L-Theanine and/or GABA Calm?

mexigrl64

Member
Author
Mar 19, 2015
52
Tinnitus Since
07/30/2000
Hi all,

I did some searching and found threads on both of these but nothing that compared them. I did note one that someone took them together.

I started taking Magnesium and L-Theanine (100 mg) about 2 weeks ago. Tinnitus has been up and down but there was a period of calm. I do have the GABA Calm but was wondering if one is better than the other, or if the can or should be taken together. Does anyone have experience with that?

My L-Theanine dosing may be too low so perhaps I should bump it up. I was hoping it would help me sleep but I'm still pretty restless. I take them around 6PM at night.

Thanks and Happy 2019 to all

Laurianne
 
I take 600mg of Theanine 2 to 3 times a day and 750mg of GABA with 400mg of Magnesium at night. Works good together in my book. I also take 3mg of Melatonin nightly.
 
I tried L-theanine and it did nothing. I just felt a bit more calm. I've never tried GABA but I will. I'm afraid that it may give some complication like benzodiazepines.
 
L-Theanine works for me, I'm not using it at the moment but given how well it worked in the darkest early days I fully expect it could zero my remaining tinnitus for several hours these days if I got more of it.
 
I've found l-theanine to work OK against acute anxiety. It isn't Xanax obviously but I do find it useful if I'm very anxious. I take 1-2 teaspoons of powder.
 
Been taking this for about 10 days. It does help me sleep a little bit better (I have dreams). My tinnitus is still the same though. I take 1 pill at night.

https://www.amazon.com/Nature-Made-Melatonin-L-theanine-Supporting/dp/B082N5L4NN/

Screenshot 2020-02-12 at 14.47.53.png
 
Just want to tell you that taking GABA as a supplement does not help. It never reaches the brain after being processed in the stomach
Can GABA supplements cross the blood brain barrier?

Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is the main inhibitory neurotransmitter in the human cortex. ... It has long been thought that GABA is unable to cross the bloodbrain barrier (BBB), but the studies that have assessed this issue are often contradictory and range widely in their employed methods.

There are both a number of studies that were unable to show that GABA crosses the BBB and a number of studies that did show GABA's ability to cross. In view of the multitude of employed methods and species, in addition to the finding that GABA metabolism might differ between rodents and humans (Errante et al., 2002), it is not possible at this time to come to a definite conclusion with regards to GABA's BBB permeability in humans.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4594160/
:)
 

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