Bloo, but green.
-
So I remember D-Ribose isn't too peaty because it imitates vascular regeneration (VEGF, https://x.com/PeatPill/status/1834735807405384047). I then remember Danny also somewhere said VEGF uses nitric oxide (in response to BPC-157), so it's not the best for regeneration purposes.
But since methylene blue lowers NO I figured I'd add D-Ribose and salt (to better use sugar, i.e salt allows the colon to use sugar or salt brings out the flavor in food) to my bloo. The D-Ribose changes the bloo color to green! The green color also prevents the usual stains you'd get in your shower, (although the new bloo seems to have a much lower staining capability in it, this worked even with the older batches).
Anyway I then leave it on my hair at night (MB is unstable in the presence of light) and wash off in the morning. And I think my hair's thicker than ever before.
If you can use MB to lower NO in chicken pox I don't see why not in combo with with D-R. How retarded is this? -
I don't know but if you make and market Goo it would be funny.
-
@ThinPicking Kek
-
@izkrov it is probably oxidizing it or smth
-
@izkrov it's reducing, ie the d-ribose is accepting electrons from the MB, probably reducing some of MB's beneficial anti-ROS effects. MB loses its color when it's reduced, which is why it can be a good assay for local metabolic health when observing how quickly the color dissipates after being applied to the skin, or how blue your urine is after ingestion.
-
@samson the ribose is not being reduced if it is interacting with MB, it is being oxidized.