Elizabeth Yurth, M.D.
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's nice because it's a nasal spray.
So you can get it right to the brain.
The nose has a direct access to the brain.
So now we can get a direct access to the brain.
So you do a little nasal spray.
It's totally anti-inflammatory to the neurons.
So you can have people do that a couple of times a day and start reducing some of the inflammation in the brain.
And then you can use what's called C-Lank, which is this kind of sister peptide, which actually sort of now keeps the brain a little bit more awake.
So now we've settled the inflammation down and now we want to make people more alert, more focused.
So even in people like you and I, where we want to be more alert, more focused, but not anxious, doing a little C-max can keep us in this nice level state where we get sort of focused and intense on things, but we're not feeling hyper or irritable.
So those are really a nice combination of peptides.
Probably our favorite peptide to go to, which is harder to get anymore here.
We actually have to fly to Austria to get it anymore.
It's called cerebral lysine.
Supralicin is usually done as an IV.
It's been utilized for many, many years in Europe and Asia for dementia, for traumatic brain injuries, for stroke, with tremendous results.
It's not approved here, and they're not really...
trying to get it approved here because it's really a conglomerate of about a hundred different neural peptides.
It has to be done IV, or it's best done IV.
You have to give it pretty volume.