Avipaxin
IS YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM MAKING YOU FEEL NOT QUITE RIGHT?
When your immune system is activated because of a virus, bacterium, or
other challenge, you may feel sad, tired, and unable to concentrate.
This might be due to your NTs being out of balance. NTs help control
your emotions and mental functioning, and when they are out of balance,
you might have more trouble being as happy as you normally are or being
able to think as clearly as you normally do.
Avipaxin has been shown to help calm an activated immune system and to
help put your NTs back in balance. This should help you feel better.
Your immune system can become activated due to many things. Some of
them you might know about – like when you get sick and feel down, achy,
etc. – and some you might not know about. Some things you might not be
aware of include exposure to toxins, reactions to different foods, and
viruses, bacteria, and molds that do not make you feel actively sick.
When your immune system stays activated for a long time, it’s
considered consistent. A consistently activated immune system can keep
your NTs from going into optimal balance, causing you to occasionally –
or frequently – have trouble sleeping, feeling sad, being achy, etc.
There are tests available to see if you have an acutely or persistently
activated immune system.
Ask your healthcare provider about the NeuroScience, Inc tests for
immune markers. Even if you do not do the test, if you have an
activated immune system and are not feeling as well as you should be,
Patent-Pending Formula!
- Decreases Pro-inflammatory cytokines
- Normalizes cytokine-induced neurotransmitter imbalances
- Supports acetylcholine levels
- Improves mood, sleep quality, memory, and mental clarity
- Changes in mood and mental health are frequently associated with pro-inflammatory cytokines that trigger imbalances in certain neurotransmitters. Avipaxin supports normal brain function by utilizing
- acetylcholine and the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway to decrease elevated pro-inflammatory cytokine levels.
Avipaxin contains Huperzine A, which is a potent inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase, the enzyme that metabolizes acetylcholine.
Blocking acetylcholinesterase increases circulating levels of acetylcholine. Avipaxin also contains ±-Glyceryl Phosphoryl Choline (±-GPC) and Acetyl-L-Carnitine. These ingredients supply choline and acetyl groups, respectively, for acetylcholine synthesis.
Recently, research1 on the role of the role of the vagus nerve in mediating immune activation has been done and it has been found that cytokines released upon immune challenge activate the vagal nerve that result in increased cortisol levels via the Hypothalmic-Pituitary-Adrenal axis2. Vagal pathways from the brain secreteacetylcholine,which binds to activated immune cells and down-regulates those cells’ pro-inflammatory cytokine production3. Avipaxin supports acetylcholine levels,leading to a down-regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines and a subsequent normalization of neurotransmitter concentrations4.
1. Pavlov V, Tracey K et al., Molecular Medicine 9:125-134 (2003); Figure 1.
2. Tracey K. Nat Rev Immunol 2009;9:418-428.
3. Tracey K. J Clin Invest 2007;117:289-296.
4. Thayer J, Fischer J. J Intern Med 2009;265:439-447.
Available in a 60 ct capsule
Avipaxin might work for you.