There are articles claiming cyanocobalamin depletes methionine because of high demand if methylation process and just small fraction converts to usable form of B12.
Please share your information
There are articles claiming cyanocobalamin depletes methionine because of high demand if methylation process and just small fraction converts to usable form of B12.
Please share your information
I woukd check out the safety of it com.bined with everything else you take .
I'd never heard of it .
A review of any supplements you take always a good Idea.
Hope someone else knows more about this
I don’t pretend to know much about glutathione but, some years ago, I tried it as a cream after reading Dr Datis Kharrazion’s book, ‘ Why do I Still Have Thyroid Symptoms?’. Apparently, glutathione (I tried Swanson’s Glutathione Cream ), is best absorbed through the skin (soles of the feet), but I can’t say I noticed a huge difference.
All I remember is that it is supposed to help with autoimmune disease,(apparently supports red blood cells?), as well as neurological diseases.
From his book, I quote:
“ GLUTATHIONE COFACTORS The substantia nigra is extremely sensitive to oxidative stress by hydroxy radicals. Glutathione has demonstrated promise in protecting these neuronal tissues responsible for producing dopamine. The essential nutritional substrates for the synthesis of glutathione are selenium and N-acetyl-cysteine.”
You could try getting more from foods maybe?
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...
PS. Sorry, I meant this for Hamayeshguy
Could you quote and link to your sources? The only info I could find was about a b12 analogue/inhibitor, cyanocobalamin [c-lactam], not cyanocobalamin itself. For example 'The cytotoxic effect of the vitamin B12 inhibitor cyanocobalamin [c-lactam], and a review of other vitamin B12 antagonists.' at pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/972...
perniciousanemia.org/b12/fo...
Read through the article. Fir detoxifying cyanide our body needs excessive amount of glutathione and it causes glutathione get depleted
I’ve just come across an old link from five years ago, again Dr Kharrizian.