Fix sleep apnea without any pills

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Sleep apnea is a huge problem.

And doctors don’t really understand it.

But you can fix sleep apnea without any pills.

Sleep apnea is caused by low carbon oxide.

In this newsletter, I’m going to show you how you may be able to the fix it very easily.

Carbon dioxide is one of the secrets to great health.

You want higher levels of carbon dioxide in your body.

Most people don’t realize that low carbon dioxide is a cause of sleep apnea.

I had terrible health problems that were threatening to kill me.

What saved me was increasing the carbon dioxide levels my body.

I was able to throw away all my different medications and to this day I am drug-free and very healthy.

Yet, doctors do not understand carbon dioxide.

But people have sleep apnea treatment options, and most don’t require drugs or surgery.

There are several ways of increasing your carbon dioxide levels.

One way is to live at a high altitude.

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People who live at a high-altitude build up more carbon dioxide in their bodies.

And they are generally healthier and live longer.

Another way to build up carbon dioxide in your body is by taking a drug called acetazolamide.

Acetazolamide works by stopping a mechanism in the body that breaks down carbon oxide.

So it allows carbon dioxide to build up to healthier levels.

And it can be helpful for sleep apnea.

Acetazolamide is a very little-known solution of sleep apnea.

People with sleep apnea have dangerously low carbon dioxide levels.

Acetazolamide helps restore the carbon dioxide levels.

Often, people begin breathing normally and do not need anything else.

But now there is a new study that shows a third way to build up carbon dioxide levels.

It could mean that anybody can stop sleep apnea and help build carbon dioxide up to healthier levels.

And it’s a simple thing — using the vitamin called thiamine, vitamin B1.

Fix sleep apnea without any pills

The compounds displayed relatively strong actions in the same range as the clinically used with acetazolamide

If I were to try this, I would consume about 500 mg of thymine per day.

Over about a week or more, levels build up in the system that will improve carbon dioxide levels dramatically.

Once you start taking large amounts of thiamine, you also want to start taking other B vitamins.

This is to make sure that your B vitamins don’t fall out of balance.

You can do that by taking a good B supplement, or by taking niacinamide, biotin, and riboflavin.

These are the most common B vitamins that become depleted and which can be replenished fairly harmlessly.

Fix sleep apnea without any pillsResearchers gave people thymine, coenzyme Q-10, vitamin E and vitamin C, plus carnitine.

However, I think that they would’ve got equal results with just thiamine.

In any event, they found out that people recovered from sleep apnea very nicely this way.

A marked clinical recovery was seen after administration of high doses of thiamine.

If you are suffering sleep apnea, you might want to try high doses of vitamin B1, thymine.

This will help improve your health and get ride of the side effects of sleep apnea.

Always be sure to talk your doctor before trying anything new.

And if that doesn’t work, consider asking your doctor to try acetazolamide.


Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
Inhibition of mammalian carbonic anhydrase isoforms I, II and VI with thiamine and thiamine-like molecules
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22145674 

Medical treatment with thiamine, coenzyme Q, vitamins E and C, and carnitine improved obstructive sleep apnea in an adult case of Leigh disease 
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11325-013-0816-5