Alzheimer’s disease (pronounced AHLZ-high-merz) is a complex disease that affects the brain. Approximately 4.5 million Americans have this disease.
How Angioprim Helps Alzheimer's
Angioprim helps restore blood flow to the entire body, including the brain. It also removes harmful metals and minerals such as aluminum from the body. Yes, you read that correctly: ALUMINUM! Aluminum by-products come in many different forms, including the tap water you drink. Aluminum has been linked as a contributor to Alzheimer's disease. So why wouldn't you want to remove it from your body?
Aluminum is suspected of playing a role in Alzheimer's disease, a form of degenerative senile dementia thought to afflict 5-10 percent of all persons over 65. Victims of Alzheimer's have been found to have four times the normal concentration of aluminum in their brain cells. Aluminum is known to be a neurotoxin that can cause brain damage if you're exposed to it in sufficiently large amounts. The question is whether chronic exposure to small amounts can affect you. Despite lots of research, we still don't know. But several studies have shown that people exposed to higher-than-average amounts of aluminum tend to have higher rates of Alzheimer's.
It's obvious aluminum isn't the sole cause of Alzheimer's disease, since many people don't contract it, even in environments where they're exposed to high amounts of aluminum. In fact, there's some indication that a predisposition to the disease may be hereditary. Thus if one of your forebears had Alzheimer's, you may have inherited some genetic kink that makes you especially vulnerable to aluminum poisoning.
In any case, aluminum isn't easy to avoid. You can probably keep your aluminum cookware without much trouble. But you will find aluminum is in so many common products like antacids and antiperspirants, baking powder, self-rising flour, cake mix, pancake batter, and frozen dough (as sodium aluminum phosphate, a leavening agent); in nondairy creamers, table salt, and other powdered foods (as an anticaking ingredient); in processed cheese (as an emulsifier); and in hemorrhoid preparations (up to 50 percent aluminum hydroxide). Even more insidious, aluminum is added to most municipal water supplies to clarify the water. There is no human dietary need for aluminum.
What would aluminum have to do with alzhiemers? Like other metals that may accumulate in the brain aluminum is a conductor and the brain operates on electrical energy when an area has an excess metal conductor electrical brain impulses can become irratic, lost in transmittion or sent to the wrong neuron. This obviously would result in mental impairment and possible los of memory.
As with Aluminum, Copper and iron are also electrical conductors and may be a factor. Excess and unwanted metals like Lead, Mercury, Aluminum, copper, iron and magnesium over time can be removed by Angioprim.
Alzheimer’s disease is one of several disorders that cause the gradual loss of brain cells. The disease was first described in 1906 by German physician Dr. Alois Alzheimer. Although the disease was once considered rare, research has shown that it is the leading cause of dementia.
Alzheimer’s disease advances at widely different rates. The duration of the illness may often vary from 3 to 20 years. The areas of the brain that control memory and thinking skills are affected first, but as the disease progresses, cells die in other regions of the brain. Eventually, the person with Alzheimer’s will need complete care. If the individual has no other serious illness, the loss of brain function itself will cause death.