ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/276...
Has anyone ever tried?
Is it really a neuroprotective and anti-inflammator agent in Parkinson?
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/276...
Has anyone ever tried?
Is it really a neuroprotective and anti-inflammator agent in Parkinson?
Jimmary, on this site, pointed us all to um-PEA (ultra-micronized PEA) a month ago. The article he linked to--
news-medical.net/news/20170...
is way more relevant than the mouse model you hit upon. Although the clinical trial was small (30 patients) and open-label, it found a significant positive effect of um-PEA. Responses to Jimmary's post veered mostly off-topic, as they focused instead on thiamine. Here's his post: healthunlocked.com/parkinso...
Talking about PEA, I have found more interesting information.
balancingbrainchemistry.co....
To point out, " taking PEA (low dose 10-60mg) in combination with seleginine (5mg twice a day) and vitamin b6 (p5p) will be a very effective antidepressant. It's a psychological painkiller..."