Newsletter Subject

These 5 supplements can stop dementia by inhibiting lipofuscin

From

malehealthcures.com

Email Address

matt@malehealthcures.com

Sent On

Wed, Jan 13, 2021 08:33 PM

Email Preheader Text

They?re cheap and easy to find -- you can even get them from food ----Important Message---- This h

They’re cheap and easy to find -- you can even get them from food ----Important Message---- This hot wires a man’s pleasure centers for more explosive full-body O’s [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] I’ve found a way to reduce the refractory period men experience after ejaculations… And this way, I can come more and enjoy more pleasure. No waiting around. No “recharge” necessary. I can keep enjoying that orgasmic feeling for hours, even all day if I want. And it works in just 45 seconds. [Here’s how to hot wire your pleasure centers for more O’s and more pleasure]( ---------- These 5 supplements can stop dementia by inhibiting lipofuscin Lipofuscin is an inclusion body that accumulates over time and is largely responsible for progressive dementia seen with aging. Small amounts can be observed in very young animals fed certain diets, yet concentrations of this can range-up to extreme values in the elderly. In centenarians, for instance, lipofuscin has been shown to occupy up to 75% of the interior volume of neurons (Jung, 2007). 'One of the highlights of postmitotic aging is the intracellular accumulation of highly oxidized and cross-linked proteins, known as lipofuscin.' ―Jung Neurons are the main target because they rarely divide. The lipofuscin in most cells is diluted through each division, which is essentially everywhere besides the brain and heart. Lipofuscin is commonly called “ceroid” or “age spots” when found on the skin, yet this is far from an innocuous cosmetic issue. Certain genetic diseases characterized by aberrant liposomal proteins will allow for substantial lipofuscin accumulation even in the young. Such conditions are associated with epilepsy, vision loss, motor disturbances, and premature death (Siintola, 2007). Yet there are ways to inhibit its formation, as its accumulation rate is highly diet-dependent. This fatty material consists physically of proteins crosslinked by products of lipid peroxidation -- e.g. malondialdehyde and hydroxynonenal -- with iron atoms that were trapped during the polymerization process. 'Lipofuscin is a highly oxidized cross-linked aggregate consisting of oxidized protein (30–58%) and lipid (19–51%) clusters. It is a yellow-brown material accumulating over time.' ―Jung Considering its physical properties, lipofuscin would be somewhat analogous to an oil painting. In both cases, the most highly unsaturated lipids reliably increase the rate of formation, or the drying time, and the iron pigments are known by painters to speed-up the process of curing. Iron is highly redox-active metal, and catalyzes lipofuscin by creating free radicals that go on to initiate lipid peroxidation chain reactions. Yet since proteins also compose lipofuscin, it would be a bit more similar to the 15th century Dutch paintings that used egg tempera and oil together (van Eyck, circa 1435): [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] Lipofuscin would then be most similar to reddish-orange hues, or the areas where iron oxide pigment were used. Lipofuscin is one of the best reasons to avoid excess iron and polyunsaturated fatty acids, as it cannot even form without these. Yet since we do need iron to carry oxygen, the focus should instead be on avoiding PUFAs as much as practically possible. Although omega-3 fatty acids are better than the omega-6 ones in many ways, they are more-or-less equivalent in this regard. Actually it's the long chained omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oil that represent the greatest lipofuscin hazard on account of their sheer multiplicity of double bonds. Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is hailed as being necessary for the brain, yet this fatty acid is actually the most unstable lipid imaginable. Docosahexaenoic acid has six double bonds, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) has five, and the feeding of salmon oil to rats has been shown to greatly increase heart lipofuscin content (Nalbone, 1988). [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] So fish consumption should probably be limited to a few times per month if that, and most certainly its oil is not worthy of consumption. Coconut oil and butter are completely safe here, as these fully-saturated fatty acids cannot even undergo peroxidation without any double bonds. This stability against oxygen is why coconut oil stays liquid forever, and it can never turn into that gunky polymer film you find around the stove and inside the oven. Using soybean oil to fry eggs on a cast iron skillet would, over time, likely result in a residue chemically-similar to lipofuscin and Jan van Eyck paintings. 'In conclusion and as already warned by others it appears that the effects of fish oils must be further investigated in all the vital organs and function before being widely used for human purpose.' ―Nalbone Although it perhaps cannot be avoided completely... Lipofuscin and its formation is understood well enough to know exactly how to slow its progress by taking supplements you'd want to take anyway, for other reasons. Inhibiting lipofuscin should allow a person to live longer, and also maintain their mental acuity for decades longer than your standard fish- and soybean-eater. [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] Now that it's established a person ought-to avoid excessive iron and polyunsaturated fatty acids, there are vitamins and minerals that also should be considered. Certain enzyme cofactors and antioxidants will decrease lipofuscin even further than simply PUFA and iron restriction. And there is tons of evidence for this, in many species: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] The classic lipofuscin-inhibitor is, of course, vitamin E, which has been proven to accomplish this many times over compared to its nearest competitor. Vitamin E owes this unique property to its antioxidant role in the lipid phase. Most antioxidants are water-soluble with spheres of protection limited to the cytosol, such as ascorbic acid, yet vitamin E's solubility places it directly on the lipid membrane: the front line in the fight against lipofuscin formation. Although this has been demonstrated dozens of times, this study here was one of the better ones on account of its length: most studies are relatively short-lived by comparison, and this one was over two years long. Starting with rats aged only four weeks, they fed three similar groups otherwise identical diets, varying only in their vitamin E content. At the specified time post-initiation, the rats were sacrificed and their brains examined for lipofuscin. It could be worth mentioning that this was a sucrose/casein/starch diet with 5% PUFA, fed as corn oil, and with iron contained in the “mineral mix.” They found a dose-dependent inhibition of lipofuscin as a function of vitamin E and age: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] This is significant, and a very respectable result for just one specific vitamin. The middle-aged rats showed the most striking difference, and lipofuscin rates in the high vitamin E group were less-than-half that in the deficient group. The control group represented the intermediate, those that were fed the nominal amount of 20 milligrams per kilogram found in standard rat food. 'Based on our findings, dietary vitamin E clearly had a significant effect on lipofuscin accumulation with age in the rat brain.' ―Monji They explained the amelioration of the lipofuscin variance in the old groups by the downregulation of enzymes such as catalase, superoxide dismutase, and glutathione peroxidase. Since free radicals were safely contained by the increasing vitamin E, the cell had less need for these enzymes so had apparently underexpressed them. Thus, a compensatory effect was induced in the cell. Imagine what you'd see if the high vitamin E group had also been fed coconut instead of corn oil? Perhaps also with low iron? Yet further reductions are observed by adding selenium to the diet along with vitamin E, as seen in this study on cows: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] This study was 137 days in duration, and included selenium along with vitamin E. Selenium is sometimes used to inhibit lipid peroxidation because it's a necessary component, as selenocysteine, of the enzyme glutathione peroxidase. Glutathione peroxidase is responsible for lowering peroxynitrite and hydrogen peroxide, a function it shares with catalase. And because most animals and people are by no means sufficient in selenium, the primary effect from taking it is often an increased expression of glutathione peroxidase and hence... A reduction of peroxynitrite and reactive oxygen species. Not only did they give some of the calves the powerful selenium & vitamin E combination, they also force fed-them linseed oil. Linseed oil is often euphemistically called flaxseed oil when marketed for consumption. This is one of the most peroxidizable oils, and commonly used in painting for this reason. 'These changes were more severe in polyunsaturated fatty acid-fed calves than in animals that did not receive polyunsaturates.' ―Kennedy Because cows have a sophisticated digestive system that actively saturates most of the unsaturated fatty acids they consume, the linseed oil had to be modified to circumvent this. After 137 days, the calves were sacrificed and examined histologically for lipofuscin. It was found, rather predictably, that the selenium & vitamin E groups had greatly reduced lipofuscin relative to their unsupplemented controls. The main finding was necrosis and a general degeneration of the heart muscle, and some of the calves had even died from this linseed oil feeding. 'Macroscopic myocardial alterations were seen in five polyunsaturated fatty acid-fed calves but not in any other experimental calf. Microscopic lesions, comprising multifocal or diffuse cardiocyte degeneration and necrosis, were seen in atrial and ventricular myocardium of all experimental calves. [...] Myocardial damage was severe and diffuse in the two calves that died.' ―Kennedy Selenium is the most well-studied substance for reducing lipofuscin second only to vitamin E. Yet, unlike vitamin E, selenium demonstrates a U-shaped curve and can become an oxidant when given in the improper form. Only inorganic selenium can go from an antioxidant to an oxidant in high concentrations, while selenomethionine and selenocysteine are exempt from this. The selenoamino acids are naturally found in food, and have selenium covalently bound to an amino acid. Taking selenomethionine leads to increased glutathione peroxidase just the same yet without any of the risk associated with inorganic selenium. This is especially helpful in prostate cancer, as methionine concentrates in this organ due to its high polyamine production. 'No alterations were seen in the hearts of control calves fed vitamin E and selenium-supplemented diet.' ―Kennedy Besides glutathione peroxidase, the body has a few more enzyme types constantly working to lower reactive oxygen species: Superoxide dismutase is exactly what the name implies, an enzyme that turns reactive superoxide (Ȯ₂⁻) back into molecular oxygen (O₂). There are a few different isoforms of superoxide dismutase, with the copper-dependent form being the more common. Therefore, it's good to take a little chelated copper -- e.g. copper glycinate -- once in a while to ensure a high expression of superoxide dismutase within the cells. Also worth taking are vitamin B12 and methylfolate, both needed in the brain to methylate homocysteine back into methionine. Homocysteine is a unique amino acid in that it can form a stable free radical, crossing the blood brain barrier and inducing a lipofuscin cascade. Homocysteine has been shown highly correlated with cerebrospinal fluid hydroxynonenal, a lipid peroxidation fragment shown to crosslink proteins thereby forming lipofuscin (Selley, 2002). The Pearson coefficient between these two molecules is remarkable, and represents almost a perfectly straight line (r =.924). 'These granules had autofluorescent, periodic acid-Shiff-positive, diastase‑resistant, acid‑fast, and sudanophilic properties characteristic of lipofuscin.' ―Kennedy There is one more that deserves special attention, and that is vitamin C palmitate. This molecule is similar to vitamin E in that it's a lipid-soluble antioxidant, yet it was actually vitamin C palmitate that was found to be more effective. This was demonstrated nearly 20 years ago, in Korea: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] Vitamin C palmitate is also called ascorbyl palmitate, and sometimes even ascorbyl-6-hexadecanoate. The author of this study called it ascorbyl palmitate. They tested ascorbyl palmitate directly against vitamin E, the gold standard, on its ability to inhibit the peroxidation of soybean oil, cottonseed oil, corn oil, tallow, and lard. They found that ascorbyl palmitate was a powerful lipid-soluble antioxidant, inducing a dose-dependent inhibition of peroxidation in concentrations lower than vitamin E. 'Ascorbyl palmitate showed significantly greater antioxidative activity than α-tocopherol for the reduction of oxidation in all oils.' ―Lee Ascorbyl palmitate is freely available online and considered safe at any practical dose. Half of this molecule is hydrolyzed into plain vitamin C, which is useful, and the other half into palmitate -- a safe saturated fatty acid found in coconut oil and butter. Although evidence suggests that just plain vitamin C can regenerate vitamin E, thereby sparing it (McCay, 1985), it cannot cross the blood-brain barrier as well as ascorbyl palmitate. This too has also been proven: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] They used cats to determine the brain disposition of ascorbyl palmitate. This molecule was given inside the milk of one group, and an equimolar amount of ascorbic acid was given to another. They found increased ascorbate levels in the brain when it was given as the palmitate ester. This really was no comparison, as the brain concentrations of ascorbyl palmitate were over ten times that of ascorbic acid. So to compare the brain concentrations between the two compounds with such a large difference, they had to draw a chart using two separate scales: [Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'] The brain is the area where lipofuscin accumulates the most because neurons rarely divide. This increased brain uptake makes ascorbyl palmitate the preferred form, along with its solubility properties that lend it an intimate association with lipid membranes. 'The lipophilic ascorbyl palmitate was able to cross biological barriers and satisfied the tissue demand for ascorbate better than the hydrophilic form. Ascorbyl palmitate should be considered as the preferred form of transport of ascorbate into neural tissues.' ―Pokorski If vitamin E can be said to prevent lipofuscin, which it certainly can, then ascorbyl palmitate could be said to prevent more of it. In a head-to-head comparison, ascorbyl palmitate was found to be more effective (Lee, 1999). So besides limiting both polyunsaturated fatty acids and excessive iron… ...the supplements ascorbyl palmitate, vitamin E, selenomethionine, copper, methylfolate, and vitamin B12 should act to inhibit lipofuscin further. With adequate nutrition, supplementation, and PUFA restriction, a person should be able to avoid the loss of productivity and dementia seen with aging… ...and be capable of maintaining their independence longer than people taking iron multivitamins and fish oil. ----Important Warning for Men---- What has the FDA been hiding all these years? Only the top echelon know about this systematic crime… ...that millions of Americans are being harmed, yet these top FDA people have stood by silently, despite the illness and deaths. Well today, it’s over -- because I’m blowing the lid off this very well-kept secret… ...a secret that Big Pharma and the FDA have been hiding from us for more than 100 years. This secret has the power to turn modern medicine on its ear, if I can get it out before they silence me… So I made a quick video, hosted on a private page, where I hope THEY won’t see it. I can’t promise how long it will be up, but [every man NEEDS to watch this before they eat another bite of food...]( ...and I mean ANY food… ---------- 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.

EDM Keywords (284)

young years would worthy works whoever well ways way watch want vitamins useful us try trapped transport tons tocopherol times time thus terms taking take subscribed study studies stove stood stability spheres speed something solicitations solicit slow similar silence significant shows shown shares share sex severe services service sender selenomethionine selenocysteine selenium seen see secret saying satisfied sale said sacrificed result responsible responsibility represent remarkable reductions reduction reduce receive reason really read rats rate range question purchase published proven promise progress products productivity process probably prevent power policy pleasure person peroxynitrite peroxidation people palmitate painting painters oxygen oxidation oxidant others opting open one oil often occupy observed newsletters needed necrosis necessary much molecule modified minerals millions milk methylfolate men mean matt marketed man maintaining made loss long lists lipofuscin limited life lid less length lend law lard korea known issue investigated intermediate instead inside inhibit inducing induced illness hydroxynonenal hydrolyzed hope highlights hiding hence hearts head half hailed granules good go giving given give getting get function found formation form force forbid food focus five find fight feeding fed fda far explained exempt exactly evidence established enzymes enzyme ensure enjoy end employees email eligible elderly ejaculations effects effective easy ear duration draw downregulation doctors doctor division directly diluted diffuse determine delivering dedicated day cytosol cows could consumption consume considered consent conditions conclusion compelled comparison compared compare come clicking click claim circumvent cheap charge changes certainly centenarians cells cell catalase cases capable calves buy butter business brain body blowing bit beyond better become bear avoid author atrial assure associated ask ascorbate areas area appears antioxidants antioxidant answers another animals americans amelioration alterations also allow aging age advertisements actually act accumulates account accomplish able ability 75 120

Marketing emails from malehealthcures.com

View More
Sent On

22/08/2022

Sent On

22/08/2022

Sent On

21/08/2022

Sent On

21/08/2022

Sent On

20/08/2022

Sent On

20/08/2022

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.