Guest guest Posted August 21, 2009 Report Share Posted August 21, 2009 URL does not work here, . Could you locate the URL and send it to the list? Alobar On Fri, Aug 21, 2009 at 2:03 PM, Wilkins<montemomma2002@...> wrote: > > > > > anti-aging research center > > > http://www.anti-agingresearchcenter....vitamin-c.html > > The Life, Health Implications of LET Vitamin C > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2009 Report Share Posted August 21, 2009 anti-aging research center http://www.anti-agingresearchcenter....vitamin-c.htmlThe Life, Health Implications of LET Vitamin CCardiologist, Levy, MD JD, a frequent Vitamin C lecturer and the author of two books on the subject theorizes in his book, Curing the Incurable, that it is likely the human body was not intended to get all its ascorbate (Vitamin C) from dietary sources. He presents eight evidences for this theory: The need for ascorbate (Vitamin C) in the human body for basic maintenance of basic structure and function is essential and fluctuates greatly based on health status and environmental conditions. Even in IV doses exceeding 200 grams per day, no toxicity for ascorbate has ever been documented. Human livers have all the ingredients necessary to synthesize ascorbate except one — the enzyme L-Gulonolactone oxidase (GLO). Humans have the gene required to produce GLO but it is defective in the vast majority of the population. Some humans apparently synthesize ascorbate as not all individuals deprived of dietary ascorbate develop scurvy. Most mammals, reptiles, and amphibians do synthesize ascorbate. Some of the larger mammals produce upwards of 100 grams daily. Intravenous doses of ascorbate have shown powerful antioxidant, anti-toxin and anti-pathogenic properties in humans. (Dr. Levy cites many cases of this including Fred Klenner’s use of ascorbate to cure 60 out of 60 cases of polio in the late 1940s.) The uptake of ascorbate by the intestines is very inefficient. Since Liposomal Encapsulation Technology candeliver virtually 100% of a nutrient directly to thebloodstream, it promises to eliminate the hugeloss of bioavailability when dose sizes of activelytransported nutrients are increased. This bio-availability chart was developed from a study doneby J.L. Groff, S.S. Gropper, and S.M. Hunt whichwas published in the book Advanced Nutritionand Human Metabolism, West Publishing Co., 1995,pages 222-237. Concerning the inefficiency of the body’s uptake of Vitamin C, studies show that the body has an increasing resistance to traditional forms of oral Vitamin C — tablets, powders, capsules — as dose size increases. J.L. Groff (1995 - see chart at left) demonstrated that less than 2 grams of a 12 gram oral dose of Vitamin C actually gets to the bloodstream. Based on that study, 2 grams of liposomal encapsulated Vitamin C has the bio-availability equal to 24-500 mg tablets of the nutrient. Wilkins Join Granny Warrior in a freedom loving intentional community for safety in troubled times. http://www.freedomisnotdead.org/freedom.htm use me as the referal to save $100 on a campsite or $500 on an acre http://www.chews4health.com/Wilkins http://www.simplexityhealth.com/ distributor#2005722 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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