Don’t be dead – sip this instead
Remember: Heart attacks are the #1 killer of men 50+
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Story-At-a-Glance
Matt Cook here, and they call heart attacks “the silent killer” because there’s often no warning signs…
One minute you’re feeling fine and the next, you’re in the hospital!
It’s a scary thing to have to worry about if you’re a man over 50 years old.
That’s why I’m sharing this new discovery with you today — how to shield yourself from heart attacks with just a few sips of one specific brew…
And these sips can make a world of difference… adding potentially decades to your life…
—-Important Message From Adam Armstrong—-
This med school dropout discover 1 rogue molecule constricting the arteries and hurting blood flow
This rogue molecule forces your blood vessels to constrict around your most important organs — including your heart…
Making it nearly impossible for blood to flow smoothly…
As a result, your blood pressure is rising to dangerous levels — and could be on the verge of bursting…
Luckily, a new breakthrough has identified the key to neutralizing this rogue molecule…
Bringing your blood pressure back to 120/80 without treatments, surgery, or dangerous side effects.
Defeat the “rogue molecule” lurking in your blood with 1 little-known plant…
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Sip this – shields you from heart attacks
It’s common for doctors to advise patients who’ve had heart problems that they shouldn’t drink coffee.
That’s because coffee does speed up the heart rate.
Coffee can quicken heart rate, some people worry that drinking it could trigger or worsen certain heart issues. This is where general medical advice to stop drinking coffee may come from.
But the idea that coffee is bad for the heart because it speeds up the heart rate is only looking at a small sliver of data.
You need to look at the bigger picture when deciding whether or not to drink coffee.
When you look at large studies, the reality is that drinking coffee is actually heart protective and can help you live a longer life!
In a study published in the American College of Cardiology…
Researchers found that drinking coffee is associated with a lower risk of heart disease AND dangerous heart rhythms.
It’s also associated with living longer.
Drinking coffee — particularly two to three cups a day — is not only associated with a lower risk of heart disease and dangerous heart rhythms but also with living longer, according to recent studies. These trends held true for both people with and without cardiovascular disease.
This is a BIG study.
It used the UK BioBank and looked at data from over a half a million people over the course of a 10 year period of time.
The researchers grouped together people by how many cups of coffee they drank a day.
They found that drinking the coffee was either neutral or had a positive health effect.
Overall, they either found no effect or, in many cases, significant reductions in cardiovascular risk after controlling for exercise, alcohol, smoking, diabetes and high blood pressure that could also play a role in heart health and longevity.
The researchers also isolated a group of people who had cardiovascular disease at the beginning of the study.
They found that coffee drinkers had a 20% lower chance of death than those that didn’t drink coffee.
Of the 24,111 people included in the analysis who had an arrhythmia at baseline, drinking coffee was associated with a lower risk of death. For example, people with AFib who drank one cup of coffee a day were nearly 20% less likely to die than non-coffee drinkers.
A 20% reduction in the rate of death is quite significant!
The researchers concluded that if you have heart disease and drink coffee…
You can go ahead and keep drinking it without worrying about the effect on your heart.
“Coffee drinkers should feel reassured that they can continue to enjoy coffee even if they have heart disease. Coffee is the most common cognitive enhancer — it wakes you up, makes you mentally sharper and it’s a very important component of many people’s daily lives.”
Overall, coffee is really good for you and caffeinated coffee is better than decaf coffee.
Lower rates of death were seen across all coffee types. Decaf coffee did not have favorable effects against incident arrhythmia but did reduce cardiovascular disease, with the exception of heart failure. Kistler said the findings suggest caffeinated coffee is preferable across the board, and there are no cardiovascular benefits to choosing decaf over caffeinated coffees.
Personally, I drink a lot of coffee and I recommend that my students drink coffee as well.
It’s not only great for your heart, it’s also very helpful for liver function.
—-Important Message About Liver Function—-
This liver cleanse improves penile blood flow — here’s why…
The weirdest thing happened when I cleaned out my liver…
My wife Jodi noticed it right away.
“What is going on?” she asks me, quite pleased, a glimmer in her eye…
At the time, I hadn’t experienced erections like that for many years.
Now they were back — and still are, years later.
So how is it that cleaning out my liver made such eye popping rocky ones a normal, daily thing?
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