ThinkFast (60 vcaps) by Futurebiotics

ThinkFast (60 vcaps) by Futurebiotics

ThinkFast (60 vcaps) by Futurebiotics

Clinical studies have shown that the botanical extracts of CogninSA™ may increase sustained attention thereby improving ability to learn complex tasks and maintain consistency. Couple with Bacopin® Ginkgo extract and a proprietary compound of brain-boosting nutrients including L-Theanine ThinkFast is an advanced formula that supports brain performance attention and memory.

CogninS™ supplies a clinically-proven patent-pending blend of Chinese Skullcap root extract (Scrutellaria baicalensis) and Acacia heartwood and bark extract (Acacia catechu) that has been shown to improve working memory speed measured as reaction time - often equated with mental flexibility as well as superior decision making.

Ginkgo biloba extract has been used for over 5000 years. Modern research has demonstrated that Ginkgo extract has the ability to enhance blood flow to the brain which aids memory. Bacopin® is a proprietary extract derived from the leaf of Bacopa monnieri and has been used for centuries to help improve mental performance. Scientific evidence supports its long traditional use.

ThinkFast contains a brain-boosting compound of complementary healthy nutrients and herbs including L-Theanine which may have neuroprotective effects and BioVinca® Vinpocetine (Vinca minor) a cerebral vasodilator that improves normal cognitive function in healthy adults. Gotu Kola Rosemary and Soy Lecithin are included to provide natural whole-plant co-factors nature created.

ThinkFast is potency-enhanced with Futurebiotics BioAccelerators™. Clinically-proven Bioperine® (piper nigrum extract) improves nutrient bioavailability while their proprietary natural compound of Ginger extract Trikatu super-potent Digezyme® and Lactospore® boosts digestion and absorption.

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Information From the Manufacturer Plus Pricing and Comparisons…

NYT > Aquariums
News about aquariums, including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times.

  • Seeing and Counting Salamanders Close-Up
    An aquarium is helping in an international bid to save frogs and amphibians by identifying and counting species amid scientists? concerns that some of them have become vulnerable in recent years.

  • In Battle of Aquariums, Big Gets Bigger
    After being open for only about 18 months, the Georgia Aquarium is undergoing a major expansion, allowing Atlanta to cement its claim to the ?world?s largest aquarium.?

  • Beijing Air Terminal Goes All Out for the Games
    The $3.8 billion structure, the latest in China?s Olympic works, can handle more than 50 million fliers a year.

  • World Expo in Spain Has Water as Its Theme
    ?Water and Sustainable Development? is the theme for the 2008 World Expo, which will take place in Zaragoza, Spain, from June 14 through Sept. 14.

  • In Coney Island, One of the Oldest Sharks in Captivity Dies
    Bertha, a sand tiger shark , had lived at the New York Aquarium since the 1960s, and was believed to be at least 43 years old.


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    Mental Health Articles
    The taxonomy view for health categories

  • Hospital Releases New Tool For Psychiatric Outcomes Survey

    The Mental Health Services Evaluation Department at McLean Hospital, the largest psychiatric affiliate of Harvard Medical School, announced today that it has released an improved application that allows mental health care providers to measure patient outcomes. An online application, WebScore 2.0, is used by mental health providers to score the BASIS-24 survey (Behavior and Symptom Identification Scale) and report on the progress of patients undergoing psychiatric treatment.

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  • North Carolina Mental Health Parity Law Takes Effect

    North Carolina health care insurers must provide the same amount of coverage for certain mental conditions as they do for physical ailments under a state law that took effect on Tuesday, the Winston-Salem Journal reports. The North Carolina General Assembly last year passed the "mental health parity" measure to require that nine common mental health conditions be covered at levels equal to physical conditions.

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  • Depression Ups Risk Of Complications Following Heart Attack

    People who suffer from severe depression following a heart attack might be more likely to experience cardiac complications while hospitalized, according to a new study.

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  • Mice Expressing Human Genes Bred To Help Unravel Mental Disorders

    New mouse strains engineered to express human genes related to mental disorders are being developed under a recently-launched grant program from NIMH?s Division of Neuroscience and Basic Behavioral Science. The new models are designed to help scientists understand the molecular workings of variations in genes that may predispose for ? or even help protect against ? illnesses like depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.

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  • Potential New Target For Developing Medications To Treat Bipolar Disorder

    Medications that target the protein BAG1, which regulates a process that can trigger symptoms in people who have bipolar disorder, may offer a new way of treating the disease, according to NIMH scientists.

    People with bipolar disorder, also called manic depressive illness, experience unusually intense emotional states that occur in distinct periods called mood episodes. An overly joyful or overexcited state is called a manic episode, and an extremely sad or hopeless state is called a depressive episode.

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    The taxonomy view for health categories

  • New Technology Helps Restore Cognitive, Physical Functions

    Stroke survivors and others with neurological injuries and illnesses often have difficulty regaining the ability to perform everyday functions such as walking, talking and even swallowing. In response to these difficulties, Fairlawn Rehabilitation Hospital has introduced several new therapeutic technologies to its inpatient and outpatient programs.

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  • New Condom That Breaks The Mold

    Intellx introduces the SafeSexyShapes line of designer-condoms. Remarkably shaped condoms, including the look-alike Dolphin Condom and several more patented shapes ... think phallic and/or fun. What condom designers could only dream of making before. The Dolphin has all the graceful curves of a real dolphin, plus the teasing, pleasing bottlenose.

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  • Georgia Offers Community Living Alternatives For Individuals With Disabilities

    More than 2,300 individuals with disabilities currently institutionalized in Georgia?s eight public psychiatric hospitals and mental retardation facilities will have the opportunity to live in their communities with appropriate supports tailored to meet their individualized needs as a result of a settlement agreement between the state of Georgia and the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR).

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  • CDC Reports Pn Formaldehyde Tests Of Trailers

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) posted on Wednesday two reports from its work related to assessing the levels of formaldehyde in the indoor air of travel trailers used by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for emergency housing of Gulf Coast residents. One report, the results of which have been previously reported, assessed indoor formaldehyde levels. The other looked at emissions from specific travel trailer components and construction materials.

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  • US Health Care System Overhaul Needed To Reduce Costs

    "Health care will become one of the most onerous personal finance issues in coming years unless the system is changed to ensure universal access, cost control and long-term financing," Bloomberg columnist John Wasik writes in the Bloomberg/Boston Globe.

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