Landmark discovery – new hidden pleasure organ inside a woman

Newly discovered and SO sensitive to touch

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—-Important Message From Lloyd Lester—-

Landmark discovery — new hidden pleasure organ inside a woman

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In the early 80s, research put the clitoris front and center when it comes to female pleasure…

But now a NEW landmark discovery has come along, stealing the spotlight…

(And no, it is NOT the G spot)

This discovery casts a shadow on all orgasms ever known to women…

Because it has the power to deliver mind-bending pleasure that she’s never felt before…

And when you stroke a woman in this newly discovered spot — like this…

It sends a shock wave of pleasure through her entire body, delivering a flood of addictive pleasure chemicals…

…and forcing her body to erupt in a series of personality-altering orgasms.

In fact, for the women who experience this — it’s like “touching a sex organ I never knew was IN me…”

So get ready because when you stimulate this hidden sex organ the way I show you here…

…it’ll give her full-body climaxes so powerful, she’ll make a complete mess of your bed sheets and still be begging for more…

———-

Why having low cholesterol is actually dangerous as a man

If you Google “cholesterol and cancer,” you’ll find lots of articles indicating evidence that cholesterol causes or accelerates cancer.

You can find studies showing that high cholesterol is associated with higher PSA.

PSA is a protein which is indicative of increased general inflammation in the prostate.

But just because cholesterol is sometimes elevated in cancer doesn’t mean it causes cancer – and PSA is a remarkably poor indicator of prostate cancer.

The logic of these claims does not hold up to scrutiny.

Elevated cholesterol usually occurs as a protective mechanism.

The cholesterol protects against underlying health problems –

cholesterol is not a cause of disease.

And studies have shown that men with low cholesterol are much more likely to develop aggressive prostate cancer.

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The human research was carried out at Oslo University Hospital in Norway. The paper was published in BMC cancer.

“Few studies have taken the risk of competing events into account when examining the relationship between cholesterol and prostate cancer incidence, and few studies have a follow-up over several decades.”

The authors of this study decided to follow the health of over 2,000 healthy men for a period of more than 15 years.

They tracked blood cholesterol levels and incidence of prostate cancer over this time period in the men who were in their 40s and 50s when the study began.

“We aimed to use these approaches to examine the relationship between cholesterol and prostate cancer.”

The researchers used standard statistical analysis to look at the relationship between cholesterol levels and the risk of developing prostate cancer.

They also made calculations which accounted for common prostate cancer risk factors.

“The association between cholesterol and prostate cancer incidence was assessed using competing risk regression analysis, with adjustment for potential confounders.”

The men in the study developed prostate cancer at the same rate as the general population – showing that this was a good sample of the population.

“The study cohort had a cancer risk similar to the general Norwegian population.”

Prostate cancer is an over diagnosed disease.

Many men who are diagnosed with prostate cancer would never have any problems from these small growths in their natural lifespans.

One study showed that 50% of men had unknown and non-symptomatic prostate cancer when they died.

We all have clumps of cells growing in our body which could be diagnosed as cancer if doctors looked close enough.

But it really does make sense to diagnose most of these things as cancer because they will never cause us any problems.

However, a small percentage of men do develop advanced stage prostate cancer – and this can be a threat to your health.

“Prostate cancer was registered in 11 %, including3 % with advanced stage at diagnosis.”

Men with the lowest cholesterol levels were twice as likely to develop advanced prostate cancer as those with the highest cholesterol levels.

“For overall and advanced stage prostate cancer, the incidence was twice as high in the lowest quartile of cholesterol compared to the highest quartile.”

One possible explanation for this may be that these men had lower testosterone into DHT.

Testosterone and DHT are protective against prostate cancer – and cholesterol is the source of both protective male hormones.

The researchers found that the increased risk of prostate cancer associated with low cholesterol remained the same…

…even when they accounted for other known prostate cancer risk factors.

“These associations remained significant after adjustment for age, smoking, physical fitness, BMI, and systolic blood pressure.”

The truth is that low cholesterol is associated with serious prostate cancers.

And it is likely a causal factor as it can lead to decreased testosterone and DHT.

“Low cholesterol may be associated with increased risk of prostate cancer. These findings conflict with current prostate cancer prevention recommendations.”

Misunderstandings about both cholesterol and prostate cancer are unfortunately very common…

…and lead to a lot of unnecessary health problems.

—-Important Message for Men About Cholesterol and Testosterone—-

Sizzling new breakthrough — one small capsule gives men great cholesterol levels and healthy, high T

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A famous doctor told me, “Testosterone is the dipstick of male health,” and he is right.

When men have high testosterone levels, it’s good for the prostate, it’s good for the heart, and it’s good for rockiness.

You can’t be a healthy man with low testosterone.

So where does cholesterol come in?

Cholesterol is necessary to create testosterone. It’s one of the building blocks of T.

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And I’ve found one simple supplement that can take cholesterol and help the body turn it into testosterone.

So now you never have cholesterol that’s too high or too low.

And your T stays high and healthy.

In fact, thanks to this simple supplement, I never even have to think about my cholesterol levels anymore.

And my T is nearly 900 at 63 years old!

Here’s the simple supplement that I’m calling the C2T Method — and I’m sharing it with you for free today

———-


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.

Cholesterol and prostate cancer risk: a long-term prospective cohort study

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27535659/