Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Glutathione Can Prevent Parkinson's

A recent study revealed that mice with less glutathione, particularly in their dopamine-producing neurons, become crippled by nerve damage. In fact, what they developed seemed to be symptoms of Parkinson's.

This new discovery might call into question the current pharmaceutical approach to Parkinson's Disease; which doses patients with dopamine equivalents, or with drugs that boost dopamine's effect (as a former prescription drug, Methamphetamine, or “Crystal Meth” does). Unfortunately, these drugs have also been found to cause many of the effects that are also seen with Methamphetamine, such as gambling and other impulse-control problems. Now it seems that the underlying problem may not really be dopamine.

For most of us in the modern world, the likely reason for having insufficient glutathione in the active form is that we aren't getting enough melatonin at night. Better sleep hygiene and more darkness, as well as more regular bedtimes, are a great way to start. Another way is by taking MaxGXL, the world's best glutathione supplement.



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For a free sample of MaxGXL, visit www.7daymaxchallenge.com and request a MaxGXL Intro Pack.

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