, which is known to be an inhibitory cytokine, was upregulated by certain PDEIs.
The suppression of TNF-alpha and induction of IL-10 were confirmed at the mRNA level by RT-PCR. PDEIs may be useful anti-inflammatory agents by downregulating inflammatory cytokines and upregulating inhibitory cytokines in the central nervous system. (CNS).
PMID: 10335522 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]