Supercharge your energy levels by generating more ATP

Increasing energy this way keeps you healthier, happier, with more energy and sexual stamina as a man…

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Story-At-a-Glance

Matt Cook here, and believe it or not, generating energy is one of the single most important things your body can do.

Because nearly every single health problem comes down to a lack of energy.

Even pneumonia!

And I’ve discovered a way of generating more ATP, the primary source of energy in our bodies.

And the results are pretty spectacular…

—-Important Message From Isabella Stone—-

Men are using this one technique to give a woman an orgasm in just 30 seconds

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She’ll swear she’s never felt this good before…

And she will be begging you to do it to her again and again.

In just 30 seconds, you will give her the most intense, toe-curling orgasm she’s ever had.

And from that moment on, she will be willing to do anything you want…

Here’s the one technique that will make her come in 30 seconds or less.

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Supercharge your energy levels by generating more ATP

It requires a lot of work to keep the body together, healthy, and in one piece.

The ability to do this work depends on the ability to generate energy.

In a way, every single health problem comes down to a lack of energy.

This is true even of infectious diseases like some common types of pneumonia.

Chlamydia pneumoniae is a very common and troublesome infectious agent.

It is a bacteria which is a major cause of pneumonia.

This type of pneumonia is also called TWAR — short for Taiwan acute respiratory agent.

Aside from pneumonia, the bacteria can cause pharyngitis, bronchitis and even coronary artery disease.

There are no vaccines and the death rate is about 5%.

But many people don’t know that the risk of infection from this bacteria depends on cellular energy.

Low-energy cells allow the bacteria to rapidly replicate — causing pneumonia.

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The cell experiments were carried out at the University of Lübeck, in Germany. The findings were published in Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology.

Chlamydia pneumoniae is a serious bacteria — its ability to cause disease is dependent on its ability to replicate — to create more bacteria inside your cells.

“Effective growth and replication of this pathogen depends on host cell metabolism.”

One of the major elements of cell metabolism is mitochondrial function.

The mitochondria controls energetic metabolism — how the cell produces energy and how much energy the cell produces.

But before this study, no one had looked into the relationship between cellular energy production and replication of this bacteria.

“How replication is connected to some mitochondrial function has not been studied.”

So the researchers carried out a number of cell experiments.

They infected epithelial cells with the bacteria.

Epithelial cells are border cells, the exact cells that this bacteria hijacks in real-world disease.

In the body, the primary energy source is something called ATP.

ATP is produced in the cell — and ATP production depends on an enzyme called ATP synthase.

In the experiments, researchers modified cells to produce less ATP by altering ATP synthase expression.

They created low-energy cells.

The low-energy cells quickly became victims of the bacterial infection.

“Knockdown and mutation of cell ATP synthase resulted in increased chlamydial replication.

Cells which produce less energy end up becoming a breeding ground for the bacteria which causes pneumonia and coronary artery disease.

Decreased ATP synthase inside the mitochondria is one type of mitochondrial dysfunction — a group of cellular problems which impair the production of energy.

The researchers concluded that low cellular energy (mitochondrial dysfunction) promotes the growth of pathogenic bacteria leading to serious infection.

“Functional and genetically encoded mitochondrial dysfunction strongly promotes intracellular growth of Chlamydia pneumoniae.”

This bacteria primarily affects older people or those who have been weakened by disease.

These are precisely the people who are suffering from mitochondrial dysfunction — low-energy.

Infectious agents like Chlamydia pneumoniae are everywhere.

We all come in contact with serious viruses and bacteria every day.

But these agents rarely cause symptoms — and few people get very ill from them.

One of the reasons for this is the difference in the ability to produce energy at the cellular level.

Energy is essential for all the functions of the body — including protection against replicating pathogens.

And we are not entirely victims of energy problems.

There is a lot that we can do to improve our cells’ ability to generate energy and protect us from disease.

Certain foods, supplements and lifestyle habits can have major effects on mitochondrial health, energy and overall bodily health.

Though I don’t necessarily mention energy in every article — most of my articles are based around this principle. 

That which makes you healthier almost certainly improves mitochondrial energy production.

—-Important Message From Matt Cook About Increasing Mitochondrial Energy Production—-

What is the one difference between the you of today, and the you of “then” when you were a teenager?

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Remember when kids would eat pizza, cakes, donuts and sodas, and be thin as a rail?

And remember when you became a teenager, remember how most teenagers back in the day could eat anything, huge amounts of literally any food, and still be thin and fit?

And finally, remember as a teenager when you discovered your sex drive and sex abilities, and how often you would test things out by yourself, just for the fun of it?

Remember how intense that rush was, how toe-curling and powerful…

…and how you could get erections and do some business by yourself, many times a day, without a problem?

So let me ask you a key question: what is the one difference between the you of today and the teenage you?

The difference between then and now is one word: metabolism

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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.
Growth of Chlamydia pneumoniae Is Enhanced in Cells with Impaired Mitochondrial Functionhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29259924/