Anonymous ID: 1eb636 July 12, 2020, 11:01 p.m. No.9945164   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5177 >>5205

>>9945145

 

Peptides are not to be mistaken for over the counter supplements. Your lucky not have gotten priapism (male) or heart arrhythmia/stroke due to an over dose.

 

Must be more careful Anon.

Anonymous ID: 1eb636 July 12, 2020, 11:20 p.m. No.9945251   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9945205

Your still here and that's what counts. Lessons learned to pass on to younger folks. I just wish they would listen.

Our mistakes are free tuition in their education of life's lessons.

As with any light within the darkness, at first it takes time for the eyes to adjust. As with new found truths it may take a while for things to come into focus. I just hope this younger generation is able to process what it is they see when the shadows are removed. We all have stories……………

Anonymous ID: 1eb636 July 12, 2020, 11:27 p.m. No.9945278   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5295 >>5344

>>9945244

Methylene blue, also known as methylthioninium chloride, is a medication and dye.[4] As a medication, it is mainly used to treat methemoglobinemia.[4][2] Specifically, it is used to treat methemoglobin levels that are greater than 30% or in which there are symptoms despite oxygen therapy.[2] It has previously been used for cyanide poisoning and urinary tract infections, but this use is no longer recommended.[4] It is typically given by injection into a vein.[4]

 

Common side effects include headache, vomiting, confusion, shortness of breath, and high blood pressure.[4] Other side effects include serotonin syndrome, red blood cell breakdown, and allergic reactions.[4] Use often turns the urine, sweat, and stool blue to green in color.[2] While use during pregnancy may harm the baby, not using it in methemoglobinemia is likely more dangerous.[4][2] Methylene blue is a thiazine dye.[4] It works by converting the ferric iron in hemoglobin to ferrous iron.[2]

 

Methylene blue was first prepared in 1876, by Heinrich Caro.[5] It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.[6] In the United States, a 50 mg vial costs about US$191.40.[7] In the United Kingdom, a 50 mg vial costs the NHS about £39.38.[2]

Anonymous ID: 1eb636 July 12, 2020, 11:30 p.m. No.9945295   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5318 >>5344 >>5352

>>9945278

 

Before quinine and hydroxychloroquine to treat malaria…..

 

Methylene blue has been described as "the first fully synthetic drug used in medicine." Methylene blue was first prepared in 1876 by German chemist Heinrich Caro.[45]

 

Its use in the treatment of malaria was pioneered by Paul Guttmann and Paul Ehrlich in 1891. During this period before the first World War, researchers like Ehrlich believed that drugs and dyes worked in the same way, by preferentially staining pathogens and possibly harming them. Changing the cell membrane of pathogens is in fact how various drugs work, so the theory was partially correct although far from complete. Methylene blue continued to be used in the second World War, where it was not well liked by soldiers, who observed, "Even at the loo, we see, we pee, navy blue." Antimalarial use of the drug has recently been revived.[46] It was discovered to be an antidote to carbon monoxide poisoning and cyanide poisoning in 1933 by Matilda Brooks.[47]

 

The blue urine was used to monitor psychiatric patients' compliance with medication regimes. This led to interest - from the 1890s to the present day - in the drug's antidepressant and other psychotropic effects. It became the lead compound in research leading to the discovery of chlorpromazine.[48]

Anonymous ID: 1eb636 July 12, 2020, 11:36 p.m. No.9945318   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9945295

WATCH THE WATER

 

Tonic water: Quinine aka "Q water"

 

Malaria…

 

All water containing quinine will have a "Q" designating quinine as an ingredient

 

Quinine powder is so bitter that British officials stationed in early 19th century India and other tropical posts where medicinal quinine was recommended mixed the powder with soda and sugar, and tonic water was created. The first commercial tonic water was produced in 1858. The mixed drink gin and tonic also originated in British colonial India, when the British mixed their medicinal quinine tonic with gin.

 

Since 2010, at least four tonic syrups have been available in the US. Consumers add carbonated water to the syrup to make tonic water, allowing drinkers to adjust the flavour intensity

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