Update on broccoli seed extract study - Cure Parkinson's

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Update on broccoli seed extract study

wriga profile image
64 Replies

The following is an updated article about the study completed by 8 PwP.

It gives you a summary of the biological processes, the first results and what the high response symptoms may be telling us about the mechanisms involved. I am still waiting for detailed statistical analysis and for further feedback from Prof Jed Fahey. Finally I make a suggestion about what I think should be done next. There is little point in just repeating the same experiment with a few more people. The next trial has to be done better, much better... with more professionalism, proper chemical and clinical analysis and more rigour. That is going to cost money ....

It's here

wp.me/pc57vK-1o

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wriga profile image
wriga
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64 Replies
rescuema profile image
rescuema

I'm a big fan of sulforaphane's role in Nrf2 activation. The few things people need to watch out for is the possibility of iodine deficiency (supplement Lugol's at alternate times not being deficient on selenium) and being sure that molybdenum-dependent detox enzymes aren't underperforming not to experience sulfite related toxicity (or sulfate deficiency blocking sulfation pathway) - build up very slowly and not be deficient in molybdenum and methyl donors.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply torescuema

Can I just put a little seaweed in my broccoli sprout tea?

I take 100 mcg of sSelenium every day.

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toBolt_Upright

You should separate the intake of sulforaphane and iodine. I use a few drops of 2% Lugols in my morning coffee 5 days a week - I can't even taste it. I tend to intake sulforaphane in the evening. Selenium is definitely recommended while dosing iodine, but you should be careful not to worsen thyroid issues or iodine deficiency while supplementing Se - finding this balance can be very tricky. I use hair mineral analysis to periodically check my Se level.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/204...

stopthethyroidmadness.com/2...

It's almost impossible to find a pure unpolluted source of seaweed and kelp these days, so using Lugols should be the easiest. You can also look into nascent iodine.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply torescuema

Thanks Rescue,

I'm not sure I need iodine due the the sulforaphane, but might need it due to the fact that I take 100 mcg of selenium every day.

I found this 2019 article on the effets of sulforaphane on thyroid function that was comforting: Broccoli sprout beverage is safe for thyroid hormonal and autoimmune status: results of a 12-week randomized trial. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...

HIGHLIGHTS

A broccoli sprout beverage was administered to healthy volunteers as a source of sulforaphane to activate Nrf2 signaling.

Daily consumption of the sulforaphane-rich beverage for 12 weeks did not affect the serum levels of fT4, TSH and TG.

The thyroid autoimmunity status of participants after 12 weeks on the broccoli sprout beverage was also unaffected.

Long-term ingestion of a sulforaphane-rich broccoli sprout beverage is safe for the thyroid gland.

Natural products activating Nrf2 should be individually evaluated for effects on thyroid hormonal and autoimmune status.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply torescuema

This is why I am taking selenium:

healthunlocked.com/cure-par...

wriga profile image
wriga

Hi Rescue,

I've not gone into the detail of iodine or selenium deficiency. That's not to minimise your remarks, but I'm a believer in the 80/20 rule. I think the decline of the Nrf2 pathway is 80% of the problem . Get that right and the rest falls into place.

I noticed on another post you did that you favour broccoli shoots rather than seeds because of anti-neutrients. No problem with that argument, but I don't think it's a very powerful one. My belief in the seeds route is that it gives better bioavailability using my protocol which converts glucoraphanin to sulforaphane before you ingest it. With raw sprouts you can't get that, but you can if you microwave them at 60C . Unfortunately there is no easy way to ingest sulforaphane. We need to work on a good delivery system.

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply towriga

It may not be a powerful one but I'm convinced of the effects of antinutrients (including erucic acid) so best to avoid them - some may be more sensitive than others. I soak/spout all seeds including brown rice and noticed profound benefits myself. : )

I'm not aware of your exact protocol, but there's no harm in sprouting the seeds up to 48 hrs as to using the straight seeds. You can use the young sprouted seeds (with little roots), or freeze them, then heat + blend it to convert to sulforaphane. I also use daikon sprouts to maximize the conversion while avoiding epithiospecifier protein shift.

For those who're sensitive, I say at least just eat the broccoli sprouts and let the gut bacteria perform the conversion (supply myrosinase) even if at low sulforaphane conversion around 10% - this might prevent unintended overdose in itself while providing myriad other nutritional benefits.

I agree with you on Nrf2 decline - of the many compounds that can help reactivate it, I prefer sulforaphane and I believe it also helps control gut pathogens.

wriga profile image
wriga in reply torescuema

Rescue, I see that you are fully informed on the published science. My experience is that the sprouts route doesn't work well for me, but I know it works for others. The question of anti-nutrients in seeds may well be the cause of adverse effects at higher doses in the study I report on. I have no means of knowing. One solution might be to germinate seeds for 2-3 days, with all the washing etc. to get rid of ... whatever is causing the problem ??? , then dry them so that they can be ground to a powder. Just an idea.. I also agree with Daikon seeds or sprouts for myrosinase, it may be better than white mustard . I did not propose it because it's harder to get hold of.

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply towriga

The reason I don't prefer mustard seeds is that they're also full of erucic acid, and the seeds get mucilaginous when attempting to sprout and get slimy, not easy to handle. Daikon seeds are incredibly easy to sprout. Soak them overnight, and then rinse twice a day until sprouts appear - literally in 2 days, but I let them glow out as long as they want as a source of clean myrosinase conversion. They have a harsh bite (a sign of myrosinase) but I personally love to munch on them. I got these seeds amazon.com/gp/product/B0010...

I also make sure to buy organic seeds. Possibly glyphosate tainted seeds can block phase II detox in itself so I'm careful of that.

The side effects that people noticed may be thyroid-related (sulforaphane causing iodine deficiency) or it may be because of sulfite toxicity with inadequate enzyme actions (molybdenum deficiency?) amongst others. eonutrition.co.uk/post/sulf...

Here's my protocol that works for me -

Sprout for 48hrs (soak for 4 hrs, then rinse 2x a day - very easy). Use the young sprouted seeds or freeze them (maximize sulforaphane) at that point place them in an ice cube tray for easy daily availability.

Heat water, then pour into a cup with a tea strainer. Something like this mug will work great - amazon.com/Sweese-2101-Porc...

Use an IR non contact infrared thermometer (I use the one by Etkcity), and pour cold/hot water until the temp shows 159F.

I place the sprouts in the tea strainer and wait 10 minutes with the cover on.

Take it out, blend it (I use an immersion blender) with some of now lukewarm water. Alternately forget the temp and blend cooked/steeped sprouts with some daikon sprouts below 160F. Wait a few minutes for sulforaphane conversion before consuming, since stomach PH will lower the bioavailability.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply torescuema

Are you talking about the broccoli seeds when you say sprout 48 hours or the daikon?

And what is your ratio/ quantities of broccoli vs daikon seed?

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toLAJ12345

broccoli seeds. They'll about double in size with little roots showing, and ready to use or freeze. You can even eat them straight if not worried about maximizing sulforaphane conversion. Daikon will sprout even faster, and you can use them for way over a week fresh as long as they taste hot.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply torescuema

What was the quantity and ratio required of each?I just want a rough and ready every day type of cooks recipe rather than an accurate scientific method.

Eg if I take 1/2 tsp broccoli and 1/2 tsp daikon seeds. Soak overnight, rinse through a tea strainer then sit in a cup of hottish but not boiling water for 5 minutes is that close enough?

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toLAJ12345

I'd get a few wide mouth mason jars, and get some sprouting lids such as these. They'll simplify the soaking/rinsing process. amazon.com/UPGRADED-Aozita-...

Sprout the seeds separately. Once sprouted, steep broccoli sprouts for 10 minutes, and add some daikon sprouts when below 160F, blend, wait a few minutes and drink.

If not worried about being scientific, grow broccoli sprouts and just eat them at all stages or incorporate into your diet/cooking. Add them to salad, sandwich, or stir fry. You still get up to 100x more glucoraphanin than mature broccoli.

You don't need to worry about daikon seeds if not worried about maximizing the isothiocyanate. You can also simply buy some arugula leaves and they'll also supply myrosinase to go along with cooked sprouts. You only need a very tiny amount, as little as 2% by volume, but no harm in adding more.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply torescuema

I’m no good at sprouting as I get busy and forget them and then they are all slimy and smelly. I always end up throwing them away. I thought they were as effective in the first days before growing much?

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toLAJ12345

Then make a batch as I've mentioned above and freeze them for daily use. I can't imagine anyone failing at this as long as you have good viable seeds with a good germination rate. Literally, soak 4 hours, and even if you fail and forget to rinse them they'll germinate.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply torescuema

Ok thanks. I usually get that far but when I try to grow them to an edible length is where I fail. How many grams per day of the dry seed do you need? I’m thinking if I can just throw them in a glass of water at night then use them in the morning I can manage that

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toLAJ12345

The dosage is tricky depending on the seeds - some are higher and others are much lower in the precursor. Through the freezing/maximizing method, it is said about 30g sprouts (older) will yield 30mg adequate sulforaphane for benefit but this will obviously vary greatly, and for PWP you want to start even lower - about a tsp 48hr sprouts, or less at 1-3g to start for weekly monitoring/increase for safety. I personally noticed benefit at as little as 1 tsp a day.

GrandmaBug profile image
GrandmaBug in reply torescuema

So, I sprout broccoli seeds, it’s easy enough. I eat about 1/2 cup per day as part of my daily salad greens. Am I getting the value I should with this amount?

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toGrandmaBug

That's probably around 40g sprouts for 1/2 cup.

Sulforaphane content varies widely depending on the seed genotype - anywhere between 5 to 60mg per 100g broccoli sprouts. If you assume about 10% conversion, you'd need 300g fresh sprouts for 30mg sulforaphane.

If you heat the sprouts to 60C (140F) to deactivate the epithiospecifier protein (which redirects the pathway causing waste of the precursor), you'll maximize the sulforaphane yield especially if you blend and let the glucosinolate + myrosinase to convert to sulforaphane before ingestion to attain the maximum benefit (sublingual and vagus nerve brain-gut axis exposure, killing off stomach pathogens such as H. pylori, etc). You'll need significantly less per wriga for PD benefits through such delivery.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/151...

Here's a video easy to follow (I simply drain off some of the water before blending) -

youtube.com/watch?v=Z7buU-P...

GrandmaBug profile image
GrandmaBug in reply torescuema

Thank you so much. The video, in particular, was especially helpful.

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toGrandmaBug

You're welcome.

For simplicity, know that glucoraphanin precursor is not heat-sensitive so you can simply cook or steep the broccoli sprouts in hot/boiling water, and then once cooled (anywhere below 60C), add daikon sprouts (the myrosinase lacks the main epithiospecifier proteins) and blend to convert to max sulforaphane. If you sprout broccoli seeds, you'll love sprouting daikon seeds.

I also believe in the value of eating raw sprouts, so keep doing that as well as long as you enjoy it.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply torescuema

Hi Rescue, could I just get organic sprouting Daikon seeds and grind them up like I do my mustard seeds for the myrosinase? I'm still using the freeze dried broccoli sprouts so ground daikon seeds would be easy.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply torescuema

Is erucic acid bad for you?

In small doses, erucic acid is safe, but higher levels may be dangerous. Research in animals indicates that, over long periods, erucic acid may cause a heart condition called myocardial lipidosis.

I'm having about an 8th of a tsp every other day. That does not seem high. Happy to switch to Daikon seeds though.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply towriga

How do you microwave at 60 degrees to get the right temperature?

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345

That’s very promising. I hope you get some funding.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345

Here’s some New Zealand organic daikon seeds too. The Amazon ones seem to be sold out. Packet is small though but I think might be available in bulk at the right time of year?

kingsseeds.co.nz/shop/Sprou...

Broccoli bulk

kingsseeds.co.nz/shop/Sprou...

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345

Does it have to be in solution when you take it? Would sprinkling the sprout seeds over a meal work or does the chemistry have to happen in the solution?

Sorry you probably explain all that in your study but can you give a quick recap of the method here for those who want to try it but can’t commit 100% to not trying other things at the same time?

I probably haven’t got time to do a fully accurate method good enough for a trial but do you have a quick and easy 80% there type of shortcut for busy people that I could add to our daily routine?

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345

Do the broccoli seeds have to be mature and dried before they will work? Presumably the actual vegetable head is packed with immature seeds. At what point do they become therapeutic?

wriga profile image
wriga in reply toLAJ12345

Just catching up here. The vegetable is immature flower buds. They're a long way (weeks) from being seeds The heads will eventually break out into long stalks like mustard, then lots of white or yellow cruciform (4 petals in a cross) flowers on each stalk, then seed pods like beans grow on the stalks, then a dozen or so seeds grow in the pods. That's when the glucoraphanin is made.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply towriga

Thanks

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply towriga

Ok, I have my brocolli sprouts sitting in 60 degree water. I notice the water is turning pale green. Does the active compound go into solution or stay in the sprouts. i.e. should he drink the liquid as well as the sprouts?

**sorry see you have answered this below. Thanks

CardiCorgi profile image
CardiCorgi

Holy crap what a bunch of nonsense. Take Avmacol and be done with it. The benefits out weigh the risks 100:1.

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply toCardiCorgi

I would have guessed you were Sunvox without being told. I agree you are not an idiot. You're also not a good candidate for the diplomatic corps. Before I rush over to Amazon, I'll wait for Albert to weigh in, but thanks for the lead.:)

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply toMBAnderson

PS. From their website.

"How Avmacol® and Avmacol® Extra Strength Work?

Our Sulforaphane Production System® supplies broccoli seed extract (glucoraphanin) and Myrosimax® (Active Myrosinase Enzyme) which helps promote sulforaphane production in your body. As depicted in the diagram below, when sulforaphane enters your cells it allows for a master regulator, known as NRF2, to enter the nucleus and bind to DNA. This helps increase the production of important Phase 2 detoxifying enzymes, promoting your body’s natural detoxification process, thereby supporting the elimination of potentially harmful metabolites.*"

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toMBAnderson

Lol, at over .80 per Avmacol pill, it certainly will provide convenience as to the DIY sprout route that's much cheaper and more potent. When you combine the sprout's glucoraphanin + myrosinase and convert it to sulforaphane before ingestion, you maximize the benefit as to using the pill getting a fraction of the conversion, needing 3-4 pills (over $3 bucks a day) for 30mg sulforaphane.

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply torescuema

I suspected as much. Thank you for this.

rescuema profile image
rescuema in reply toMBAnderson

Once you get into the routine, the sprouting process is no big deal. Soaking seeds and rinsing twice a day (less than 30 seconds) for two days? Everyone has time for such a simple process using a mason jar/straining lid method. I personally enjoy the process and having control over what I consume.

Some people like to eat out and others love to cook (nonsense?). 😁

Buckholt profile image
Buckholt in reply toMBAnderson

One of the foremost advocates of Sulforaphane is Dr Rhonda Patrick and she, herself takes Prostaphane supplement. This is an interesting 5 min video.

foundmyfitness.com/episodes...

wriga profile image
wriga in reply torescuema

Overnight there has been a lot of discussion and I note that rescue has answered in much the same way as I would gave done. Thanks Rescue, we are on the same wavelength.

Don't believe the hype that's written on the broccoli supplement labels. If the glucoraphanin is not converted to sulforaphane before you ingest it, the subsequent conversion yield is a lottery that depends on your gut bacteria profile. You can probably count on 10% and there are probably benefits to getting that 10% being converted in the colon to improve gut membranes via Nrf2 and gut neurons also.

But even tho the gut is our second brain, it's not going to solve the problem of damaged dopamine-making neurons in the brain. For that you need to get the sulforaphane straight into the blood and to the brain as directly as possible. That means converting the glucoraphanin to sulforaphane BEFORE you ingest it.

There are several ways to do this from seeds or sprouts, but the principles are the same.

You have to inactivate the epithiospecifier protein (ESP) that, if present, modifies the myrosinase enzyme so that it makes an inactive product rather that sulforaphane.

To be most effective this has to be done before the glucoraphanin comes into contact with myrosinase. ESP is heat sensitive, so I do this by heating dry grains to 60C before grinding them to a powder. You can do the same with sprouts before you liquidise them. Myrosinase is also heat sensitive and may be partly inactivated by this, although the upper limit for myrosinase is about 70C . So to be sure, you still have some, you can add a small amount of fresh myrosinase from another source and why not choose a type of myrosinase that is more robust and more effective than that in broccoli. There are 2 good sources of myrosinase, white mustard and daikon radish seeds. In my protocol, I add 4% white mustard seeds, because white mustard is easier to find than daikon. At the level of 4%, I don't think the antinutrient argument is a concern, but if so daikon radish seeds will get round it, and with daikon, 2% will be enough.

Next step: the extraction into water and conversion of glucoraphanin to sulforaphane. You need the water to be hot enough to hydrate and hydrolyse the seed powder (or liquidise sprouts) rapidly and to inactivate any remaining ESP at the same time. The upper limit is still 60C, but it can be lower if the previous step to inactivate ESP has been done properly. At this temperature, the seed powder breaks down to a suspension in about 2 minutes and the conversion to sulforaphane takes no more than 2 minutes, I give it 4 mins at 60C and it's done. Sulforaphane is not very soluble in water, so it will be present as a suspension. I filter it through a fine mesh tea strainer to get rid of the solid residues (seed husks mostly) . If you use a paper coffee filter, you may lose some sulforaphane.

Concerning dosage. In the trial we gat the best results at a remarkably low dosage. The range (in dry seed equivalent) was 0.6 to 1.2g per day. Calculated from the glucoraphanin content of the seeds, assuming a conversion yield of 70%, we get about 15 - 25 micro mol of sulforaphane .

The mol mass of sulforaphane is 177g/mol, so this adds up to about 3 to 5 mg of sulforaphane per day. I can only conclude that the delivery process makes all the difference. By this I mean that 3 to 5mg delivered directly to the blood as sulforaphane in a single dose via the upper digestive system appears to give a better result than ten times more delivered as glucoraphanin to the gut bacteria.

All this needs to be confirmed by more precise measurements which should also include chemical analysis and blood and urine tests.

I hope this answers a few questions.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply towriga

Do you know what the equivalent amount of fresh broccoli would be to achieve the same results? Say if you cut off all stalk and just used the flowery bit? Or does it have to go to seed to work?

wriga profile image
wriga in reply toLAJ12345

Hi LAJ,

I did calculate this many months back and it's a lot of broccoli heads. I'm guessing now at between 200 and 300g. BUT that's in the form of unconverted glucoraphanin. To convert it to sulforaphane you would need to cook and liquidise it at 60C. Cooking at 100C destroys the enzyme. Eating it raw or cooked means that most of the glucoraphanin would be metabolized by gut bacteria with a low yield.

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply towriga

Did you include the stalk or just the floret tips?

LAJ12345 profile image
LAJ12345 in reply towriga

So are you just grinding the unsprouted seeds? Sorry to ask so many questions. You may have answered this somewhere else.

Mimer profile image
Mimer in reply towriga

Is there anything in the process you could do in batches? Like do a batch of heated grains and grind to pulver? How long is it possible to store?

Or is it even possible store hydrated suspension for e.g. the coming week or so?

B.t.w. how do you grind it?

Despe profile image
Despe in reply toCardiCorgi

Joe from NY? :)

Everything OK Joe? Long time no see!

Despe profile image
Despe in reply toCardiCorgi

amazon.com/BrocElite-Sulfor...

This is one of the supplements I got, the other one is amazon.com/Designs-Health-B...

Gioc profile image
Gioc in reply toCardiCorgi

Un poco si :-)

Despe profile image
Despe

Albert,

You never seize to amaze me, your determination and dedication to your cause, ameliorating PD symptoms, are unparalleled.

You have the expertise and time (?) for your scientific research/trial. For me, time is a luxury I can't afford. Like Joe, I have bought a supplement and hope for the best.

Did you reach out to Dr. Mischley?

wriga profile image
wriga

I would just like to update you on this subject.

First of all, the website I created is always the best place to go for my latest updates. This is updated at least every week. Even if the names of articles don't change, because then the links wouldn't work, the content does and new items get added or reorganised.

For now the best point of entry is this link, but there are now several pages, so use the menu the 3 line symbol top right to navigate.

wp.me/pc57vK-1o

What is not yet on the website is a detailed scientific article that I have written about the experiment with the help of Jed Fahey ( the world expert on sulforaphane at John Hopkins medical school in Baltimore). This article has been passed around to a few medical research experts in the US for confidential opinion.

One has severely criticised the method as being unacceptable and unethical because not run by a certified institution and therefore it should not be published. Another says it was a well designed and documented experiment that deserves to be published.

It comes down to differences of opinion on the contentious issue of the rights of people to do and report on self-experimentation, so called (n-of-1) trials (trials with 1 person). This subject is gaining ground because all the published research on internet and the discussion on forums like this make such things possible. The hardline anti- self-experimentation people see this as taking away their control and therefore want to discredit any results, either on technical or on ethical or legal grounds. Our experiment with 8 PwP has been renamed as 8 x (n-of-1) which makes it particularly unique and could become a model for others. Because of this, until I get clarification on where I stand, I won't be setting up a new trial of this kind.

I have had talks with Dr Simon Stott who has talked to the research council at Cure Parkinsons and they want to take this idea forward. They found the method and the results interesting. They also discussed it with Prof Bas Bloem, a well known Dutch neurologist who is passionate about patient advocacy. He is also favourable and has proposed to set up a symposium with Cure Parkinsons for scientists and patients to discuss the merits of self experimentation. He also wants to help with publication.

So we are making progress.

wriga

Gioc profile image
Gioc in reply towriga

Great Albert, congratulations on your research, a great job and thank you.

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Incidentally, if you are interested, there is also another way to use broccoli leaves against inflammation without eating it. Here is a search: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/268...

chartist profile image
chartist

Hi Albert,

Thank you for your continued efforts to get your protocol exposure with the scientific community! I wish you continued success as the work you are doing is very important!

Art

chartist profile image
chartist

Hi Albert,

It has been a moment since your last update and I was wondering if you have any updates that you can share as I feel that your protocol has potential to make significant health changes for PwP if applied properly? A major difference between what you are doing and studies showing potential benefit is that your method shows potential to offer those benefits "NOW", as opposed to years from now! I understand you are still trying to fine tune and work any problems out, but I am inquisitive and I don't want your information to just fall by the wayside!

Thank you!

Art

wriga profile image
wriga

Dear PwP,

Many of you have been asking about how to make the Broccoli seed tea or where to find the recipe.

I've been silent about this since the results of the experiment for several reasons, one of which has been the résistance from the medical community concerning safety and ethics and also because I wanted to focus on the model which I believe is more important.

I have no intention at the moment of relaunching the trial because it would take too much of my time and would still not be able to overcome its most serious limitation , that of not having a placebo arm.

I am however in the process of updating the method to take into account new information and to make it easier for others to follow. With this method, any PD patient or group of patients will be able to run their own study and take over from where I stopped. The method I will be publishing will be more informative and less directive than the original method leaving the patient free to make his own choices at every step based on the information available. This is essential to meet ethical and safety requirements.

I hope that this will be ready to be made public in the next week, but may still be subject to further updates.

Albert

JBOVERT profile image
JBOVERT

WRIGA what is the correct protocol for making the tea please? I am not sure if I am following it all correctly thanks very much Jim

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright

Please don't anybody get mad, but would this be an adequate substitute for those times when my broccoli sprout harvest is not doing so well?

KOYAH - Organic Broccoli Sprout Powder (1 Scoop = 1/4 Cup Sprouts): 36 Servings, Freeze-dried, Tested for Active Myrosinase and Glucoraphanin (Sulforaphane Glucosinolate)

amazon.com/KOYAH-Freeze-dri...

ACTIVE MYROSINASE - Freeze-dried raw to preserve active Myrosinase enzyme. Each batch is 3rd party tested to ensure the myrosinase is active.

GLUCORAPHANIN (Sulforaphane Glucosinolate) - 3rd Party tested for Glucoraphanin content. Glucoraphanin turns into Sulforaphane when Myrosinase is present and water is added.

USA GROWN - Sprouted and Freeze-dried in the USA. Certified Organic. Non-GMO.

EACH JAR - 36 scoops. Each scoop of powder is equivalent to 1/4 cup of fresh organic broccoli sprouts.

INGREDIENTS - Organic Freeze-dried Whole Broccoli Sprout Powder (includes the sprout and seed portion of the sprout). 100% Pure. No additives.

(it's not cheap - $45)

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright

Albert, trying to pull up the results of the trial. Getting 404 — File not found.

wriga profile image
wriga in reply toBolt_Upright

You're right, Just shows my incompetence. Try it now.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply towriga

File still not found: patientresearcher.files.wor...

wriga profile image
wriga in reply toBolt_Upright

It's a more recent document and this is new the link. Hope this works.

patientresearcher.files.wor...

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply towriga

Thanks Albert! It is actually the link from the home page that is not working. I am good now! Thanks!

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright

Broccoli sprout beverage is safe for thyroid hormonal and autoimmune status: Results of a 12-week randomized trial ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...

HIGHLIGHTS

A broccoli sprout beverage was administered to healthy volunteers as a source of sulforaphane to activate Nrf2 signaling.

Daily consumption of the sulforaphane-rich beverage for 12 weeks did not affect the serum levels of fT4, TSH and TG.

The thyroid autoimmunity status of participants after 12 weeks on the broccoli sprout beverage was also unaffected.

Long-term ingestion of a sulforaphane-rich broccoli sprout beverage is safe for the thyroid gland.

Natural products activating Nrf2 should be individually evaluated for effects on thyroid hormonal and autoimmune status.

Furch profile image
Furch

Wow! So I live here in Kannapolis NC the location of the Murdock Research Center which largely reseach with various food and natural approaches to diseases. I am not a stranger to the team members, and actually not shy from asking them what they are researching. I admit I am a bit aggressive and usually I catch them at the lunch Cafe. I think it's time for me to go have a salad and try to see if anyone is working on this and if not why not.. I am always inquiring about PD.Thanks Wriga I appreciate you sharing this info. I truly believe that when we beat this beast it will be from us sharing these theories and studies...

wriga profile image
wriga in reply toFurch

Hello Furch,

You have commented on a thread that is more than 2 years old. We have moved on a lot from then. We now produce standardized Broccoli seed tea from high quality broccoli seeds and we are much better organised. See our web page which describes the actions of the Broccoli and Sulforaphane Research Group : patientresearcher.com/ If you are committed, you are welcome to join us.

sgantiques52 profile image
sgantiques52

What is a source for making broccoli tea. Could honey be added without lowering the effectiveness for Parkinson's fatigue.

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