Hi ya!
Thanks for clicking by today. Glad you could make
it. Coffee’s on and there’s a splendid array of completely low-fat, virtual treats
to tempt you so go on...be a devil. Hey, you know, while I have been rather
incapacitated for the past few weeks, my pal, Dr. Al has still been sending me
interesting emails. Here’s one that is apropos...
Dear Bob,
When your cells can’t make enough energy, you feel
it. It’s a pretty good description of getting older. And that’s no coincidence.
They go together.
But you don’t have to go through that.
Nature, in its wisdom, has provided us with a
nutrient that can triple … even quadruple … your energy in just a few days.
It works by massively increasing the number of
cellular “engines” you have. Then it protects those engines and keeps them
humming along.
The engines I’m talking about are your
mitochondria. They’re tiny, independent cells within your cells. Their job is
to take nutrients and make energy for you. Not just energy to run around but
also for pumping blood, blinking, and even reading the menu and deciding what
to order.
But the same thing happens to mitochondria over time that happens to an old car engine. Oxidation (in a car it’s called rust) breaks down the engines so they don’t run as well, or produce as much power. You also have fewer of these engines as you age, and they’re undersized, and degraded.
But the same thing happens to mitochondria over time that happens to an old car engine. Oxidation (in a car it’s called rust) breaks down the engines so they don’t run as well, or produce as much power. You also have fewer of these engines as you age, and they’re undersized, and degraded.
Unless you do something about it, you get all the
consequences of aging I just described. Slowing down like that is one of the
things that bothers my patients the most about aging.
But when I introduce them to PQQ, everything
changes. I love PQQ because it combines the two things that I have most
specialized in; anti-aging and energy production. PQQ can reverse the energy
loss that happens as you age, and keep your cells young and robust.
In one study, published in the Journal of Nutrition, researchers fed mice a diet supplemented with PQQ. The mice grew a
staggering number of new mitochondria in just 8 weeks.1
But PQQ is a powerful antioxidant as well, which is
not very well known even in the anti-aging community. A new study gave five men
and five women a single dose of around 10-15 mg (depending on their body
weight) of PQQ. Then researchers measured changes in their antioxidant
capacity. Over the next two days, PQQ significantly reduced their markers for
oxidative stress.
Even better, in a second part of the study, the
people got daily PQQ for three days. All of them had increases in metabolites
showing their mitochondria were working much more efficiently.2 They
got more energy with less effort. Which means PQQ is like a whole-body energy
tune-up.
Plus, PQQ works harder and for longer than any
other antioxidant. It’s so stable and strong it works for thousands of
antioxidant cycles.3 Other related antioxidants, like the ones in green
tea, break down quickly. But PQQ keeps right on protecting you hundreds of
times longer.
No one else is talking about PQQ, and it’s mostly
because they don’t know about it. It’s brand new, and unless you’re reading
scientific journals you won’t have heard of it. They’re certainly not teaching
this in nutrition classes, and you’re certainly not going to find out about it
from your doctor.
Once you know how important it is, it is possible
to get some through food. Right now no one is getting enough through food
because they don’t know it’s there, or what to eat. But it is possible. It’s in
a few, specific foods, and here’s what they are:
- The food with the most PQQ is natto. Natto is the Japanese fermented soy product (without all the processed soy waste like there is in Western soy foods).
- Eggs are the next best food for PQQ, which is one of the reasons eggs are a perfect food.
- The herb parsley has some PQQ.
- Kiwi, a fruit with lots of healthy fat, also has a small amount of PQQ.
- Green tea has PQQ in it, too, to go along with its other health benefits.
- Beyond that, you get some in green peppers, and whiskey.
Also, you can get PQQ in supplement. But here’s
what you need to know:
- Most supplements only use a 5 mg dose, but you need 10 mg. PQQ is expensive, and many supplement makers want to get away with giving you either lower quality or a lower dose.
- It’s also a good idea to combine it with CoQ10, which is the fuel mitochondria use.
- If you take CoQ10, make sure you get the kind your body absorbs best, ubiquinol.
To Your Good Health,
Al Sears, MD
Al Sears, MD
I’ll have to look for it next time I hobble past a GNC or
other vitamin/supplement shop.
See ya, eh!
Bob
PS: PQQ is not the Parti Quebecois in Quebec!
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