Tag Archives: ubiquinol

I Want the Energy of a Teenager When I’m 80

7 Aug

Some people say that the new form of CoQ10, called ubiquinol, is equivalent to the fountain of youth—giving you renewed energy and promoting improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health.

I think that’s a bit of a stretch—after all, the fountain of youth is mythological.

But I believe in ubiquinol enough to take the supplement Accel everyday.  Accel consists of pure ubiquinol–CoQ10 in its reduced form.

What makes it so special?

Ubiquinol is eight times more potent than regular CoQ10 and promotes all the processes that keep the body young and beautiful. Studies show that ubiquinol slows aging by as much as 51%. This is remarkable by any possible standard.

It’s not easy to cope with aging. Ubiquinol can help many of the problems that come from aging. It promotes normal cholesterol levels, encourages healthy triglyceride levels, boosts vision and eye health, improves gum health and supports tissue healing.

It specifically works well for people who are over age 45, since the first signs of aging normally appear around that time. But the people who will benefit most from ubiquinol are over 55 years of age, as this amazing compound is able to start to reverse the harm that aging has caused. Ubiquinol’s many health benefits include increased energy, improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health. In fact, research shows that ubiquinol may promote neurological health as well.

Getting old doesn’t have to mean getting slow, weak and feeble—you can maintain the mental and physical powers you’ve enjoyed all your life.

Please click here to learn how ubiquinol can change your life by igniting the power source inside every one of your body’s trillion cells.

Yours for health and wellness,

Andrew Palmer
Publisher
New England Health Advisory

P.S. I take Accel (ubiquinol 50mg) daily and think every adult should take it as well. Give it a try, and if for any reason (or for no reason at all) you do not want to continue taking Accel, just return it in 60 days for a full refund.  This is a completely risk free offer.

Now you can feel like a teenager well into your 60s and 70s. What are you waiting for? Click here to get started!

I Want the Energy of a Teenager When I’m 80

10 Jul

Some people say that the new form of CoQ10, called ubiquinol, is equivalent to the fountain of youth—giving you renewed energy and promoting improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health.

I think that’s a bit of a stretch—after all, the fountain of youth is mythological.

But I believe in ubiquinol enough to take the supplement Accel everyday.  Accel consists of pure ubiquinol–CoQ10 in its reduced form.

What makes it so special?

Ubiquinol is eight times more potent than regular CoQ10 and promotes all the processes that keep the body young and beautiful. Studies show that ubiquinol slows aging by as much as 51%. This is remarkable by any possible standard.

It’s not easy to cope with aging. Ubiquinol can help many of the problems that come from aging. It promotes normal cholesterol levels, encourages healthy triglyceride levels, boosts vision and eye health, improves gum health and supports tissue healing.

It specifically works well for people who are over age 45, since the first signs of aging normally appear around that time. But the people who will benefit most from ubiquinol are over 55 years of age, as this amazing compound is able to start to reverse the harm that aging has caused. Ubiquinol’s many health benefits include increased energy, improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health. In fact, research shows that ubiquinol may promote neurological health as well.

Getting old doesn’t have to mean getting slow, weak and feeble—you can maintain the mental and physical powers you’ve enjoyed all your life.

Please click here to learn how ubiquinol can change your life by igniting the power source inside every one of your body’s trillion cells.

Yours for health and wellness,

Andrew Palmer
Publisher
New England Health Advisory

P.S. I take Accel (ubiquinol 50mg) daily and think every adult should take it as well. Give it a try, and if for any reason (or for no reason at all) you do not want to continue taking Accel, just return it in 60 days for a full refund.  This is a completely risk free offer.

Now you can feel like a teenager well into your 60s and 70s. What are you waiting for? Click here to get started!

Retain the Power of Youth

12 Jun

By Andrew Palmer

“I think virtually everyone should be taking Ubiquinol.”–Inger Pols, Editor of New England Health Advisory

Isn’t it time that you increased your energy, improved your metabolic function, upgraded your cell protection and experienced better cardiovascular health?

You can with Ubiquinol.

Ubiquinol is an active and reduced form of CoQ10, which your body absorbs up to eight times more efficiently than ordinary CoQ10 supplements. Better absorption means you can get more CoQ10 into your system while actually taking fewer pills.

To learn how Ubiquinol can make you feel like a teenager again, please read this letter from our contributor Dr. Al Sears.

Getting old doesn’t have to mean getting slow, weak and feeble–you can maintain the mental and physical powers you’ve enjoyed all your life.

Yours for health and wellness,

Andrew Palmer
Publisher
New England Health Advisory

P.S. I take Ubiquinol daily and think every adult should take it as well. If you’d like to learn how to retain the power of youth well into your old age, I urge you to read on.

Isn’t it Time You Felt Like a Teenager Again?

8 May

By Andrew Palmer

Some people say that the new form of CoQ10, called ubiquinol, is equivalent to the fountain of youth—giving you renewed energy and promoting improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health.

I think that’s a bit of a stretch—after all, the fountain of youth is mythological.

But I believe in ubiquinol enough to take the supplement Accel everyday.  Accel consists of pure ubiquinol–CoQ10 in its reduced form.

What makes it so special?

Ubiquinol is eight times more potent than regular CoQ10 and promotes all the processes that keep the body young and beautiful. Studies show that ubiquinol slows aging by as much as 51%. This is remarkable by any possible standard.

It’s not easy to cope with aging. Ubiquinol can help many of the problems that come from aging. It promotes normal cholesterol levels, encourages healthy triglyceride levels, boosts vision and eye health, improves gum health and supports tissue healing.

It specifically works well for people who are over age 45, since the first signs of aging normally appear around that time. But the people who will benefit most from ubiquinol are over 55 years of age, as this amazing compound is able to start to reverse the harm that aging has caused. Ubiquinol’s many health benefits include increased energy, improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health. In fact, research shows that ubiquinol may promote neurological health as well.

Earlier in the week New England Health Advisory Editor Inger Pols wrote this about ubiquinol:

“Ubiquinol is important to many key processes in the body because it supports basic cellular level functions, so the benefits are likely far beyond what can be cited through the limited research available now. Whether heart health or anti-aging is a concern, the research that does exist now is compelling enough to recommend this supplement.”

Getting old doesn’t have to mean getting slow, weak and feeble—you can maintain the mental and physical powers you’ve enjoyed all your life.

Please click here to learn how ubiquinol can change your life by igniting the power source inside every one of your body’s trillion cells.

Yours for health and wellness,

Andrew Palmer
Publisher
New England Health Advisory

P.S. I take Accel (ubiquinol 50mg) daily and think every adult should take it as well. Give it a try, and if for any reason (or for no reason at all) you do not want to continue taking Accel, just return it in 60 days for a full refund.  This is a completely risk free offer.

Now you can feel like a teenager well into your 60s and 70s. What are you waiting for? Click here to get started!

Heart Health is Only the Beginning

5 May

By Inger Pols

This is part two of a five-part series on the five supplements I think every adult should take. On Monday, I sent you the first of my five-part series, which focused on whole-food based multivitamins. You can read that article here.

Ubiquitous means to exist or to be everywhere; to be omnipresent. From the same word source comes the second supplement I think virtually everyone should be taking: ubiquinol.

Ubiquinol is the active and reduced form of CoQ10 (also known as ubiquinone). CoQ10 is found in every cell of the body and performs a critical role in cellular energy production. It also protects against free radical damage, which affects the aging process on numerous levels. While both ubiquinone and ubiquinol are necessary for sustaining life, ubiquinol is the source of the powerful antioxidant benefits that we often associate with CoQ10. More than 90% of the CoQ10 found in a healthy person’s blood is in the form of ubiquinol.

You’ve probably heard about free radicals, even if you don’t know how they affect you.  Free radicals are oxygen atoms deficient in electrons that become reactive in our bodies. They then wander “freely” through our bodies and cause damage to our tissues and DNA. Most experts agree that if we could reduce the free radical damage, we could slow down the damage that occurs in our bodies as we age. Ubiquinol can help because it limits free radical production.

CoQ10 also helps in the production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the energy base for all our cells. But your ability to produce CoQ10 and then convert it to ubiquinol, even if you eat whole unprocessed foods, diminishes as you age. If you are under 25 years old, you will do well taking CoQ10 as a supplement. But after age 25, the conversion process becomes more challenging and research shows that taking the reduced form, ubiquinol, has a greater effect on helping to produce more cellular energy. Taking ubiquinol can also help you absorb more CoQ10 from your food.

In addition to free radical protection and increased cellular energy, ubiquinol can improve heart health. (I addressed its role in combating the oxidation that can occur with small dense LDL in this cholesterol article.) Ubiquinol has also been shown to help manage high blood pressure and to benefit seriously ill patients suffering from advanced late-stage congestive heart failure.

In one study, critically ill patients with life expectancies of less than six months were given ubiquinol for three months. They experienced a 24%-50% increase in their heart’s ability to pump blood, in some cases tripling their plasma CoQ10 levels. They all demonstrated significantly improved heart function and lived past initial expectations.

Statins lower cholesterol on the same pathway that your body uses to produce CoQ10. Research shows that CoQ10 production is significantly reduced by statins so ubiquinol supplementation is a must for anyone taking those drugs.

While ubiquinol is clearly tied to good heart health, its ability to mitigate free radical damage and support base cellular energy functions is not fully understood. Ubiquinol has only been available in supplement form since 2006, but what we have learned in that limited time is impressive.

Ubiquinol is important to many key processes in the body because it supports basic cellular level functions, so the benefits are likely far beyond what can be cited through the limited research available now. Whether heart health or anti-aging is a concern, the research that does exist now is compelling enough to recommend this supplement. And I believe we’ll learn even more about how important this vitamin-like substance is to many health functions in the coming years.

To your health!

Inger Pols
Editor of New England Health Advisory

The Most Powerful Anti-Aging Formula Just Got Better!

10 Apr

Many leading health and wellness experts will tell you that in addition to eating a healthy diet, most people should take a multivitamin, fish oil, coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) and anti-inflammatory botanicals like ginger.

These are all important, but today I want to focus on CoQ10.

Its many health benefits include increased energy, improved metabolism, weight loss, cell protection and better cardiovascular health. In fact, research shows that CoQ10 may promote neurological health as well. But are you taking the right CoQ10?

There’s a new form of CoQ10 and it may be the most critical discovery since Karl Folkers first identified it back in 1958.

This new CoQ10—from our contributor Dr. Al Sears—is called Accel. It’s eight times more potent than regular CoQ10 and has already been shown to slow the aging process by up to 51%!

Accel is made of 100% ubiquinol, a vastly superior form of CoQ10. With Accel, you can feel like a teenager well into your 60s and 70s.

The science behind this new discovery is published and peer reviewed. It’s not a theory or hopeful speculation. It’s a done deal.

Getting old doesn’t have to mean getting slow, weak and feeble—you can maintain the mental and physical powers you’ve enjoyed all your life.

Please visit the link below and keep reading to learn how you can benefit from this new form of CoQ10 and ignite the power source inside every one of your body’s trillion cells.

Click here to read more!

Yours for health and wellness,

Andrew Palmer
Publisher
New England Health Advisory

P.S. I take Accel daily and think every adult should take it as well. Give it a try, and if for any reason (or for no reason at all) you do not want to continue taking Accel, just return it in 60 days for a full refund.  This is a completely risk free offer. What are you waiting for?

Click here to order now!

5 Cholesterol Myths Shattered

6 Apr

An estimated 102.2 million Americans have cholesterol levels above 200, which is considered borderline high, according to the American Heart Association. About one-third of those have cholesterol levels over 240, which is considered by today’s test standard to be in the high-risk zone. And a new study just released showed 41% of Canadians have high cholesterol levels.

We have been told that high cholesterol is bad, that it causes heart disease (the leading cause of death in the U.S.), that we should all be tested for it, and that high levels must be treated, usually with statin drugs. With those assumptions and statistics, the problem would seem epidemic.

But today I’m going to shatter five myths about cholesterol and hopefully change the way you think about it forever.

Myth #1: Cholesterol is Bad for You

Cholesterol plays several key roles in a healthy functional body. It keeps cell membranes from falling apart and plays an integral part in cellular repair. Cholesterol is also a vital pre-cursor to many major hormones including testosterone, progesterone, estrogen, cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and is required for synthesis of vitamin D.

The body manufactures about 75% of the cholesterol it needs. The rest we must take in from foods. Without adequate dietary cholesterol, the body may divert cholesterol to where it is needed most: cellular repair and healthy function in key areas, especially the brain. When this happens, there may not be enough left for use in hormone synthesis, which can cause hormonal imbalance.

This is why some women (especially those going through perimenopause) who do not eat enough cholesterol may experience more severe hormonal reactions and symptoms.

In fact, the body has a built-in mechanism to increase its cholesterol production to override a severe shortage. In extreme cases, when cholesterol is not being consumed in appropriate levels, the liver will step in and actually overproduce cholesterol. If you were to be tested at that time, your cholesterol levels could be considered high, even though you would actually be cholesterol deficient.

But that’s not the case for most of us. So for those of us eating healthy diets with moderate amounts of fat, how concerned should we be about cholesterol in food?

Myth #2: High Cholesterol Comes from Eating Foods High in Cholesterol

Despite popular belief that it’s the cholesterol in your food that influences cholesterol in the bloodstream, according to the Harvard School of Public Health, it’s actually the mix of fats in your diet that’s important.

Saturated and trans fats (often called “bad” fats) increase the risk for certain diseases while monounsaturated and polyunsaturated (often called “good” fats), do the opposite—they are good for the body and heart, and cells need them to help manage what goes in and out of cell membranes.

Cells need fat and cholesterol to function, but fat and cholesterol can’t readily travel through the blood. So the body combines them with protein-covered particles called lipoproteins. Lipoproteins can carry a good amount of fat and travel easily through the blood. There are three types of these particles that are important: low-density lipoproteins (LDL), high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and triglycerides.

Low Density Lipoproteins (LDL)

LDL is responsible for taking the cholesterol from the liver to the body’s cells. Once the lipoprotein reaches the cell, the cell attaches to it and extracts the fat and cholesterol it needs.

High-Density Lipoproteins (HDL)

HDL then takes over and plays clean up, collecting cholesterol from the bloodstream, LDL and artery walls, and transporting it back to the liver to be recycled, an equally important role in healthy cholesterol function.

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are the body’s main method of transporting fat to cells. They make up most of the fats you eat and that your cells use. They are an important part of healthy body function, but in excess they can cause problems. If your triglycerides are high, you have a lot of fat in your bloodstream, which means you are either making too much or are unable to burn it.

Myth #3: There is Good Cholesterol and Bad Cholesterol

Despite needing LDL, it has been argued that when there is an excess of it, particles can be deposited in the walls of the arteries of the heart and elsewhere, limiting blood flow. The deposits, known as plaque, can break apart and cause a heart attack or stroke. Because of this, LDL has been called the “bad” cholesterol.

The truth is, there is no good and bad cholesterol. There is only one cholesterol: LDL and HDL are lipoprotein cholesterol carriers and they are both equally necessary for survival and wellness.

While LDL has been labeled bad because it can cause plaque development, we now know that there are many types of LDL. In fact, if we want to create labels for good and bad, we could argue there is good LDL and bad LDL. Research has shown that LDL particles come in different sizes and that the large LDL particles cause no problem. The small, dense LDL particles can be troublesome, as they are tiny enough to squeeze through the lining of the arteries.

If they oxidize, or turn rancid, they can cause inflammation, which can lead to many if not all of our chronic conditions. C-reactive protein tests measure general levels of inflammation and can be an early warning sign to take action. Inflammation can be reduced through dietary changes such as increased consumption of vitamin E and fish oil.

— Advertisement —

Breaking News: Does Your CoQ10 Really Work?

If You’re Taking the Wrong Kind You May Be Wasting Your Money!

The many health benefits of taking Coenzyme Q10 are already well established. Yet many patients I talk to in my practice tell me they don’t feel any different after they start taking CoQ10.

When they show me the bottle, I immediately know why.

As it happens, most of the CoQ10 they are taking never makes it to their cells where it can do the most good.

In fact, most people over 50 have a hard time converting CoQ10 into its usable form. The lion’s share of the valuable CoQ10 enzyme disappears—making it impossible to give your cells the protection and nourishment they need.

Fortunately, I’ve found a simple way to solve this problem forever.

Click HERE and get the most powerful, most effective form of CoQ10 on the planet—NOW!

http://www.on2url.com/app/adtrack.asp?MerchantID=166930&AdID=489326

Myth #4: Cholesterol Causes Heart Disease

We have known for a while that there is a correlation between cholesterol and heart attacks, but is it causal?

Research now shows that damage to the lining of arteries (such as what can occur when small dense LDL squeeze through and oxidize) causes the coronary heart disease associated with heart attacks.  The damage causes inflammation and it’s the inflammation that leads to the heart attacks.

How does this happen? Let’s look briefly at the inflammatory process.

When you cut yourself, the damaged tissue releases chemicals to start inflammation. Blood vessels constrict to slow down bleeding. Blood thickens so it can clot and cells multiply to repair damage and facilitate healing while the immune system calls on cells and chemicals to protect against viruses and bacteria from attacking the cut.

This is very similar to what occurs within the arteries. As damage occurs, chemicals are released to begin the inflammatory process. Arteries constrict, blood begins to clot, the immune system sends help, and nearby cells are told to multiply. As this process occurs over and over again in the artery lining, scars called plaque form. Over time, blood thickening and artery constriction combine to make a heart attack or high blood pressure more likely.

So remember the first step after trauma: Chemicals are released to begin inflammation and start the healing process. Enter cholesterol, whose primary function is cell repair. Cholesterol is sent to help repair the damaged tissue in the artery linings and elsewhere: it is actually helping your body heal to keep you alive.

Now if this process is occurring repeatedly, cholesterol is continually being manufactured or recycled in order to facilitate the healing process. When tested, your cholesterol levels will seem high.

Because your body needs cholesterol to heal, what effect will lower levels have on the body?

Instead of trying to deal with the symptom, the high cholesterol, we need to look at the cause: The inflammation that is being caused by excessive and/or repetitive damage, particularly from small dense LDL particle oxidation.

Pomegranate has also been shown to be highly effective as an LDL anti-oxidation agent. Subjects taking pomegranate supplements in a clinical study were able to reduce artery thickness by 35%, increase blood flow by 45% and improve markers related to LDL oxidation by up to 130%.

As you can see, the connection between cholesterol and heart attacks is correlated but not causal. High cholesterol may not be anything to worry about; it may in fact be an important component of your body’s healing mechanism. The real focus should be on reducing high LDL levels and preventing its oxidation.

If you decide that you must take action to lower your cholesterol, there are two ways to do so: Change your diet and/or take statins.

Myth #5: Statins are a Safe and Effective way to Lower Cholesterol

A January 2008 cover story in Business Week concluded that there isn’t much evidence to support taking statins.

Upon review of statin data, a leading physician and professor at the University of British Columbia found there is no benefit in people over age 65 no matter how much their cholesterol declines and that there was no benefit to women at any age. Middle-aged men who took statins saw a small reduction in heart attacks, but no overall reduction in deaths or illnesses requiring hospitalization even though their “bad” LDL cholesterol went down.

The only time the drugs were seen as effective was with patients who had already had one heart attack, as it reduced the likelihood of having another. He concluded, “Most people are taking something with no chance of benefit and a risk of harm.”

But what about the marketing hype the pharmaceutical companies put out? Let’s read the small print on Lipitor’s claim that it reduces the risk of heart attack by 36% … in patients with multiple risk factors for heart disease. It says, “That means in a large clinical study, 3% of patients taking a sugar pill or placebo had a heart attack compared to 2% of patients taking Lipitor.”

In other words, out of every 100 people, three on placebos and two on Lipitor had heart attacks. That means that to spare one person a heart attack, 100 people had to take Lipitor for more than three years while the other 99 got no benefit. A useful statistic known as the NNT, or number needed to treat, means the number needed to treat in this case for one person to have any benefit is 100. Several recent studies have shown that the NNT for statins may be even higher: 250 or more for lower risk patients.

Dr. Jerome R. Hoffman, professor of clinical medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles, put it this way: “What if you put 250 people in a room and told them they would each pay $1,000 a year for a drug they would have to take every day, that many would get diarrhea and muscle pain, and that 249 would have no benefit? And that they could do just as well by exercising? How many would take that?”

It’s true that statins can lower cholesterol levels by (guess what?) reducing inflammation! Statins might be acceptable solutions if they were shown to be completely safe, but they are not. Statins have common side effects including muscle pain, cognitive impairments and sexual dysfunction and have been shown to increase cancer risk in rodents.

The Business Week article posed this question: What would work better?

Prescription: Change Your Diet

The answer, not surprisingly, according to Dr. Jerome R. Hoffman, professor of clinical medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles, is not a pill but rather diet and lifestyle changes. Several studies have shown that lifestyle changes, such as switching to the Mediterranean diet and eating more fish, brought greater declines in heart attacks than statins.

If you still want to lower your cholesterol levels, in addition to fish and omega-3s, walnuts and soluble fiber like oatmeal have been shown to be effective cholesterol reducers and most of us need more fiber in our diets anyway. Niacin (or vitamin B3) also lowers cholesterol and triglycerides and it recently outperformed Merck’s drug Zetia in arterial plaque prevention (resulting in Merck canceling the study.)

Physical fitness also plays a role with exercise and lifestyle changes such as stress reduction, diet changes and weight reduction.

Keep in mind that your doctor had little, if any, nutrition training in medical school and may not be comfortable guiding you in this regard. In addition, some physician friends tell me they are reluctant to suggest dietary changes because they find that people don’t always stick to them. So you may have to take the initiative with your physician to get the right plan in place for you.

Studies prove that the anti-inflammatory aspects of the Mediterranean diet and fish or fish oil, combined with a healthy lifestyle and reduced stress, are the most effective prescription for wellness, in the arteries as well as in the rest of the body.

To your health!

Inger Pols
Editor of New England Health Advisory

P.S. As I mentioned above, ubiquinol is one of the supplements I take daily and think every adult should take as well. But not all ubiquinol, Coenzyme Q10 or CoQ10 is created equal. Click below to find out whether your supplement is the right one!

http://www.on2url.com/app/adtrack.asp?MerchantID=166930&AdID=489326