As you mentioned, there are not that many registered medications so we have to look at dietary supplements. And one of the ways that I started out with was when patient mentioned something, I would study it. If a patient, for example, says I can't live without PEA, which is what I'm going to show you, then I have to study and see what's the background literature on this and is it something I would think would work for my patients. And then I would start patients on that and then accumulate a lot of knowledge on that. I think we have about over 1000 patients in the clinic and for this, PEA, we have I think about 6-700 on it. If we look back at what had happened to these patients that would be a good way to look at it.
So with PEA again you know explain what is the biology or the what what is the chemistry, it's an endocannabinol. So we actually do produce cannabis in our bodies. We have two cannabis receptors. CB1 which is the funny one I mean that that's the one that you like to have on. And then there's a CB2 receptor which works on inflammation and that's where PEA has its effect. And PEA is primarily accumulated in the hypothalamus, so it has an effect on hormones and the autonomic nervous system.
And we have, I think, very good results from what we're doing. It has been shown to decrease release of pro-inflammatory cytokines. It stimulates the CB1 receptor, and this receptor is very abundant on microglia cells, and that's probably why it has a good effect on neuroinflammation. We looked into the possible side effects and in rats this is the usual daily dose in rats you can give them up to 1,000 milligram per kilogram, so this is far from where the side effects may arise so this is a safe compound to use.