Now if I could only get my idiot father to take the Quercetin pills I gave him.
After three weeks of it sitting at my parent's house unopened, I angrily asked why in the hell wasn't he taking that with his mandated (by me) Zinc and Vitamin D.
"Well, I just need to do some more research before I'm comfortable taking a supplement I've never heard of".
This coming from a man who was jabbed twice and showed up early the first day for his booster.
If he has a heart issue and takes lisinopril or any ace-inhibitor he should NOT take NAC. <<
Does anyone know if DANDELION LEAF EXTRACT, which has been found to bind to ACE2 receptors in place of spike proteins, could have any possible negative interactions with NAC?
Dandelion leaf extract prevents spike protein damage from Covid and DeathJabs (Univ. of Freiburg, Germany)
Dandelion leaf extract prevents spike protein damage from Covid and DeathJabs (Univ. of Freiburg, Germany)
posted 186 days ago by Huffman98 +460 / -2
A German university research group has shown that at least in petri dishes, substances obtained from dandelion leaves prevent spike proteins from harming human cells by binding to ACE2 receptors.
Anons who work with herbal medicines might be able to tell us if there is an effective way to get the goodies from dandelion leaves (some of which I have bolded below) at home - for example, can we just steep some dandelion leaves in hot water and drink the 'tea' it produces? Notably, these researchers did not use the flower or stems or roots of the plant -- just the leaves.
Summary from the article:
""Here we report on the efficacy of common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) to block protein- protein interaction of spike S1 to the human ACE2 cell surface receptor. This could be shown for the original spike D614, but also for its mutant forms (D614G, N501Y, and mix of K417N, E484K, N501Y) in human HEK293-hACE2 kidney and A549-hACE2-TMPRSS2 lung cells…
"The common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) belongs to the plant family Asteraceae, subfamily Cichorioideae with many varieties and microspecies. It is a perennial herb, native distributed in the warmer temperate zones of the Northern Hemisphere inhabiting fields, roadsides and ruderal sites.
T. officinale is consumed as vegetable food, but also employed in European phytotherapy to treat disorders from the liver, gallbladder, digestive tract or rheumatic diseases. Modern herbal monographs consider the plant usage as safe and have evaluated the empiric use of T. officinale with a positive outcome [...]
Our research was conducted using water-based extracts from plant leaves. We found that leaf extracts efficiently blocked spike protein or its mutant forms to the ACE2 receptor, used in either pre- or post-incubation, and that high molecular weight compounds account for this effect…"
Now if I could only get my idiot father to take the Quercetin pills I gave him.
After three weeks of it sitting at my parent's house unopened, I angrily asked why in the hell wasn't he taking that with his mandated (by me) Zinc and Vitamin D.
"Well, I just need to do some more research before I'm comfortable taking a supplement I've never heard of".
This coming from a man who was jabbed twice and showed up early the first day for his booster.
Pretty sure I was adopted.
If he has a heart issue and takes lisinopril or any ace-inhibitor he should NOT take NAC.
Does anyone know if DANDELION LEAF EXTRACT, which has been found to bind to ACE2 receptors in place of spike proteins, could have any possible negative interactions with NAC?
.........................................................................................................................
http://greatawakening.win/p/12jJBvdPEr/dandelion-leaf-extrac
Dandelion leaf extract prevents spike protein damage from Covid and DeathJabs (Univ. of Freiburg, Germany)
Dandelion leaf extract prevents spike protein damage from Covid and DeathJabs (Univ. of Freiburg, Germany)
posted 186 days ago by Huffman98 +460 / -2
A German university research group has shown that at least in petri dishes, substances obtained from dandelion leaves prevent spike proteins from harming human cells by binding to ACE2 receptors.
Grab the PDF while you can at: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.03.19.435959v1.full.pdf
and see the abstract and authorship credits at: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.03.19.435959v1.article-info
Anons who work with herbal medicines might be able to tell us if there is an effective way to get the goodies from dandelion leaves (some of which I have bolded below) at home - for example, can we just steep some dandelion leaves in hot water and drink the 'tea' it produces? Notably, these researchers did not use the flower or stems or roots of the plant -- just the leaves.
Summary from the article:
""Here we report on the efficacy of common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) to block protein- protein interaction of spike S1 to the human ACE2 cell surface receptor. This could be shown for the original spike D614, but also for its mutant forms (D614G, N501Y, and mix of K417N, E484K, N501Y) in human HEK293-hACE2 kidney and A549-hACE2-TMPRSS2 lung cells…
"The common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) belongs to the plant family Asteraceae, subfamily Cichorioideae with many varieties and microspecies. It is a perennial herb, native distributed in the warmer temperate zones of the Northern Hemisphere inhabiting fields, roadsides and ruderal sites.
T. officinale is consumed as vegetable food, but also employed in European phytotherapy to treat disorders from the liver, gallbladder, digestive tract or rheumatic diseases. Modern herbal monographs consider the plant usage as safe and have evaluated the empiric use of T. officinale with a positive outcome [...]
Our research was conducted using water-based extracts from plant leaves. We found that leaf extracts efficiently blocked spike protein or its mutant forms to the ACE2 receptor, used in either pre- or post-incubation, and that high molecular weight compounds account for this effect…"
I can tell you this much -- dandelion tea leaves make delicious tea. I like it cold.