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Res-3 -- An Anti-Aging Triple PlayBy Dr. Al Sears People
in
Japan live longer than people in just about any other part of the world. The
life
span of the average Japanese person is nearly 83 years. But the average
American lives to be only a little over 78 years old.
There’s
one big difference between the Japanese and the Americans, maybe the
biggest
that I’ve discovered. And it’s very simple, will make you feel better
and you
can start today. The
Japanese consume a powerful antioxidant almost every day. It goes by
the name
of epigallocatechin-3-gallate – or EGCG for short. Most
Americans get little or no EGCG in the foods they eat. So they lack the
strong
antioxidant cellular protection EGCG provides. The Japanese, on the
other hand,
get EGCG all the time in the form of green tea. So
what makes EGCG so special? Well,
researchers first discovered evidence of a “longevity gene” about 20
years ago.
It’s a gene that may increase your life span. There’s a few ways you
can turn
on this “longevity gene.” One way is by calorie restriction. Researchers
found that giving mice a diet with very few calories significantly
extended
their life spans.1
Later
studies found the same was true with a wide range of living creatures
from single-celled
organisms to plants and animals. The results showed that taking in
fewer
calories does turn on the longevity gene, and the organisms live longer.2 It
wasn’t
until recently an explanation was found. Researchers isolated a family
of
life-protecting genes called sirtuins (silent
information protein
regulators). Under
conditions of severe stress, such as starvation, the sirtuins are
turned on.
And they transmit signals to every cell in your body to cancel out the
effects
of aging. This
would be a great solution to aging – if starving were an option. That’s
where EGCG comes in. EGCG
helps switch on your longevity genes similar to restricting your
eating.
Mentioned in the medical journal Rejuvenation Research,
“The protective
effects of high-dose EGCG against oxidative stress were comparable with
the
effects of caloric restriction, a well-established dietary intervention
that
retards aging.” EGCG
can
also help slow the aging process because it:3,4,5,6
My
Anti-Aging Triple Play Before
you grab your tea cup and run to the nearest store to start loading up
on green
tea, you should know something. Many of the beneficial components of
green tea
like EGCG are broken down in the intestinal tract. Making them useless
to you. In
fact,
only about 39 percent of them are bioavailable, according to a recent
study in
the journal Nutrition.7 You’d
have to drink green tea all day to get the right amount of antioxidant
cell
protection. In fact, some of the studies that show the benefits of
green tea
have people drinking five or six cups a day! But
during my research into creating an anti-aging solution with the power
to turn
on your sirtuin genes, I found a pure extract of the tea leaf that
contains 50
percent EGCG. So
I took
this extract and combined it with two other anti-aging nutrients –
resveratrol
and SOD – designed to help you feel years younger and help slow the
aging
process. Resveratrol
is an antioxidant found in red wine. It turns on your sirtuin genes
like EGCG.8
It supports your metabolism and your ability to deal with stress. SOD
is
the single most powerful defender your body has against the aging
effects of
free radicals. I call it your body’s “master antioxidant.” Most people
have
never heard of SOD but it’s 3,500 times more effective than vitamin C
and is
powerful against the aging process. All
of
these potent anti-aging nutrients make up the formula I call RES-3. With
RES-3, you can restore your levels of SOD, get all the EGCG you’d find
in a cup
of green tea and more resveratrol than 50 glasses of your average red
wine. And
by
taking RES-3 every day, you’ll have the unique opportunity to push the
envelope
of what you can accomplish – no matter what your age or where you live.
To Your Good Health,
PS: All
of my products are backed by my 100-percent satisfaction guarantee. If
you’re
not completely happy with your RES-3 purchase, then
it’s on me.
1
Saeed, O., Yaghmaie, F.,
Garan, SA, et al, "Insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor immunoreactive
cells are selectively maintained in the paraventricular hypothalamus of
calorically restricted mice". Int. J. Dev. Neurosci.
2007;25 (1):
23–8 Note: The good folks at the FTC
require me to disclose that I am an affiliate of the companies that |
Health Supplements and You 2011