Magnesium to prevent and reverse Aurtic stenosis and calcification in general

the SEM data show that the protein-protein cross-linking bonds are the starting sites of calcification. In addition, substitution of Ca2+ cations by Mg2+ cations leads to the formation of amorphous hydroxyapatite, preventing aortic valve stenosis, which suggests that treatment with magnesium salts may reduce stenosis of aortic valves…
iv.iiarjournals.org/content/28/1/91.full

We observed strong, favorable associations between higher self-reported total (dietary and supplemental) magnesium intake and lower calcification of the coronary arteries…
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3957229/

Studies showed that a calcium to magnesium intake ratio <2.8 is critical for optimal health, supporting a long-held but non–evidence-based recommendation that the calcium to magnesium ratio should be close to 2. Increasing calcium intakes in the United States since 1977 have resulted in a calcium to magnesium ratio >3.0 since 2000, coinciding with increasing rates of T2D and colorectal cancer. US studies assessing oral magnesium therapy or dietary magnesium intakes showed beneficial effects of dietary magnesium in CVD, T2D, and cancers, although similar studies in populations with lower calcium to magnesium ratios (≥1.7) reported the opposite…
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4717874/

 

Ketosis and Ketosis Supplements

  •  high-fat, low-carb keto diet. Being in ketosis, the state where your body uses fat instead of glucose for energy, increases the NAD+ to NADH ratio. You want higher NAD+, because it protects cells from oxidative stress[20][21] — an imbalance between free radicals and antioxidants in your body that contributes to aging.[22][23]
  • Practice intermittent fasting. Restricting your eating increases NAD+ levels.[24][25] Though calorie-restriction diets and periods of fasting will do it, those aren’t sustainable for the long term. Intermittent fasting is, if you do it right. Here’s how to get started with intermittent fasting.
  • Take oxaloacetate. A higher ratio of NAD+ to NADH helps you make more energy and makes your cells work better. Oxaloacetate activates the longevity pathway in a similar way that calorie restriction does. It converts to malate, which raises your NAD+ to NADH ratio,[26] which makes more NAD+ available for your cells to use. Try: KetoPrime, a highly bioavailable form of oxaloacetate.

NADD+ and NADH

NADH for PD:

(NADH) has been used as medication in 885 PD patients in an open label trial. About half of the patients received NADH by intravenous infusion, the other part orally by capsules. In about 80% of the patients a beneficial clinical effect was observed

NADH for brain issues
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29634344

older research
pdfs.semanticscholar.org/ed59/9c8a4b6e45592c8da1099103c5797e82f87b.pdf

NAD+ vs NADH
www.elysiumhealth.com/en-us/knowledge/science-101/whats-the-difference-between-nad-and-nadh

NR+?

Most sources say boost  NAD+ using precursors or NAD+ supplement (NMN, NR)

also oxaloacetate :

oxaloacetate. A higher ratio of NAD+ to NADH helps you make more energy and makes your cells work better. Oxaloacetate activates the longevity pathway in a similar way that calorie restriction does. It converts to malate, which raises your NAD+ to NADH ratio,[26] which makes more NAD+ available for your cells to use. Try: KetoPrime, a highly bioavailable form of oxaloacetate

see also https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1474-9726.2009.00527.x

NAD+

Role of Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide and Related Precursors as Therapeutic Targets for Age-Related Degenerative Diseases: Rationale, Biochemistry, Pharmacokinetics, and Outcomes

NADH for PD:

short history of NAD related work from 2016, anecdotal evidence suggest its a game changer
measuring NAD is hard to do
precursors taken orally – do they surviv? NADD patched, iv,supossitory…

liposomal NMN ?

all precursors will be tested soon
NAD deficit might be high so that 2x increase in NAD level is not significant

David Sinclair personal anti aging supplements protocol

NMN 1 gr with food(fat) in the morning, proven to raise NAD

Reversatol 0.5 gr (checkout Uleic acid – olive oil alternative)

Metformin 1 gr at night (checkout supplement alternative Berberine )

#q1: checkout this supplement
il.iherb.com/pr/Thorne-Research-ResveraCel-60-Capsules/69377

#q2: interaction with Warfarin

Avoid mamals due to TAMO
From 4:30 here:

another list,from fastlifehacks.com/david-sinclair-supplements/

David Sinclair Takes:

Resveratrol – 1g/daily – mornings with yogurt (see where to buy)
Nicotinamide Mononucleotide (NMN) – 1g/daily – mornings (see where to buy)
Metformin (prescription drug) – 1g/daily in the evenings – except on days when exercising
Multivitamins? Only vitamin D3 with K2, he aims to get the rest from his diet
Statin (prescription drug) – taken since his early 20s due to family history of cardiovascular disease
Aspirin – 83mg daily

make a list according to this guy

checkout Uleic vs resveratrol

Risk:

Metformin may increase risk of PD and other neurodegenerative disease

Leaky Gut protocol

Tom Obrian:

Vitamin D
Glutamine
Fish Oil 3gr per day
Zinc carnosine 2X75 mg /day
Colestrum
Probiotics

use coconut oil – oil pulling  , for mouth higene, especially against gingivalis

 

list of leaky gut treatment options on slefhacked

see also postt on colostrun, here

in normal physiology, glutamine plays a key role in signalling in enterocytes that are part of the intestinal barrier, but it is not clear if supplementing the diet with glutamine is helpful in conditions where there is increased intestinal permeability.[27]

Prebiotics and certain probiotics such as Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 have been found to reduce increased intestinal permeability.[9] Lactobacillus rhamnosus,[28] Lactobacillus reuteri,[28] and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii[29] have also been shown to significantly reduce increased intestinal permeability.

Larazotide acetate (previously known as AT-1001) is a zonulin receptor antagonist that has been probed in clinical trials. It seems to be a drug candidate for use in conjunction with a gluten-free diet in people with celiac disease, with the aim to reduce the intestinal permeability caused by gluten and its passage through the epithelium, and therefore mitigating the resulting cascade of immune reactions.[25][30] read more>>

Colostrum, for leaky gut

positive results of colostrum on adult gut health in several recent well controlled published studies.[44][45][46][47]

Davison, Glen; Marchbank, Tania; March, Daniel S.; Thatcher, Rhys; Playford, Raymond J. (1 August 2016). “Zinc carnosine works with bovine colostrum in truncating heavy exercise-induced increase in gut permeability in healthy volunteers”. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 104 (2): 526–536. doi:10.3945/ajcn.116.134403. ISSN 1938-3207. PMID 27357095.
Marchbank, Tania; Davison, Glen; Oakes, Jemma R.; Ghatei, Mohammad A.; Patterson, Michael; Moyer, Mary Pat; Playford, Raymond J. (1 March 2011). “The nutriceutical bovine colostrum truncates the increase in gut permeability caused by heavy exercise in athletes”. American Journal of Physiology. Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology. 300 (3): G477–484. doi:10.1152/ajpgi.00281.2010. ISSN 1522-1547. PMID 21148400.
Playford, R. J.; MacDonald, C. E.; Calnan, D. P.; Floyd, D. N.; Podas, T.; Johnson, W.; Wicks, A. C.; Bashir, O.; Marchbank, T. (1 June 2001). “Co-administration of the health food supplement, bovine colostrum, reduces the acute non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug-induced increase in intestinal permeability”. Clinical Science (London, England: 1979). 100 (6): 627–633. ISSN 0143-5221. PMID 11352778.
Khan, Z.; Macdonald, C.; Wicks, A. C.; Holt, M. P.; Floyd, D.; Ghosh, S.; Wright, N. A.; Playford, R. J. (1 November 2002). “Use of the ‘nutriceutical’, bovine colostrum, for the treatment of distal colitis: results from an initial study”. Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 16 (11): 1917–1922. ISSN 0269-2813. PMID 12390100.
Uruakpa, F; Ismond, M.A.H; Akobundu, E.N.T (2002). “Colostrum and its benefits: a review”. Nutrition Research. 22 (6): 755–767. doi:10.1016/S0271-5317(02)00373-1.

research list on examine.com

get Colostrum on Iherb

Magnesium

www.naturalstacks.com/blogs/news/magnesium

www.naturalnews.com/046401_magnesium_dietary_supplements_nutrient_absorption.html

magnesium deficiency can cause hreart palpatation and also calcification of heart and blood vessle

general association between magnesium and heart health www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3957229/

 magnesium salts  could reduce the progress of aortic valve stenosis