To: TobagoJack who wrote (195523 ) 2/2/2023 5:28:15 AM From: sense Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217561 A couple articles containing a few ideas worth considering... Resolving "Long-Haul COVID" and Vaccine Toxicity: Neutralizing the Spike Protein I'd avoid the hydrogen peroxide and "bio-oxidative" ideas in context... agnostic on invermectin and HCQ in context... but the rest of the supplements mentioned seem worthy. This article Network-based drug repurposing for novel coronavirus 2019-nCoV/SARS-CoV-2 follows up on my early suggestions re rapidly done screening studies on drug repurposing, Others did that work early on and combinatorics identified my own choice of MB as a high potential candidate. This study also addresses another of my choices... melatonin... but also includes quite a few other things, including a mention of a thing or two that are said to function as RNA synthesis inhibitors... which I'd think might be useful not only in countering viral reproduction or direction of spike protein manufacture in infected cells, but also perhaps in useful in countering the mRNA "vaccine" directed conversion of your own cells into spike protein factories. Melatonin deficits in aging people might well explain much of the age related issues in virulence and mortality... as natural melatonin production drops off from ~ 30mg/day in youth to a fraction of that in old age, dropping off faster over time from around age 50. I'd think younger people wouldn't need supplementation as much as oldsters. Taking it might give you "interesting" and vivid dreams, and should help you sleep better, which is necessary to repair the damage done by the toxic spike proteins made by the virus or injected with and made by the mRNA in the vaccine. Body repair is the last thing that occurs in the sleep cycle... so, too many "short nights" mean accumulated damages that you will avoid accumulating with a solid 8 hours. The sleep disruption and psychotically bad dreams that occur coincident with infection are too little studied... MB also got studied in clinical trials since I last looked: Methylene blue in covid-19 METHYLENE BLUE FOR TREATMENT OF HOSPITALIZED COVID-19 PATIENTS: A RANDOMIZED, CONTROLLED, OPEN-LABEL CLINICAL TRIAL, PHASE 2 Methylene Blue: A Scientific Breakthrough for COVID-19? The articles cover a lot of ground and consider a lot of different applications... all over the map, too, in dosing. One says 100mg twice a day... likely WAY more than necessary for basic benefit, probably 5X or 10X too much... another suggests a small enough dose that it "might" discolor urine... which might be useless in countering infection ? It's fairly benign stuff... but some care required, still, as it is an MAOI. Higher doses used in preventing hypoxia with MB used as an oxygen carrier in its own right and as a hemoglobin substitute (as used in countering serious tylenol overdoses, if I remember correctly)... also proven good in those high doses to save people dying from Covid induced lung dysfunction... but that's likely way more than you need as a preventive or prophylactic. I would pay attention to the stuff on MB as used as an adjunct in phototherapy... They use it to clean viruses out of the blood supply... but "it won't work" to clean them out of your blood unless they remove it first ? LOL! Dr Golwalkars Methylene Blue dosage for Patients & for Prophylaxis Notes to use only IP or USP grade... A lot of lower grade MB is sold for use as a fungal preventive in aquariums or in aquaculture. That stuff you buy as a liquid or pills in pet shops is not purified adequately, with one of the primary byproducts of its manufacture being arsenic... so, not poisoning yourself with that is a good idea. Study finds methylene blue is a low-micromolar inhibitor of the the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and ACE2 interaction Methylene Blue Treatment of COVID-19 Last one a study started in 2020 that was planned to end in December 2022, and probably won't be reported out until Dec 2023 or later. Other stuff I'd noted as likely useful still seems so... with quercitin I'd add some berberine... and pretty much anything else that will inhibit excessive or runaway inflammation... turmeric, etc., and, well worth noting that the worst impact of the thing appears in people with diabetes related issues, including the associated vascular risks... so doing what you might to obviate those risks makes sense... berberine, garlic, and other herbs that help to stabilize blood sugar... alpha lipoic acid... which should contribute benefits on multiple fronts... And with them... another primary diabetes function related thing... maybe some arginine... Effects of adding L-arginine orally to standard therapy in patients with COVID-19: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial. Results of the first interim analysis Probably enough there to chew on ? Finding a decent internist willing to work with you on all of that ?