Doing it 5 times a week or more
Unsubscribe | Report as spam | Change email preferences
—-Important Message From Dr. Joe—-
This Native American secret keeps 81 y.o. man going for hours
You may already know that Native American elders were the most respected members of their tribe…
…but did you know they were also the most sexually active men in the tribe?
You see, it was their job to repopulate the next generation…
So some elders were sleeping with up to 14 women every week!
How did they keep up?
The tribe elders would often make a special brew containing tree bark from the mountain…
And the women all gave birth to strong warriors who went on to dominate other tribes.
However, the Puritans came in the 1500s and destroyed this Native American recipe to make the brew from the bark.
In fact, Puritans BANNED this bark because of how sexually tempting it was to their Puritan men.
So this secret was lost for hundreds of years…until now…
Here’s how you can try this special brew before it’s gone
———-
Is this 1 hormone causing heart attacks in men?
Bone deterioration and high blood calcium are problems in kidney failure.
The elevated calcium levels in the blood can clog blood vessels with fatal results.
The issue is not just a problem for people with kidney failure – out-of-place calcium is a major driver of atherosclerosis.
The movement of calcium from the bones to the blood vessels in the cardiovascular system is most affected by one hormone.
Controlling this hormone is essential for a long and healthy life.
The animal experiments were performed at the University of São Paulo in Brazil. This paper was published in Kidney International.
Kidney dysfunction results in elevated levels of phosphate in the blood.
The downstream effects of this are atherosclerosis (and vascular calcification) and high levels of parathyroid hormone.
“Hyperphosphatemia is a driving force in the pathogenesis of vascular calcification and secondary hyperparathyroidism associated with renal failure.”
The study’s authors wanted to see if those elevated parathyroid hormone levels drive cardiovascular calcification.
Is parathyroid hormone the major player in atherosclerosis and all of the deaths attributed to it?
The researchers carried out experiments on rats that had their parathyroid glands removed.
The researchers then injected the rats with very high levels of parathyroid hormone.
“To test for the possible contribution of parathyroid hormone to cardiovascular calcification, we removed the parathyroid glands from rats but infused synthetic hormone at a supraphysiologic rate.”
Some rats were fed a high-phosphorus diet.
In addition, some rats had most of their kidneys removed to simulate kidney failure.
“All rats were pair-fed low, normal, or high phosphorus diets and subjected to a sham or five-sixths nephrectomy (remnant kidney).”
The hearts of rats that had most of their kidneys removed were much heavier than those of other rats.
“Heart weight/body weight ratios and serum creatinine levels were higher in remnant kidney rats than in the sham-operated rats.”
All rats given high doses of parathyroid hormone developed elevated calcium levels in their cardiovascular tissue.
The increase in cardiovascular calcium is a major driver of atherosclerosis and half a dozen potentially fatal cardiovascular conditions.
Parathyroid hormone causes calcium deposits in the middle layer of the aortic wall, leading to stiffening and narrowing of the artery.
Parathyroid hormone also leads to a buildup of calcium in the coronary arteries – a hallmark of and structural driver of coronary artery disease.
The greater the degree of calcification, the greater the risk of a heart attack.
“All rats on parathyroid hormone replacement developed intense aortic medial calcification, and some animals presented coronary calcification.”
High parathyroid hormone pulls calcium from the bones and deposits it in the soft cardiovascular tissue, which can become a fatal chokepoint.
The researchers noted that this was identical to medial arterial calcification, calcium deposits of the middle layer of the arteries that caused them to be less flexible.
The condition is also known as Mönckeberg’s sclerosis.
“We suggest that high parathyroid hormone levels induce high bone turnover and medial calcification resembling Mönckeberg’s sclerosis independent of uremia.”
The researchers point out that these observations could lead to understanding the actual drivers of vascular calcification.
“This model may be useful in defining mechanisms underlying vascular calcification.”
The truth is that the medical establishment has decided to ignore the real causes of fatal cardiovascular problems for decades.
Calcification is almost completely ignored in favor of unsustainable theories about cholesterol.
Moreover, it’s not difficult to restrain parathyroid hormone and keep calcium out of the cardiovascular system.
3 things you must do to achieve this are consuming enough calcium, getting vitamin D3, and getting enough vitamin K2.
—-Important Message About Stopping Parathyroid Hormone—-
Get my protocol for lowering deadly parathyroid hormone for free today
I’ve come up with a simple protocol for lowering parathyroid hormone.
And it simply involves eating a few specific foods (that are surprisingly delicious).
I call it the Golden Ratio protocol and you can have it for free today.
———-