You’re CONFUSED and feel AGITATED.

You can’t CONCENTRATE… you don’t recognize your family or doctor…

And you’re starting to SEE THINGS that aren’t there.

If it happens to you, it’s important that your loved ones know what could be going on…

Because too many docs DON’T recognize the signs… and MISDIAGNOSE it!

It may not be dementia… or psychosis.

It could be delirium!

And the culprit behind it could be a vitamin deficiency.

Fortunately, that SAME vitamin could clear the clouds!

But you need to get it in the RIGHT way.

Here’s who’s most at risk for this scary condition… and how to REVERSE it.

Vitamin cure for better clarity

Thiamine (a.k.a. vitamin B1) has gotten some well-deserved attention lately as one of 3 ingredients in the so-called “sepsis cocktail“… an infusion that could save over 91% of sepsis patients who receive it.

Now, sepsis is a HUGE risk for folks who’ve been hospitalized

But there’s something else that puts hospital patients in the crosshairs… and that’s delirium.

You may not think that these acute feelings of confusion could be DEADLY

But you need to know that patients who develop delirium in the hospital have a mortality rate as high as 76%!

And even if they SURVIVE their hospital stay… they’re at HIGH RISK for cognitive impairment after they get back home.

For some, the delirium NEVER goes away.

But research has shown that RESOLVING the delirium could actually DIMINISH the risk of death

And that’s where thiamine steps in.

Thiamine deficiency is COMMON in older patients… and patients with trouble absorbing nutrients…

And it can CAUSE delirium (perhaps in addition to other factors, like certain meds).

That’s because thiamine is a CRUCIAL vitamin for the function of your nervous system.

Here’s the good news…

Not only can you REVERSE a thiamine deficiency

But REPLENISHING thiamine levels can RESTORE normalcy in a delirium patient!

That’s pretty amazing…

Especially when you consider the drug treatments for delirium include sedatives… and antipsychotics!

But they can’t CURE delirium.

Now, delirium is a medical emergency… and is often treated with high-dose IV or intramuscular thiamine. (In the UK, it’s a solution of B and C vitamins called Pabrinex.)

Don’t let it get to that point.

Keep an eye out for early signs of thiamine deficiency… BEFORE it gets to the stage of delirium…

Like headachesfatigueirritability… and abdominal discomfort.

You can get high amounts of thiamine from certain foods – most notably raw  Macadamia nuts, which provide 80% of the Recommended Daily Intake.

But folks with certain conditions might not be able to get all the thiamine they need from dietary sources.

I’m talking about like peptic ulcer… a history of gastric bypass… or cancer that’s being treated by appetite-destroying therapies.

That’s where a supplement can come in handy.

There’s something else you should know…

To convert thiamine into a form it can actually USE… your body needs yet another nutrient that acts as a “co-factor.”

Magnesium!

So you could be getting PLENTY of thiamine in your diet… but if you’re low on this miracle mineral

It could all be USELESS.

Be sure to keep your levels of BOTH of these from dipping too low.

To keeping your wits about you,
Sarah Reagan


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Allan Spreen, M.D.
Dr. Allan Spreen, Chief Medical Advisor

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