Covid and Long Covid treatment
Many of these treatments have already been featured but is worth repeating because Covid is not going away and variants are being spread by the vaccinated who are shedding. So both the virus and vaccinating can have long term effects. We are not talking about a cold or flu but neurological complications, cancers and heart disease. This compilation comes from Spartacus but is similar to ones that I have posted before.
Severe COVID-19 = viral vascular endotheliitis with thromboinflammatory response. Neutrophils go out of control and you end up with NETosis, lipid peroxidation, sepsis, DAMP formation, etc., in a runaway feedback loop. The virus’s proteins promote amyloid-fibrin clot formation, and the lungs start loading up with microclots and suffering transient ischemia, which leads to ischemia-reperfusion-like injury of the vital organs (which upsets the redox balance of the blood vessels and the tissues, leading to lipid peroxidation, ferroptosis, et cetera). Here’s how to treat it at home:
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin D
- Vitamin K
- Zinc
- NAC
- Selenium
- NMN
- Glycine
- Quercetin
- Curcumin
- Kutki Powder
- Natto-Serra
- Melatonin
- Famotidine
- Diphenhydramine
What do all of these things have in common? They are all potent antioxidants. Vitamin C is an antioxidant. Vitamin D draws excess calcium out of cells by activating Ca2+ ATPase , which has an antioxidant effect. Zinc is not just an antiviral (especially when paired with an ionophore like quercetin), it’s also an antioxidant, inhibiting NADPH oxidase. NAC and selenium are precursors to the glutathione and the selenocysteine molecules that are necessary to the functioning of glutathione peroxidases, which are arguably your cells’ primary defense mechanism against oxidative death. NMN acts as a NAD precursor, preventing parthanatos. Glycine is also crucial in glutathione synthesis. Quercetin is a powerful antioxidant and augments the effect of zinc. It’s also anti-amyloid. Curcumin is a plant polyphenol and a powerful antioxidant, and is one of the main compounds found in turmeric. Kutki powder, made from the picrorhiza kurroa root, is rich in apocynin, an extremely potent antioxidant closely related to vanillin that inhibits myeloperoxidase without harming the ability of neutrophils to engage in phagocytosis. Nattokinase and serrapeptase are potent fibrinolytic enzymes that help break down amyloid-fibrin clots. Nattokinase also has known antioxidant effects. Melatonin is an antioxidant. Famotidine and diphenhydramine (Pepcid and Benadryl) are also antioxidants and inhibitors of ferroptosis.
This is supported by peer-reviewed papers. https://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8106523/ As a matter of fact, redox modulation should be the first-line treatment for any COVID-19 case.
Why isn’t it?
This from Walter Chestnut:
Other factors which influence autophagy are acute heat exposure, as one would experience in a sauna, flavonoid consumption, phenolic compounds, and coffee. Resveratrol can also induce fasting, as it acts as a protein restriction mimetic, and metformin, a diabetes medication, can influence autophagy signaling. Surprisingly, cold exposure, in addition to heat exposure, also increases autophagy. Hyperbaric oxygen and ozone therapy may also stimulate autophagy.
— Elijah (@CherithElijah) May 20, 2023
2./ Boswellia is a plant extract derived from the resin of the Indian Frankincense tree minimizes the damaging effects of inflammation and stimulates joint repair by activating the production of collagen. pic.twitter.com/lZzcCQqtuI
— Elijah (@CherithElijah) May 20, 2023
4./ Bromelain breaks up fibrous scar tissue, thins blood and improves circulation. That is why pinapple is often served with fibrous meat. pic.twitter.com/IPg6oQkZQD
— Elijah (@CherithElijah) May 20, 2023
6./ Magnesium plays an essential role in more than 600 biochemical reactions. Muscle spasms are caused by a lack of magnesium. pic.twitter.com/DHFI8woYDU
— Elijah (@CherithElijah) May 20, 2023
Vitamin C protection in long COVID? – # 91 🚨💥 EXCLUSIVE VIDEO LINK BELOW 💥🚨(17 min)