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Old 06-21-2008, 01:12 PM #12
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jackD jackD is offline
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Location: Maryland outside WASH DC
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15 yr Member
jackD jackD is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Maryland outside WASH DC
Posts: 258
15 yr Member
Default Vinpocetine & MS

Here is the rabbit thing plus the Bladder thingie. I take 10mg of Vinpocetine twice a day.

jackD

p.s. It is also the BEST cure for MS(58% reduction in lesion activity) and fixes my bladder problems. There is some considerable hyperboyle in the preceding statement but that is what the study showed.


Quote:
1: J Int Med Res. 1990 Mar-Apr;18(2):142-52.

Calcium, phosphorus and aluminium concentrations in the central nervous system, liver and kidney of rabbits with experimental atherosclerosis: preventive effects of vinpocetine on the deposition of these elements.

Yasui M, Yano I, Ota K, Oshima A.

Division of Neurological Diseases, Wakayama Medical College, Japan.

Calcium, phosphorus and aluminium concentrations in the central nervous system, liver and kidneys were determined in 16 rabbits with atherosclerosis experimentally induced by a cholesterol-rich diet and the protective effect of 3 or 10 mg/kg.day vinpocetine (14-ethoxycarbonyl-(3 alpha,16 alpha-ethyl)-14,15-eburnamenine) given orally on the deposition of these elements was assessed.

Rabbits fed a cholesterol-rich diet developed atherosclerosis after 3 months and these rabbits possessed high concentrations of calcium, phosphorus and aluminium in the central nervous system, determined by neutron activation analysis.

In atherosclerotic rabbits fed a vinpocetine supplement, there was a decrease in concentrations of these elements in tissues.

It is suggested that calcium, phosphorus and aluminium may be implicated in the aetiology of atherosclerosis and that vinpocetine may have a preventive action on the deposition of these elements in central nervous tissue, liver and kidney.

PMID: 2340946 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Quote:
1: Mult Scler. 2000 Feb;6(1):56-8.

Drop in relapse rate of MS by combination therapy of three different phosphodiesterase inhibitors.

Suzumura A, Nakamuro T, Tamaru T, Takayanagi T.
Department of Neurology, Nara Medical University, 840 Shijo-cho, Kashihara, Nara 634-0813, Japan.

Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (PDEIs), when used in combination, synergistically suppress TNFalpha production by various cells and also suppress experimental demyelination at very low concentrations.

We conducted a pilot study to determine whether the combination of three PDEIs suppresses the relapse of MS at the usual therapeutic doses. Of the 12 relapsing remitting MS, the mean relapse rate/year dropped remarkably (from 3.08+/-3.32 to 0.92+/-1.86) after PDEI treatment. Seven out of 12 (58.3%) were relapse-free in the follow up period (499+/-142 days).

The combination of three PDEIs can be safe and useful strategy for the future treatment of MS. - 58

PMID: 10694847 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Bladder - thingie


Quote:
1: World J Urol. 2000 Dec;18(6):439-43.

Initial clinical experience with the selective phosphodiesterase-I isoenzyme inhibitor vinpocetine in the treatment of urge incontinence and low compliance bladder.

Truss MC, Stief CG, Uckert S, Becker AJ, Schultheiss D, Machtens S, Jonas U.
Department of Urology, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Germany. truss.michael@mh-hannover.de

Current pharmacological treatment modalities for urge incontinence and low compliance bladder are limited by a low clinical efficacy and the significant side effects of the standard drugs available. Previous in vitro studies indicated a possible functional relevance of the intracellular phosphodiesterase (PDE)-1 isoenzyme in the regulation of human detrusor smooth muscle contractility.

We therefore investigated the effect of the PDE-1 inhibitor vinpocetine in nonresponders to standard pharmacological therapy. In 11/19 patients (57.9%) clinical symptoms and/or urodynamic parameters were improved. Although these initial data are preliminary, they represent the first evidence that isoenzyme-selective PDE inhibition may be a novel approach to the treatment of lower urinary tract disorders.

PMID: 11204266 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Last edited by jackD; 06-21-2008 at 03:27 PM.
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