Biomedical Autism Treatment – Respen-A blended chord, Inositol and Autism part 1

Aug 1
08:26

2011

Dr. Kurt Woeller

Dr. Kurt Woeller

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www.AutismRecoveryTreatment.com Biomedical autism intervention – The new formulation of Respen-A called Respen-A blended chord has one additional ingredient from the original form. And the usage of inositol with this formulation is showing additional promise. Biomedical autism intervention specialist physician, Dr. Kurt Woeller, explains. www.AutismRecoveryTreatment.com

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In this 2 part series on Respen-A blended chord and inositol we will talk about the use of inositol with this new formulation of Respen-A. There has been much recent discussion about the new Respen-A blended chord which is the new version of Respen-A. The Respen-A blended chord has two different ingredients. The Reserpine is the original ingredient which bolsters and boosts the activity of the Monoamine Oxidase A. Then the new ingredient,Biomedical Autism Treatment – Respen-A blended chord, Inositol and Autism part 1 Articles an active metabolite, can help by neutralizing and inhibiting the excess Monoamine Oxidase B activity which can occur and then that can result in serotonin imbalances, etc.

In the past, adding back in a little bit of gluten into the diet has been suggested as a way to boost the release of stored serotonin which then helps to keep things in a steady state release. Now there are many, many children out there who have benefited from implementing a gluten and casein free diet. And the gluten free diet has been a safe remedy for many years within the Autism community. And for some children, they still cannot handle gluten being reintroduced.

But what has been found is that a supplement called inositol can be helpful here and can be used instead of needing a little bit of gluten while using Respen-A. So now the recommendation has been changed so that now you would use a little bit of inositol in the morning with Respen-A. And while the dosing would depend on the individual child, I have found that anywhere from 300, 350 mg to upwards of 400, 500 mg of inositol can be helpful. On average, 500 mg seems to be an adequate dose to help with the steady state release of serotonin so that the Monoamine Oxidase A can act upon it. Then it is converted into its active and aldehyde form which gives us the effects of Respen-A that we are looking for such as better focusing, attention, language development, kids being more social, greater awareness, etc. We will talk more about inositol and its role with this new Respen-A formulation in part 2.