Anonymous ID: 12d7e5 Feb. 1, 2021, 12:22 a.m. No.12787558   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12786196 pb

>>>12785810

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>>Mitochondria and Calcium in Alzheimer’s Disease: From Cell Signaling to Neuronal Cell Death

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>neurosciencefag here:

 

Questions for neurosciencefag if he or one is still here. 1. What role does Calcium play in Alzheimers? 2. Do you know if Alzheimers patients tend to be on the low end or normal or even magnesium deficient?

 

I've read that Magnesium deficiency leads to a build up of excess calcium in soft tissues. Mg helps to balance the two and allows the body to excrete excess calcium. Many foods today are fortified with calcium but if one is deficient in Mg, excess calcium gums up the works forming deposits in soft tissues like like gallbladder, heart, arteries etc. Seems reasonable to expect the same in the brain. The excess calcium slowly petrifies soft tissues. Too many people are in fact Mg deficient despite blood serum levels indicating "normal" ranges. An RBC test for MG is better than blood serum but still not accurate enough. Unfortunately, RBC is the best that is available to consumers outside a university or medical research environment.

 

interdasting Captcha

Anonymous ID: 12d7e5 Feb. 1, 2021, 2:23 a.m. No.12787995   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12787983

Thanks anon. Every translator I tried flagged the majority of the latin text as incorrect. Seemed odd but with your help I learned something new today! o7