How to use aspirin to protect the heart, lower cholesterol and more

This simple over-the-counter treatment is one man’s most powerful natural remedies 

Story-At-a-Glance

Matt Cook here, and aspirin is good for so much more than a headache.

It’s one of the most powerful natural remedies we have, and it’s been around for hundreds of years.

Here’s how to use aspirin to protect your heart, lower cholesterol levels, regulate blood sugar, improve liver function, and so much more…

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How to use aspirin to protect the heart, lower cholesterol and more

Free fatty acids are a problem for diabetics.

These are a type of fat which circulate in the blood normally. 

But for people with type II diabetes and other metabolic problems these free fatty acids become elevated.

Our cells can use either sugar or free fatty acids to generate energy.

When free fatty acid levels become too high our cells are prevented from using sugar.

High free fatty acids are a major cause of high blood sugar.

And there are numerous studies showing that lowering free fatty acid levels can help with blood sugar regulation — even in people with diabetes.

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These human experiments were done at Yale University School of Medicine. The report was published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Numerous studies have shown that aspirin can be beneficial to people with diabetes. 

This human study was designed to learn more about the mechanisms involved.

“We studied nine type 2 diabetic subjects before and after 2 weeks of treatment with aspirin.”

The experiment involved taking high doses of aspirin every day for two weeks.

At the end of the two-week period the researchers carried out tests looking at blood sugar, free fatty acid levels, and insulin.

Aspirin lowered blood sugar levels by an average of 25%.

“High-dose aspirin treatment resulted in approximately 25% reduction in fasting plasma glucose.”

Supplementing aspirin also lowered cholesterol by 15%.

C-reactive protein — a marker of blood sugar stability — improved by about 15%.

Triglycerides decreased by 50% in 2 weeks.

“High-dose aspirin treatment resulted in a 15% reduction in total cholesterol and C-reactive protein, and approximately 50% reduction in triglycerides.”

The study also found changes in insulin levels.

“High dose aspirin treatment resulted in a 30% reduction in insulin clearance.”

The researchers found that blood sugar spikes after a meal were significantly lower.

“During a mixed meal tolerance test, the areas under the curve for plasma glucose were approximately 20% lower.”

Most of these improvements could be explained by the fact that aspirin lowers free fatty acids — fats which compete with blood sugar.

“During a mixed meal tolerance test fatty acid levels decreased by approximately 50%.”

This is a huge reduction in free fatty acids.

These fats are probably the greatest trigger for type II diabetes — they also cause many other common chronic illnesses.

Another reason for high blood sugars in type II diabetes is the fact that the liver produces more sugar.

Aspirin treatment prevented the overproduction of sugar by the liver.

“Aspirin treatment resulted in a 20% reduction in hepatic glucose production.”

When taking high-dose aspirin, the participants were able to absorb more sugar too.

“Aspirin treatment resulted in a 20% improvement in peripheral glucose uptake.”

The study shows clear, holistic improvements in every marker of type II diabetes tested from supplementing with aspirin.

The study however used very large doses of aspirin. 7g a day is a lot of aspirin and will cause blood thinning and bruising.

This is too much aspirin. Way too much.

You would need to take a number of other supplements to prevent serious risks from this much aspirin.

But smaller doses of aspirin are safer and have similar benefits. 

Combined with other methods to lower free fatty acids, you can make massive improvements in diabetes symptoms and labs.

I can think of a handful of other safe supplements which can be used in combination with low-dose aspirin to help you get control of free fatty acids and blood sugar.

—-Important Message From Matt Cook—-

Why are so many doctors getting diabetes?

If diabetes treatment works so well, why are more and more doctors becoming diabetic?

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———-


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.

 

Mechanism by which high-dose aspirin improves glucose metabolism in type 2 diabetes

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12021247/