CORONA Benefits of NAC (N-Acetyl Cysteine) Including Virus protection

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Um, I have started to take this product. As you can read it is good for breathing. It is also supposed to be good for the flu.


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Top 9 Benefits of NAC (N-Acetyl Cysteine)

Cysteine is a semi-essential amino acid.
It’s considered semi-essential because your body can produce it from other amino acids, namely methionine and serine. It becomes essential only when the dietary intake of methionine and serine is low.
Cysteine is found in most high-protein foods, such as chicken, turkey, yogurt, cheese, eggs, sunflower seeds and legumes.
N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) is a supplement form of cysteine.
Consuming adequate cysteine and NAC is important for a variety of health reasons — including replenishing the most powerful antioxidant in your body, glutathione. These amino acids also help with chronic respiratory conditions, fertility and brain health.
Here are the top 9 health benefits of NAC.
1. Essential for Making the Powerful Antioxidant Glutathione

NAC Benefits
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NAC is valued primarily for its role in antioxidant production.
Along with two other amino acids — glutamine and glycine — NAC is needed to make and replenish glutathione.
Glutathione is one of the body’s most important antioxidants, which helps neutralize free radicals that can damage cells and tissues in your body.
It’s essential for immune health and fighting cellular damage. Some researchers believe it may even contribute to longevity (1Trusted Source).
Its antioxidant properties are also important for combatting numerous other ailments caused by oxidative stress, such as heart disease, infertility and some psychiatric conditions (2Trusted Source).
SUMMARYNAC helps replenish glutathione, arguably your body’s most powerful antioxidant. Therefore, it can improve a variety of health conditions.

2. Helps With Detoxification to Prevent or Diminish Kidney and Liver Damage

NAC plays an important role in your body’s detoxification process.
It can help prevent side effects of drugs and environmental toxins (3Trusted Source).
In fact, doctors regularly give intravenous (IV) NAC to people with an acetaminophen overdose to prevent or reduce kidney and liver damage (4Trusted Source).
NAC also has applications for other liver diseases due to its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits (5Trusted Source).
SUMMARYNAC helps detoxify your body and can treat acetaminophen overdoses.




3. May Improve Psychiatric Disorders and Addictive Behavior

NAC helps regulate levels of glutamate — the most important neurotransmitter in your brain (6Trusted Source).
While glutamate is required for normal brain action, excess glutamate paired with glutathione depletion can cause brain damage.
This may contribute to mental health conditions, such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and addictive behavior (7, 8Trusted Source).
For people with bipolar disease and depression, NAC may help decrease symptoms and improve your overall ability to function. What’s more, research suggests that it may play a role in treating moderate to severe OCD (9Trusted Source, 10Trusted Source).
Likewise, an animal study implied that NAC may minimize negative effects of schizophrenia, such as social withdrawal, apathy and reduced attention spans (11Trusted Source).
NAC supplements can also help decrease withdrawal symptoms and prevent relapse in cocaine addicts (12Trusted Source, 13Trusted Source).
Additionally, preliminary studies show that NAC may decrease marijuana and nicotine use and cravings (14Trusted Source, 15).
Many of these disorders have limited or currently ineffective treatment options. NAC may be an effective aid for individuals with these conditions (16Trusted Source).
SUMMARYBy regulating glutamate levels in your brain, NAC may alleviate symptoms of multiple psychiatric disorders and reduce addictive behavior.

4. Helps Relieve Symptoms of Respiratory Conditions

NAC can relieve symptoms of respiratory conditions by acting as an antioxidant and expectorant, loosening mucus in your air passageways.
As an antioxidant, NAC helps replenish glutathione levels in your lungs and reduces inflammation in your bronchial tubes and lung tissue.
People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experience long-term oxidative damage and inflammation of lung tissue, which causes airways to constrict — leading to shortness of breath and coughing.
NAC supplements have been used to improve COPD symptoms, exacerbations and lung decline (17Trusted Source, 18Trusted Source, 19).
In a one-year study, 600 mg of NAC twice a day significantly improved lung function and symptoms in those with stable COPD (20Trusted Source).
Those with chronic bronchitis can also benefit from NAC.
Bronchitis occurs when the mucous membranes in your lungs’ bronchial passageways become inflamed, swell and shut off airways to your lungs (21Trusted Source, 22Trusted Source).
By thinning mucus in your bronchial tubes and boosting glutathione levels, NAC may help decrease the severity and frequency of wheezing, coughing and respiratory attacks (23).
In addition to relieving COPD and bronchitis, NAC may improve other lung and respiratory tract conditions like cystic fibrosis, asthma and pulmonary fibrosis, as well as symptoms of nasal and sinus congestion due to allergies or infections (24Trusted Source).
SUMMARYNAC’s antioxidant and expectorant capacity can improve lung function by decreasing inflammation as well as breaking up mucus.


5. Boosts Brain Health by Regulating Glutamate and Replenishing Glutathione

NAC’s ability to replenish glutathione and regulate brain glutamate levels can boost brain health.
The brain neurotransmitter glutamate is involved in a broad range of learning, behavior and memory actions, while the antioxidant glutathione helps reduce oxidative damage to brain cells associated with aging (6Trusted Source).
Because NAC helps regulate glutamate levels and replenish glutathione, it may benefit those with brain and memory ailments (4Trusted Source).
The neurological disorder Alzheimer’s disease slows down a person’s learning and memory capacity. Animal studies suggest that NAC may slow the loss of cognitive ability in people with Alzheimer’s (4Trusted Source, 25Trusted Source).
Another brain condition, Parkinson’s disease, is characterized by the deterioration of cells that generate the neurotransmitter dopamine. Both oxidative damage to cells and a decrease in antioxidant ability contribute to this disease.
NAC supplements appear to improve both dopamine function and disease symptoms such as tremors (4Trusted Source).
While NAC may improve brain health, more human research is needed to make strong conclusions.
SUMMARYBy helping replenish the antioxidant glutathione and regulate glutamate, NAC has the potential to treat diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.




6. May Improve Fertility in Both Men and Women

Approximately 15% of all couples trying to conceive are affected by infertility. In almost half of these cases, male infertility is the main contributing factor (26Trusted Source).
Many male infertility issues increase when antioxidant levels are insufficient to combat free radical formation in your reproductive system. The oxidative stress can cause cell death and reduced fertility (26Trusted Source).
In some cases, NAC has been shown to improve male fertility.
One condition that contributes to male infertility is varicocele — when veins inside the scrotum become enlarged due to free radical damage. Surgery is the primary treatment.
In one study, 35 men with varicocele were given 600 mg of NAC per day for three months post-surgery. The combination of surgery and NAC supplement improved semen integrity and partner pregnancy rate by 22% compared to the control group (27Trusted Source).
Another study in 468 men with infertility found that supplementing with 600 mg of NAC and 200 mcg of selenium for 26 weeks improved semen quality (28Trusted Source).
Researchers suggested that this combined supplement should be considered as a treatment option for male infertility.
In addition, NAC may improve fertility in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) by inducing or augmenting the ovulation cycle (29Trusted Source).
SUMMARYNAC may help improve fertility in men by reducing oxidative stress that damages or kills reproductive cells. It may also aid fertility in women with PCOS.
7. May Stabilize Blood Sugar By Decreasing Inflammation in Fat Cells

High blood sugar and obesity contribute to inflammation in fat tissue.
This can lead to damage or destruction of insulin receptors and put you at a higher risk of type 2 diabetes (30Trusted Source).
Animal studies show that NAC may stabilize blood sugar by decreasing inflammation in fat cells and thereby improving insulin resistance (31Trusted Source, 32Trusted Source).
When insulin receptors are intact and healthy, they properly remove sugar from your blood, keeping levels within normal limits.
However, keep in mind that human research on NAC is needed to confirm these effects on blood sugar control.
SUMMARYBy decreasing inflammation in fat tissue, NAC may reduce insulin resistance and improve blood sugar regulation, but human-based research is lacking.
8. May Reduce Heart Disease Risk by Preventing Oxidative Damage

Oxidative damage to heart tissue often leads to heart disease, causing strokes, heart attacks and other serious conditions.
NAC may reduce heart disease risk by reducing oxidative damage to tissues in your heart (33Trusted Source).
It has also been shown to increase nitric oxide production, which helps veins dilate and improves blood flow. This expedites blood transit back to your heart and can lower your risk of heart attacks (34Trusted Source).
Interestingly, a test-tube study showed that — when combined with green tea — NAC appears to reduce damage from oxidized “bad” LDL cholesterol, another contributor to heart disease (35Trusted Source).
SUMMARYNAC can reduce oxidative damage to your heart, which can — in turn — decrease your risk of heart disease.

9. Ability to Boost Glutathione Levels May Improve Immune Function

NAC and glutathione also boost immune health.
Research on certain diseases associated with NAC and glutathione deficiency suggests that immune function might be improved — and potentially restored — by supplementing with NAC (36Trusted Source).
This factor has been studied most in people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
In two studies, supplementing with NAC resulted in a significant increase in immune function — with an almost complete restoration of natural killer cells (36Trusted Source, 37Trusted Source, 38Trusted Source).
High levels of NAC in your body may also suppress HIV-1 reproduction (39Trusted Source).
A test-tube study indicated that in other immune-compromised situations, such as the flu, NAC may hamper the virus’s ability to replicate. This could potentially reduce the symptoms and lifespan of the illness (40Trusted Source).
Similarly, other test-tube studies have linked NAC to cancer cell death and blocked cancer cell replication (41Trusted Source, 42Trusted Source).
Overall, more human studies are needed. Therefore, be sure to talk to your doctor before taking NAC during cancer treatment (43Trusted Source).
SUMMARYNAC’s ability to boost glutathione levels may improve immune function in a variety of diseases.
Dosage

There is no specific dietary recommendation for cysteine because your body can produce small amounts.
For your body to make the amino acid cysteine, you need adequate amounts of folate, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12. These nutrients can be found in beans, lentils, spinach, bananas, salmon and tuna.
While most protein-rich foods, such as chicken, turkey, yogurt, cheese, eggs, sunflower seeds and legumes, contain cysteine, some people choose to supplement with NAC to increase their cysteine intake.
NAC has low bioavailability as an oral supplement, meaning that it’s not well absorbed. The accepted daily supplement recommendation is 600–1,800 mg of NAC (44Trusted Source, 45Trusted Source).
NAC can be administered as an IV or taken orally, as an aerosol spray or in liquid or powder form.
SUMMARYEating high-protein foods can provide your body with the amino acid cysteine, but NAC can also be taken as a supplement to help treat certain conditions.
Side Effects

NAC is likely safe for adults when provided as a prescription medication.
However, high amounts may cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and constipation (47Trusted Source).
When inhaled, it can cause swelling in the mouth, runny nose, drowsiness and chest tightness.
People with bleeding disorders or taking blood thinning medications should not take NAC, as it may slow blood clotting (48Trusted Source).
NAC has an unpleasant smell that makes it hard to consume. If you choose to take it, consult with your doctor first.
SUMMARYWhile NAC is considered safe as a prescription medication, it can cause nausea, vomiting, gastrointestinal disturbances, as well as mouth issues if inhaled.
The Bottom Line

NAC plays several important roles in human health.
Renowned for its ability to replenish levels of the antioxidant glutathione, it also regulates the important brain neurotransmitter glutamate. Additionally, NAC helps the body’s detoxification system.
These functions make NAC supplements a viable treatment option for multiple health problems.
Consult with your doctor to see if NAC may boost your health.

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N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) inhibits virus replication and expression of pro-inflammatory molecules in A549 cells infected with highly pathogenic H5N1 influenza A virus.
Geiler J1, Michaelis M, Naczk P, Leutz A, Langer K, Doerr HW, Cinatl J Jr.
Author information

Abstract

The antioxidant N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) had been shown to inhibit replication of seasonal human influenza A viruses. Here, the effects of NAC on virus replication, virus-induced pro-inflammatory responses and virus-induced apoptosis were investigated in H5N1-infected lung epithelial (A549) cells. NAC at concentrations ranging from 5 to 15 mM reduced H5N1-induced cytopathogenic effects (CPEs), virus-induced apoptosis and infectious viral yields 24 h post-infection. NAC also decreased the production of pro-inflammatory molecules (CXCL8, CXCL10, CCL5 and interleukin-6 (IL-6)) in H5N1-infected A549 cells and reduced monocyte migration towards supernatants of H5N1-infected A549 cells. The antiviral and anti-inflammatory mechanisms of NAC included inhibition of activation of oxidant sensitive pathways including transcription factor NF-kappaB and mitogen activated protein kinase p38. Pharmacological inhibitors of NF-kappaB (BAY 11-7085) or p38 (SB203580) exerted similar effects like those determined for NAC in H5N1-infected cells. The combination of BAY 11-7085 and SB203580 resulted in increased inhibitory effects on virus replication and production of pro-inflammatory molecules relative to either single treatment. NAC inhibits H5N1 replication and H5N1-induced production of pro-inflammatory molecules. Therefore, antioxidants like NAC represent a potential additional treatment option that could be considered in the case of an influenza A virus pandemic.
PMID: 19732754 DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2009.08.025
[Indexed for MEDLINE]

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Recent research points the way toward a practical nutraceutical strategy for coping with RNA virus infections including influenza and coronavirus

Nutraceuticals have potential for boosting the type 1 interferon response to RNA viruses, as reported in Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases

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Philadelphia, February 24, 2020
In a compelling article in Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases, published by Elsevier, Mark McCarty of the Catalytic Longevity Foundation, San Diego, CA, USA, and James DiNicolantonio, PharmD, a cardiovascular research scientist at Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute, Kansas City, MO, USA, propose that certain nutraceuticals may help provide relief to people infected with encapsulated RNA viruses such as influenza and coronavirus.
In the United States, influenza infects around 30 million people every year causing around 30,000 deaths. While there are medications approved for the treatment of influenza, they typically are costly, have side effects, and are not very effective. Additionally, vaccinations against influenza may only be effective in around 50 percent of those vaccinated. Thus, there is a need for safer and effective alternatives in those infected with influenza.
Over the past few months, a novel RNA coronavirus, now called COVID-19, has broken out in China and has spread to over two dozen countries and infected more than 76,000 people causing more than 2,000 deaths. This novel coronavirus is much more lethal than the typical flu, with a current mortality rate of about 2.92 percent. In other words, around 1 in 33 people who are infected with this novel coronavirus will die. Whereas the annual flu has a mortality rate of just 0.05 to 0.1 percent. This means that around 1 in 1,000 to 2,000 people infected with the annual flu will die. In other words, COVID-19 is around 30 to 60 times more lethal than the typical annual flu.
Both influenza and coronavirus cause an inflammatory storm in the lungs and it is this inflammatory storm that leads to acute respiratory distress, organ failure, and death. Certain nutraceuticals may help to reduce the inflammation in the lungs from RNA viruses and others may also help boost type 1 interferon response to these viruses, which is the body’s primary way to help create antiviral antibodies to fight off viral infections.
The authors draw attention to several randomized clinical studies in humans that have found that over the counter supplements such as n-acetylcysteine (NAC), which is used to treat acetaminophen poisoning and is also used as a mucus thinner to help reduce bronchitis exacerbations, and elderberry extracts, have evidence for shortening the duration of influenza by about two to four days and reducing the severity of the infection. The authors also note several nutraceuticals such as spirulina, beta-glucan, glucosamine, and NAC have either been found to reduce the severity of infection or to cut the rate of death in half in animals infected with influenza. Furthermore, one clinical study in humans testing spirulina noted significant reductions in viral load in those infected with HIV.
“Therefore, it is clear that certain nutraceuticals have antiviral effects in both human and animal studies,” commented Dr. DiNicolantonio. “Considering that there is no treatment for COVID-19 and treatments for influenza are limited, we welcome further studies to test these nutraceuticals as a strategy to help provide relief in those infected with encapsulated RNA viruses.”
Editor-in-Chief of Progress Cardiovascular Diseases Carl “Chip” Lavie, MD, Ochsner Clinical School-The University of Queensland School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA, added, “Considering the recent interests directed at serious viral infections, especially coronavirus and influenza, this material should be of interest to specialists in cardiovascular diseases but also to a wide range of clinicians outside of our typical readership.”
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Notes for editors
The article is “Nutraceuticals have potential for boosting the type 1 interferon response to RNA viruses including influenza and coronavirus,” by Mark F. McCarty and James J. DiNicolantonio (Redirecting). It appears in Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases published by Elsevier.
Full text of the article is available to journalists upon request. To obtain a copy contact Heather Luciano at +1 347 443 4496 or hmsmedia@elsevier.com.
It is also openly available at www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0033062020300372.
Journalists wishing to reach the authors should contact Dr. James DiNicolantonio at jjdinicol@gmail.com or Mark McCarty at markfmccarty@gmail.com.
Elsevier’s Novel Coronavirus Information Center provides expert, curated information for the research and health community on Novel Coronavirus (also referred to as COVID-19 and its temporary title 2019-nCoV). All resources are free to access and include guidelines for clinicians and patients. The Research presents the latest early stage and peer-reviewed research from journals including The Lancet and Cell Press, as well as a link to the Coronavirus Hub on ScienceDirect, where you will find every article relevant to Coronavirus, SARS, and MERS freely available. Under the Clinical Solutions tab you will find resources for nurses, clinicians and patients, including FAQs on symptoms.
About Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases
Each issue of Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases comprehensively covers a single topic in the understanding and treatment of disorders of the heart and circulation. Some issues include special articles, definitive reviews that capture the state of the art in the management of clinical problems in cardiology.
About Elsevier
Elsevier is a global information analytics business that helps scientists and clinicians to find new answers, reshape human knowledge, and tackle the most urgent human crises. For 140 years, we have partnered with the research world to curate and verify scientific knowledge. Today, we’re committed to bringing that rigor to a new generation of platforms. Elsevier provides digital solutions and tools in the areas of strategic research management, R&D performance, clinical decision support, and professional education; including ScienceDirect, Scopus, SciVal, ClinicalKey and Sherpath. Elsevier publishes over 2,500 digitized journals, including The Lancet and Cell, 39,000 e-book titles and many iconic reference works, including Gray's Anatomy. Elsevier is part of RELX, a global provider of information-based analytics and decision tools for professional and business customers. www.elsevier.com
Media contact
Heather Luciano, Publisher
Elsevier
+1 347 443 4496
hmsmedia@elsevier.com

 

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N-Acetylcysteine for the Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders: A ...
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by SL Ooi - ‎2018 - ‎Cited by 12 - ‎Related articles
Oct 22, 2018 - N-acetylcysteine, a sulphur-containing amino acid for the treatment of ... including glutamate dysregulation, oxidative stress, and inflammation that can ... Premature to make recommendations for or against the use of NACin ...
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Now how am I finding this to take. First off I for the first time have high blood pressure due to stress etc. If I have a bit of Port wine my blood pressure goes down. If I get a massage my blood pressure goes down so I figured my high blood pressure is due to stress.

So this NAC seems to help me a lot with my blood pressure.
 

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NAC: feeling “normal” again


Scabies mites can drive you nuts until you kill them off, but even afterwards you might have a lot of problems. Scar tissue from scratching that can take months to heal. Left-over dead mites, eggs, mite poop and saliva all combine to cause an allergic reaction and itching which can linger.
Even after a couple months after I was cured I still didn't feel "normal". I just didn't have much energy or zip. My suspicion was that my immune system was simply not functioning very well.



I'm the sort of fellow who reads and studies a lot and I tripped over a small study which found wounds healed faster when taking a supplement called NAC (N-Acetyl-Cysteine) plus vitamin E. You can buy NAC from Amazon here. This is the NAC that I bought and am taking.
As you may have observed, bacteria form a "slime" or biofilm which protects them from our immune system or antibiotics. The study showed that NAC + vitamin E helped to break up the biofilm and clear out the harmful bacteria.
What is NAC?
NAC is short for "N-Acetyl-Cysteine". Your body uses amino acids like building blocks to make various proteins. The "C" in NAC stands for "cysteine" which is one of these building blocks. Human hair and skin contain approximately 10-14% cysteine (hair is made of protein). Wikipedia says, "Acetylcysteine is the N-acetyl derivative of the amino acid L-cysteine, and is a precursor in the formation of the antioxidant glutathione in the body." So NAC is an altered form of an amino acid.
My experience with NAC
Long story short: I started taking a 600 mg NAC pill twice a day and started feeling more energetic…not wiped out all the time. In fact, I cut back to one NAC pill a day because I found I was having more vivid dreams. Not "bad" dreams, just more colorful, more realistic…like HD instead of low res. My dreams are plenty realistic already so now I just take one or two NAC pills in the first half of the day (in the morning or mid-afternoon). I have had no other side effects that I can tell.
Anyway, it sounds odd to say it, but I feel "normal" again! Not full of extra energy, not dragging around, but simply normal.
The other plus is I don't get colds or the flu anymore. It used to be any time kids visited they brought whatever was going around in school, we'd catch it too. Now I just don't. My mate, Fran doesn't take any supplements. Fran has had a few whoppers of colds and I don't have any symptoms at all. At webmd.com they credit NAC as "increasing immunity to flu and H1N1 (swine) flu". There's a theory one actually still "gets" the cold or flu, but NAC regulates one's immune response so there are simply none of the awful symptoms we associate with them. No cough, no aches, no fatigue, etc. It just may be the symptoms are the immune system over-reacting.
NAC is a pretty cheap supplement…around $11 with free shipping for 100 capsules. I found NAC at Amazon and bought it from there. I have not seen it in any stores.
Vitamin E
The study on NAC did not specify how much vitamin E they gave, so I just took one or two 400 iu capsules. Vitamin E is available all over, but you can click here to get a highly recommended, but pricey brand at Amazon. It is a lot cheaper in stores. Here’s an example of Vitamin E available at Walmart for only $6. I suspect the $6 vitamin E is as effective as the $30 stuff.
NAC has other positive uses
NAC is used by doctors as an antidote to acetaminophen poisoning (Tylenol). Apparently acetaminophen can cause liver damage and NAC counters that. I only mention this so you know NAC isn't some obscure supplement, but rather an accepted supplement with many uses.
Click here for a simple explanation of how acetaminophen poisoning is handled involving NAC.
Click here for a very detailed example of using NAC for acetaminophen poisoning (warning: lots of medical terminology!).


 
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Chronic bronchitis
Chronic bronchitis is defined as the presence of chronic productive cough for more than three months in each of two sequential years. Therefore, an important goal in the treatment of chronic bronchitis is to decrease the frequency and duration of intensification, and to decrease symptoms in patients with aggravations. In some European countries, mucolytic drugs, particularly NAC may be used as an anti-inflammatory drug as well as an antioxidant (28,29). In these countries, it is believed that NAC can decrease the frequency of aggravations and improve symptoms in patients with chronic bronchitis. Recently, a comprehensive review in literature survey has concluded in the field of the effectiveness of any oral mucolytic drugs that a decline of aggravations, days of disability and days of antibiotic treatment was averagely determined in patients with chronic clogging pulmonary disease (30).

 
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