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You Might Have Been Duped by Health Assertions of Direct Antioxidant

Supplements!

Do you realize that you might have been scammed by the world of nutritional supplements?
You have to listen-up and take into consideration what you might be seeing and believing. I
know you might be seeing Antioxidants everywhere on food labels, even on 7-up 2-liters. But
what does it actually mean? Does it mean that you'll be able to live longer and healthier should
you take antioxidant supplements? What about eating foods that contain antioxidants? This is
possibility a far better selection, and here is why. According to Dr. Joe McCord, a four-time
Nobel Peace Nominee, our bodies produce 300 septillion free radicals every single day after the
age of 20! The power of a direct antioxidant is so miniscule compared to our overwhelming
number of free radicals, that making use of a direct antioxidant to decrease oxidative stress is
analogous to throwing a Dixie Cup of water on a home fire. While your intentions are excellent,
the house is coming down!

There is minimal amount of benefit in trying to boost antioxidants inside the body through
supplements according to the Mayo Clinic. Here is an article in the Science Daily, Sep.13.2007,
that indicates when it comes to boosting antioxidant intake, recent research indicates there’s
little benefit in taking dietary supplements. A better way, according to a report in the September
issue of Mayo Clinic Health Letter, is eating a diet rich in antioxidant-containing foods. It further
states that “Antioxidants such as vitamins C and E, carotene, lycopene, lutein and many other
substances may play a role in helping to prevent diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular
disease, Alzheimer’s disease and macular degeneration." Antioxidants are thought to help
mainly because they can neutralize free radicals, which are toxic byproducts of natural cell
metabolism. The human body organically generates antioxidants but the process isn’t 100
percent effective and that capacity declines with age”.

Whenever you reach age 20, your oxidative stress levels commence to enhance beyond what
your body is capable of equalizing. So that you can efficiently minimize that stress, your body
will must create a lot more antioxidants, much as it did when you had been younger. Attempting
to enhance levels of antioxidants by means of direct therapy not simply doesn’t operate
properly, but can have some negative side effects. So the ONLY WAY that has been verified to
operate, demonstrated in peer reviewed clinicals, is by taking herbs that for thousands of years
have been verified to stimulate the body to produce its very own antioxidants.

Another real likely possible danger with direct antioxidant therapy is creating a adverse
environment within the body from an overdose of antioxidants, intended to help, but
subsequently producing as much or more damage as the Free Radical you were seeking to
extinguish. As an example, The Science Daily, Jan 28,2010, had an article entitled;
“Antioxidants Aren’t Always Good for You and Can Impair Muscle Function, Study Shows”.
Below are excerpts from that article:
Antioxidants increasingly have been acknowledged for their positive aspects against illness and
aging, but recent studies at Kansas State University show that they also can cause harm.
Researchers in K-State’s Cardio-respiratory Workout Laboratory have been studying tips on
how to strengthen oxygen delivery towards the skeletal muscle in the course of physical activity
by making use of Antioxidants which are nutrients in foods that may avoid or slow the oxidative
harm towards the body. Their findings show that at times antioxidants can impair muscle
function. “Antioxidant is one of those buzz words right now,” said Steven Copp, a doctoral
student in anatomy and physiology from Manhattan and a researcher in the lab. “Walking
around grocery stores you see things advertised that are loaded with Antioxidants. I think what
a lot of people don’t realize is that the Antioxidant and pro-oxidant balance is really delicate.
One of the things we’ve seen in our research is that you can’t just give a larger dose of
Antioxidants and presume that there will be some sort of beneficial effect. In fact, you can
actually make a problem worse.”

Copp and Daniel Hirai, an anatomy and physiology doctoral student from Manhattan working
inside the lab, have conducted different studies associated with how muscles control blood flow
as well as the effects of distinct doses and forms of Antioxidants. Abnormalities inside the
circulatory system, for example those that result from aging or a illness like chronic heart failure,
can impair oxygen delivery to the skeletal muscle and boost fatigability during physical activity,
Copp said. The researchers are studying the effects Antioxidants could have inside the method.
Copp said there's a prospective for Antioxidants to reverse or partially reverse some of those
changes that result from aging or disease. Nonetheless, K-State’s studies have shown that a
number of the oxidants (Free Radicals) in our body, for example hydrogen peroxide, are helpful
to boost blood flow. “We’re now learning that if Antioxidant therapy takes away hydrogen
peroxide - or other naturally occurring vasodilators, which are compounds that help open blood
vessels - you impair the body’s ability to deliver oxygen to the muscle so that it doesn’t work
properly.”

Once again, realize and be conscious that Antioxidants taken directly have little effect on the
body and should you attempt to force that type of therapy on a body, not just is there scant
appreciable value, but there is usually some serious side effects that may produce impairments,
even though the intent was to produce a proactive and positive effect. Again, the value of true
knowledge can and will bring perspective to an Antioxidant crazed world. For more valuable and
Really Real information, check out our website:
http://antiagingmiraclesite.com/

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