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This one food can protect men from cancer

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malehealthcures.com

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matt@malehealthcures.com

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Tue, Jun 9, 2020 09:57 PM

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It’s completely natural and readily available... are you getting enough? ----Important Message-

It’s completely natural and readily available... are you getting enough? ----Important Message---- CID5920 may let men live decades longer Men like George Bush, Rod Stewart, and Joe Piscopo have been secretly taking CID5920 for years. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] It’s a natural “anti-aging” hormone that was first discovered in 1950 by Dr. Broda Barnes. He tested this hormone on more than 3,000 men, reporting powerful health benefits like a faster metabolism, perfect blood pressure, more stamina, even better sexual abilities… And since then, it’s been kept a secret -- only available to the affluent, privileged upper class of celebrities and politicians. Until now… now it’s finally available to the public. Men like you and me. But there’s no telling when it may get “banned” again… [click here to see this exclusive video before it’s taken down...]( ---------- This one food can protect men from cancer Studies about micronutrients and cancer generally yield positive results. Getting the proper amounts of minerals, vitamins, and fatty acids can undeniably influence cancer. And some of these food components – such as linoleic acid, vitamin E, and beta-carotene – can have quite powerful effects, making them stand out from the rest. Selenium, and specifically selenomethionine, is one such micronutrient. Selenomethionine is an all‐natural amino acid found in plants and animals. It is essentially identical to methionine – an amino acid with antioxidant activity that is involved in metabolism and other aspects of health. The difference with selenomethionine is that the sulfur atom is replaced by selenium, giving it radically different properties. And this is actually the form in which selenium is generally found in food. So we do consume it in small amounts every day. We need selenium in order to form some enzymes involved in thyroid hormone regulation. It also provides antioxidant activity. So it’s beneficial in two ways. But, as a relatively rare amino acid, it’s sometimes helpful to supplement selenium. Unfortunately, the foods containing the highest levels – such as Brazil nuts and soy – are also high in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), and immunogenic proteins. And soy is also high in phytoestrogens and polyamines. But selenomethionine could be worth supplementing in light of its anticancer effects. Not many would consider it ideal to have too many supplements crowding the cabinets, and most nutrients should come from food. But selenomethionine is certainly one of the few worth buying. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] The most well‐known selenium study is this one. Up to this point, it was known that selenium – just the lone mineral – was slightly protective against cancer. This is because the results of meta‐reviews had shown pretty consistent findings. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] But in 1996, some researchers decided to investigate selenium further... They recruited quite a few people for the study – more than 1,000 – and split that bunch of people into two groups of 650. One group was supplemented with 200 μg (micrograms) of selenium and the other was not. The results were fairly striking, to say the least. The risk ratios for all cancers measured were far below unity (see pink column): [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] Lung cancer was reduced by one‐third, prostate cancer by two‐thirds, and colon cancer had dropped down to 14% that of the controls. To put it another way... For every eight people who got colon cancer, seven of them were NOT taking selenium. And: “No cases of selenium toxicity occurred.” (Clark, 1996) So what to make of this? Do these anti‐cancer effects have anything to do with thyroid hormone? Probably not, but it gets even more interesting than that. Even though thyroid hormone does rise a bit with 200 μg selenomethionine, it's not as dramatic a result as the previous study had with cancer. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] While active thyroid hormone (T₃) does increase the metabolic rate, among other benefits, you wouldn’t expect much of a boost from this slight rise. In this study as in the earlier one, the participants received the same dose (200 μg). And the changes in plasma selenium were similar (76 ng/mL in the earlier study versus 90 ng/mL in this one) – proving similar absorption. Back then, investigators had no idea of how this worked. They didn’t seem to make the distinction between selenium and selenomethionine – and spoke of them interchangeably. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] But the anticancer effect is actually now understood. And this is something that plain selenium atoms cannot do by themselves. You need selenomethionine, specifically, to inhibit cancer to this degree. Selenomethionine interferes with polyamine synthesis, and safely. Polyamines are small molecules involved in cell proliferation. And they are so involved as to be nearly synonymous with it: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] A few years after the classic study, a few sharp biochemists put two and two together and decided to test selenomethionine on polyamine synthesis. Polyamines are small molecules that control the rate of DNA synthesis directly. The logic is clear… Methionine is necessary to create the polyamines involved in cell proliferation and cancer… And selenomethionine, a very similar molecule, powerfully inhibits cancer. So this leads to the idea that selenomethionine could be inhibiting polyamine synthesis by competing with methionine. Polyamines rise and fall in ways that mirror the cell cycle. “As polyamines are clearly implicated in cell cycle progression, it was not surprising to find the decrease in polyamines from selenomethionine administration…” (Redman, 1997) The researchers noticed a decrease in growth and polyamine synthesis with selenomethionine. No other amino acid can do this… Not even L‐threonine is this powerful. Threonine can become methylglyoxal and, theoretically, will help… But it doesn’t appear to be as effective as selenomethionine gram‐for‐gram. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] And to further prove how it works, they showed a reversal with added polyamines. The cancer cells could be made to proliferate again, quite predictably, with additional polyamines. “In the present study we also noted that selenomethionine administration resulted in mitotic arrest in both tumor cell lines.” (Redman, 1997) The involvement of polyamines in cancer had been noted as early as the 1920s by William Koch. And as early as the 1960s, they were found to bind very strongly to DNA. Polyamines can actually change DNA from the right‐handed A‐configuration to the left‐handed Z‐configuration, powerfully increasing the replication rate (Thomas, 1991). [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] This effect has even been noted during PCR amplification, the routine replication of DNA outside of the body for criminal, genetic, or biochemical investigation. The main enzyme that creates polyamines, ornithine decarboxylase, is upregulated by both androgens and prostaglandin E₂… These are the two hormones most associated with prostate cancer growth. So it seems as if every path leads to polyamines. And selenomethionine is safe. The body doesn’t distinguish between methionine and selenomethionine, so they both get incorporated into proteins at roughly the same rate. Plants also cannot make this distinction. So it basically seems to be almost just like methionine, but better. I think it’s fair to think of it as “preferred methionine.” Interestingly, the Japanese do have seven times the amount in their muscle tissue as Americans. (Could that be because they eat so much fish in Japan?) “The selenium contents of human skeletal muscle reflect accordingly the dietary selenomethionine intakes and were found to be the highest in Japanese adults (1,700 ng/g), followed by Canadians (370 ng/g) and Americans (240 ng/g), with the lowest (61 ng/g) found in New Zealand adults.” (Shrauzer, 2000) Compare these high levels to the mere doubling of plasma levels seen at the small 200 μg dose. I think it’s fair to assume that taking a bit more than 200 μg would also be safe. The upper limit is set at 500 μg by the Institute of Medicine. Perhaps selenomethionine could even be more effective yet, with an even higher dose? And higher doses of 800 μg selenomethionine have been found to be safe, roughly tripling the plasma selenium levels. “‘Some of the subjects in this study ingested >800 μg selenium/d for 16 weeks. This is considerably more than the Institute of Medicine's tolerable upper level of 400 μg/d. No signs of selenium toxicity (hair loss and nail changes) were observed, in agreement with Chinese observations in subjects with intakes of about 800 μg.” (Burk, 2006) So, besides raising active thyroid hormone and increasing metabolism, selenomethionine can powerfully inhibit cancer. Coupled with L‐threonine, and a diet low in linoleic acid, you might think cancer could be nearly completely avoidable. But in any case, selenomethionine has been shown to reduce the risk of colon cancer sevenfold. And the study by Redman shows how important polyamines are for cell proliferation. For this reason, the polyamine precursors arginine, ornithine, and common S‐methionine, should probably be used with caution. ----Important Message---- A pinch of this powder protects the cells from cancer [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] I’ve discovered a natural, cheap white powder that is showing remarkable results in fighting cancer. Most stores charge just 89 cents for this powder, and it will last you for months. I see that more and more doctors are prescribing this white powder to all their patients... ...and within a few years it will destroy the Big Pharma companies. How can they stay in business when this white powder can wipe out most disease? [Discover the remarkable cheap white powder that can protect the cells from cancer.]( ---------- Daily Medical Discoveries is dedicated to uncovering secret, buried or censored studies that can help men live great lives to 120 and beyond. You are subscribed because you joined one of our lists by opting in. We never rent or share your email address. Daily Medical Discoveries is published by Calworth Glenford LLC which also publishes other affiliated companies. By giving us your email address, you consent for Daily Medical Discoveries and its affiliated companies to delivering you a healthy daily portion of email issues and advertisements. To end your email subscription and associated external offers sent from Daily Medical Discoveries, feel free to [click here]( FREE BOOK: As a Daily Medical Discoveries subscriber in good standing, you’re eligible to receive a FREE book containing underground, buried and ignored remedies that help men live a happy, healthy and sexy life to 120 years old, including specific help for men who want more sex, more life and more of everything. [Click here to claim your copy.]( Comments / Questions? You can hit REPLY to this email or email me, Matt, at matt@getrapidhelp.com Missing issues? How to make sure you NEVER miss an issue! The real key is CLICKING and OPENING emails. That shows your email provider (Yahoo, Gmail or whoever) that you WANT our email. If you don’t click or open, you won’t be getting them anymore, sadly. BIG TIP: Hit REPLY and say “Hi Matt” or ask a question, and THAT will assure your email provider that you want our emails! Copyright © 2020 Calworth Glenford LLC, 1005 Country Club Av., Cheyenne WY 82001 USA. Publication without written permission from Calworth Glenford is strictly prohibited. Please - you are in charge of your own life. We’re not saying “don’t see a doctor.” We’re presenting research. Don’t hold us responsible if you do something as a result of what you read here. Life’s all an experiment, none of us have the answers, but the more hidden/secret/censored/ignored information you have, the better off you are. We aren’t doctors, and we aren’t giving you personal health or sex advice! If you email us with personal information, it is our policy that we forbid our employees from sharing anything you tell us with outside parties, except if you give us permission to share it, or we are compelled by force of law to share it. Daily Medical Discoveries or its affiliated companies accept third party advertisements which will be labeled “sponsored”, “third party sponsored”, etc. Third party advertising helps pay the high costs of our newsletters through various business arrangements including commissions. We try to accept advertising only from legitimate advertisers, but you bear all responsibility in dealing directly with them and will not hold us responsible. Sometimes, Daily Medical Discoveries or its affiliated companies sell their own products or services and will solicit your business for those. These solicitations are NOT third party advertisements. We can stand behind anything you buy in full accord with our terms and conditions of sale, for whatever product or service you purchase.

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