Warning for Statin Users

Important Clinical Advisory for ssRNA Viruses Tincture Users

Individuals currently prescribed pharmaceutical blood thinners, including statins or anticoagulants, must discontinue these agents gradually under the supervision of a qualified medical professional before initiating the ssRNA Viruses Tincture. A tapering period of approximately two weeks is generally advised to allow the cardiovascular and hepatic systems to adjust. During this transition, a suitable plant-based anticoagulant—such as Wild Pathimugham (Caesalpinia sappan- recommended dosage is 1000 mgs each day)—should be introduced to maintain hemodynamic balance and clotting modulation. Co-administration of the tincture with pharmaceutical blood thinners is contraindicated due to potential cumulative effects on platelet inhibition and hepatic metabolism.

Why Plant-Based Blood Thinners May Be a Better Alternative to Pharmaceuticals

Conventional pharmaceutical blood thinners, such as statins, warfarin, or newer anticoagulants (e.g. rivaroxaban), are effective in reducing clot risk and managing cardiovascular events. However, they often come with significant side effects including muscle pain, liver stress, memory issues, and increased bleeding risk. Additionally, statins may interfere with mitochondrial function, nutrient absorption (particularly CoQ10 and vitamin D), and may impair immune modulation.

In contrast, certain plant-based alternatives—such as wild Pathimugham (Caesalpinia sappan), turmeric (Curcuma longa), ginger, ginkgo biloba, and garlic—have demonstrated anticoagulant and antiplatelet effects in peer-reviewed studies, while also providing anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and often immunomodulatory benefits. These botanicals tend to work via multi-targeted mechanisms, modulating prostaglandins, thromboxane, nitric oxide, and platelet aggregation without sharply tipping the body into pathological bleeding.

The gradual shift to plant-based blood-thinning strategies allows for synergistic support of vascular health, immune resilience, and systemic balance, especially for individuals pursuing a whole-food, plant-based lifestyle. These approaches are typically gentler on the liver, do not disrupt cellular energy production, and may better harmonize with herbal formulas such as the ssRNA Viruses Tincture, which relies on integrated, immuno-supportive botanicals.

Nonetheless, transitioning off pharmaceutical blood thinners should always be done gradually and under the supervision of a qualified health professional. Regular monitoring is essential to ensure safety during any transition.

Please read; Six Lotus used AI to model use, ie; How long the tincture will take to work, and contraindications, etc. These are the areas where there may be pitfalls, so please be advised to double check for your own condition. 

High-attention items;

These are common pitfalls to double-check—not medical advice.

  • Apricot pits (amygdalin) in CRS: cyanogenic glycosides → strict caution and precise wording.

  • St. John’s wort: major drug interactions (SSRIs, OCPs, immunosuppressants), photosensitivity.

  • White willow bark: salicylates—aspirin sensitivity, anticoagulants, children.

  • Cinchona (quinine): cardiac/QT risks, drug interactions.

  • Usnea (usnic acid): hepatotoxicity risk in concentrated forms.

  • Mugwort/ragweed family: allergy cross-reactivity; pregnancy caution.

  • Chasteberry: hormone-sensitive conditions; meds that affect dopamine/prolactin.

  • Valerian: sedation; CNS depressants/driving caution.

  • Dulse/seaweeds: iodine load; thyroid conditions.

  • Blue lotus: limited clinical data; sedative effects; avoid pregnancy/lactation.