
I've done a little research on Stem Enhance. If you remember from an earlier post, this product claims to increase stem cells in the blood. The supplement contains aphanizomenon flos-aquae in blue green algae from Klamath Lake in Oregon. From what I understand, Klamath Lake is a shallow, fairly polluted lake. Many companies harvest the algae and sell it for the health benefits.
Maybe somebody can tell me why Stem Enhance is better than any other product produced from this body of water. We have one brand of Klamath Lake blue green algae at the store which is $45 cheaper than Stem Enhance. Wouldn't this product produce the same results at a more affordable price?
I take spirulina which is supposedly superior. Is AFA really better? Does anybody have an opinion? ...............Matt
2 comments:
The reason Stem Enhance is the way to go if you want the benefits that your own stem cells can provide is that it has been double blind tested and has a patent. Two capsules will raize the blood level of adult stem cells up to 30% within just 60 minutes or so.
The product is a concentrate, and an extract of just two or three ingredients found in AFA. You would have to take many times the amount of the raw material to get the same benefit, and then you would be getting much that does nothing for stem cells. How many supplements have a patent, with two more patents pending. How many supplements can say they have a major medical paper published about the research involved. Look in the Journal of Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine in the current issue for an article by Christian Drapeau et al. Stem Enhance is the real deal, and at $39.95 a bottle it's a real bargain.
I forgot to mention in the previous post on Stem Enhance that the product is available from Stem Tech Health Sciences in the USA, Canada, Mexico, and soon in the UK and many other countries. The Inventor speaks three languages and you can watch a 45 minute video streamed from Google here:
http://www.stemcellrelease.com
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