Borrowed from somewhere, but true: lots of lay articles warn that VitD3 "stays in the system.ā It is fat soluble but the supplementary forms of vitamin D are the D3 form, which is not an active form. Inactive D3 must be converted to the active form, often referred to as D1, and the final stage of this conversion is under control of the pā¦
Borrowed from somewhere, but true: lots of lay articles warn that VitD3 "stays in the system.ā It is fat soluble but the supplementary forms of vitamin D are the D3 form, which is not an active form. Inactive D3 must be converted to the active form, often referred to as D1, and the final stage of this conversion is under control of the parathyroid gland. Excess D3 cannot cause dysfunction with a properly functioning parathyroid gland!
Yes, please elaborate. Eighteen years ago, working solely indoors for decades, I started D3 supplementation to see if it would help my nonhealing fx L1. BP fell like a rock, and within a week, I had tapered off 3 antihypertensives which had been at max dose. Benefit persisted until only the past couple of years; now eating low carb and am again tapering of my single agent.
You know the poisonous termites of the pharma criminal cartel have been gnawing away at both these things, and all nutriceuticals. A clinic in Metro Detroit, which was a hot zone, was offering IV C to first responders who had to be out on the frontlines in the path of the virus infectious clones, and our lovely FBI raided them and shut them down.
Borrowed from somewhere, but true: lots of lay articles warn that VitD3 "stays in the system.ā It is fat soluble but the supplementary forms of vitamin D are the D3 form, which is not an active form. Inactive D3 must be converted to the active form, often referred to as D1, and the final stage of this conversion is under control of the parathyroid gland. Excess D3 cannot cause dysfunction with a properly functioning parathyroid gland!
Doesn't D need to be taken with K to be used properly and not become arterial plaque?
K2 recommended with D supplements. That's not completely established, but I think the evidence is strong.
Rat poison
Yes, please elaborate. Eighteen years ago, working solely indoors for decades, I started D3 supplementation to see if it would help my nonhealing fx L1. BP fell like a rock, and within a week, I had tapered off 3 antihypertensives which had been at max dose. Benefit persisted until only the past couple of years; now eating low carb and am again tapering of my single agent.
which are you referring to rat poison? D or K or both together?
Read Agent131711 vitamin D is rat poison & the all others just as bad
Over 200 Scientists & Doctors Call For Increased Vitamin D Use To Combat COVID-19 https://vitamindforall.org/letter.html
Even Eric Dingleberry signed this in 2020, or early 2021.
Another really interesting thing is this shot of literal tons of vitamin C being trucked into Wuhan in 2020 https://orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v16n13.shtml
You know the poisonous termites of the pharma criminal cartel have been gnawing away at both these things, and all nutriceuticals. A clinic in Metro Detroit, which was a hot zone, was offering IV C to first responders who had to be out on the frontlines in the path of the virus infectious clones, and our lovely FBI raided them and shut them down.
Please read the substack by Agent131711 on Vitamins š¤Æ