Difference between revisions of "Translations:Dave Johnson's Proletariat Protocol/83/en"

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Nature's Answer Licorice root single herb supplement. (non-dgl), 450 mg x 90 capsules. LEF #28567, cost $6. Dosage: one cap per day. Licorice has a number of therapeutic actions: the one that matters to us is that it’s a co-factor with Peony root extract, even though licorice itself is not a heat shock protein inducer. The biochemical glycyrrhizin is responsible for this effect, the commonly available deglycyrrhized licorice extract won’t work. WARNING: Glycyrrhizin may raise blood pressure. If you have blood pressure issues, monitor blood pressure on a regular basis (several times a day at first) to make sure that licorice root isn’t causing problems. ALSO: licorice may be incompatible with ginseng (blood pressure issues again), which some people take but I have a low opinion of the stuff myself.
TranslationNature's Answer Licorice root single herb supplement. (non-dgl), 450 mg x 90 capsules. LEF #28567, cost $6. Dosage: one cap per day. Licorice has a number of therapeutic actions: the one that matters to us is that it’s a co-factor with Peony root extract, even though licorice itself is not a heat shock protein inducer. The biochemical glycyrrhizin is responsible for this effect, the commonly available deglycyrrhized licorice extract won’t work. WARNING: Glycyrrhizin may raise blood pressure. If you have blood pressure issues, monitor blood pressure on a regular basis (several times a day at first) to make sure that licorice root isn’t causing problems. ALSO: licorice may be incompatible with ginseng (blood pressure issues again), which some people take but I have a low opinion of the stuff myself.

Nature's Answer Licorice root single herb supplement. (non-dgl), 450 mg x 90 capsules. LEF #28567, cost $6. Dosage: one cap per day. Licorice has a number of therapeutic actions: the one that matters to us is that it’s a co-factor with Peony root extract, even though licorice itself is not a heat shock protein inducer. The biochemical glycyrrhizin is responsible for this effect, the commonly available deglycyrrhized licorice extract won’t work. WARNING: Glycyrrhizin may raise blood pressure. If you have blood pressure issues, monitor blood pressure on a regular basis (several times a day at first) to make sure that licorice root isn’t causing problems. ALSO: licorice may be incompatible with ginseng (blood pressure issues again), which some people take but I have a low opinion of the stuff myself.