Replacing just this 1 simple food can give you decades of great health
Story-At-a-Glance
Hey, Matt Cook here, and there is one particular food that I never, ever eat.
It is so deadly for men. And for anyone really, even animals.
Yet this food is slipping into everything we consume…
They’re sticking it in packaged foods, fresh foods, so called “healthy foods”!
Please, whatever you do, try to avoid this one food that sets off a deadly chain reaction in the body…
It can seriously save your life.
—-Important Message From Marcus—-
How to find her G-Spot every single time — and make her gush
Guess what? The G-Spot is not a spot.
It’s a tube of stiffening tissue that surrounds the urethra.
The anatomically correct term is the urethral sponge.
Inside the urethral sponge are the Skene’s Glands (the female equivalent of the prostate).
These glands are what pulls liquid from her blood plasma and fills the tube with the fluid called Amrita, or ejaculate.
When she “squirts,” the fluid is released from the Skene’s Glands.
Wanna know how to make her squirt using it?
–> Teach her to squirt (masterclass)
———-
Limiting this one food can save you from leaky gut, heart attack, and stroke
Blood clotting abnormalities can play a role in angina, heart attack, and some types of stroke.
Many things can change how thick or thin your blood runs.
Something called thromboxane A2 can play a major role in increasing the risk of clotting problems.
Thromboxane A2 is produced by platelets in the blood and causes the blood to become thicker.
There is very good reason to believe that high levels of thromboxane A2 can cause high blood pressure, heart attack, angina and stroke.
One of the things that causes high levels of thromboxane A2 is endotoxin — a type of bacteria which can leak from the gut.
Another factor which plays into damage caused by thromboxane A2 is the levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids (vegetable oils) in the diet.
The animal experiments were carried out at the Medical University of South Carolina Charleston. The findings are published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation.
By now, you have undoubtedly heard of “leaky gut syndrome.”
This syndrome consists of an almost endless list of symptoms and diseases — including cardiovascular disease and stroke.
As the name suggests, the problem arises from a leaky gut.
Specifically, the gut leaks a type of bacteria called endotoxin.
This bacterial endotoxin gets into the bloodstream and sends the immune system crazy.
When endotoxin levels get high enough it causes extreme illness — this is called endotoxic shock.
Endotoxic shock can rapidly cause death from stroke or heart attack.
This study wanted to know whether thromboxane A2 played a role in endotoxic shock.
Thromboxane A2 is something which is released by platelets in the blood causing blood to become thicker — which can lead to clotting.
“The potential deleterious role of the pro-laboratory vasoconstrictive, thromboxane A2, in endotoxic shock was investigated and rats.”
In the experiments, rats were injected with endotoxin bacteria — the same type of bacteria which can leak from the gut.
The researchers found that indeed, endotoxin bacteria increases thromboxane A2.
“After administration of endotoxin, thromboxane levels increased from normal levels to very high levels within 30 minutes.”
Leaky gut syndrome increases thromboxane which thickens the blood.
Gut problems can cause cardiovascular disease including heart attack.
These gut bacteria can also lead to stroke because of blood clots.
The researchers tried the same experiment on the number of other groups of rats.
One of these groups of rats were fed a diet which had very low levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids — which come from vegetable oils.
These polyunsaturated fatty acids — vegetable oils — contain the building blocks of thromboxane.
So the researchers wanted to know whether animals deficient in these types of fats would be protected against the toxic effects of endotoxin and thromboxane.
Limiting vegetable oils in the diet protected the animals against thromboxane and endotoxin.
The fats contained in vegetable oils have been incorrectly labeled as essential fatty acids.
“In contrast to controls, essential fatty acid deficient rats did not exhibit significant elevations in thromboxane.”
Those animals, with lower levels of thromboxane after endotoxin exposure, were deficient in arachidonic acid.
This is a fat found in common vegetable oils which serves as the building block of thromboxane.
And this has real-world consequences…
The “fatty acid deficient” animals were far less likely to die from endotoxin and thromboxane.
“Essential fatty acid deficiency significantly reduced mortality in response to lethal endotoxin doses.”
To put it another way, the combination of endotoxin and vegetable oil increases the likelihood of death triggered by thromboxane A2.
High levels of endotoxin, usually caused by “leaky gut syndrome,” trigger the production of lethal thromboxane A2 — which is made from fats found in vegetable oil.
Perhaps we should decrease our consumption of vegetable oils.
“Endotoxin increases synthesis of thromboxane A2 that may contribute to the pathogenesis of endotoxic shock.”
I believe that the very recent addition of vast amounts of this type of fat to our diet is one of the major causes of cardiovascular disease and stroke.
—-Important Message From Matt—-
My new gut protocol fights bacterial overgrowth and brings erections back in men
When the gut is overloaded with bacteria, it doesn’t just stay in the gut…
That bad bacteria starts to spread…
And it can work its way to the male member and interfere with the blood vessels lining the penile chambers.
That’s how gut problems cause erections problems in men.
But my new gut protocol — it fights back against bacteria overgrowth…
And it brings erections back by strengthening the epithelial and endothelial cells that line the penis…
Because when these cells are stronger and not being poisoned by bad bacteria, male blood flow improves…
In fact, I’ve had several of my students tell me their erections returned in just 5-7 days after starting my new gut protocol.
———-
Elevated thromboxane levels in the rat during endotoxic shock: protective effects of imidazole, 13-azaprostanoic acid, or essential fatty acid deficiency
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7350199/