12-17-2023, 12:59 AM
(12-16-2023, 03:57 PM)DontTreadOnMe Wrote: Heading for an online source for those now.
Thanks!
Yep, i forget to mention it`s good to keep pauses with Sulbutiamine like maybe 2-3 days after 4-6 days use . Litle pauses are ok ,specially if happen to have benfotiamine which can be used everyday.
Japanise had trouble to cure Beriberi ( B1 deiciency ) with the normal vitamin B1 , so they created the fat soluble Sulbutiamine which works much better.
Quote:In Japan, it was found that insufficient thiamine led to a central nervous system disorder called Beriberi. But supplementing with thiamine alone didn’t help because of its poor bioavailability. A lot of thiamine was needed to cure Beriberi symptoms.
So Japanese scientists created a derivative of Vitamin B1 called Sulbutiamine in an attempt to quell the health crisis within the Japanese population.
Sulbutiamine is far more bioavailable than standard thiamine. It is fat-soluble (thiamine is water-soluble) which helps it more easily cross the blood-brain barrier.
Quote:Japanese researchers were the first to determine that something was missing in the diet of those who ate only polished rice.
Polished rice is one of the first “processed foods”. And of course there were problems right from the start. The bran coating on rice kernels contained what was later identified as thiamine (Vitamin B1).
The Japanese population were severely thiamine-deficient from this rice-only diet. Large numbers of the population were suffering from Beriberi. A central nervous system disorder caused by a lack of thiamine.
Once scientists determined it was thiamine that was behind a major, country-wide health crisis, they went on to develop Sulbutiamine. It was better absorbed by the brain than standard thiamine.
Your body does not produce thiamine on its own. So you must get it from food including beef, brewer’s yeast, legumes (beans, lentils), milk, nuts, oats, oranges, pork, rice, seeds, wheat, whole-grain cereals, and yeast.
But thiamine has poor bioavailability when taken as a nootropic supplement. A derivative of thiamine called Sulbutiamine is a fat-soluble compound that is easily digested. And readily crosses the blood-brain barrier.
Vitamin B1 (Thiamine)
As a extra bonus, thiamine treats lead poisoning, i dont know how much thought.