Understand Anti-Aging Program

How Your Supplement Works (Special Anti Aging Program)

COMMITMENT TO YOUR HEALTH & WELL-BEING

Anti-Aging Program: Dietary supplements are tablets, capsules, powders or liquids that contain vitamins, minerals, herbs, amino acids and/or enzymes. People use them not only to stay healthy, but also to avoid prescription drugs, lose weight, or even to enhance sports or sexual performance.

Today’s supplement industry is strong and growing, fueled by recommendations from physicians, friends who swear by one natural remedy or the other, and aggressive marketing by supplement companies themselves. In the U.S., most supplement users take vitamins and minerals, with the humble multivitamin the most popular item, followed by vitamin D, vitamin C, and calcium. In the specialty supplement category, Omega 3/fatty acids, fiber, and probiotics are the most popular, while among herbals and botanical, Americans favor green tea, cranberry, garlic, and ginseng.

Antioxidants are chemicals that interact with and neutralize free radicals, thus preventing them from causing damage. Antioxidants are also known as “free radical scavengers.” Free radicals are formed naturally in the body and play an important role in many normal cellular processes. At high concentrations, however, free radicals can be hazardous to the body and damage all major components of cells, including DNA, proteins, and cell membranes. The damage to cells caused by free radicals, especially the damage to DNA, may play a role in the development of cancer, heart disease, stroke, and other diseases of aging.The body makes some of the antioxidants that it uses to neutralize free radicals. These antioxidants are called endogenous antioxidants. However, the body relies on external (exogenous) sources, primarily the diet, to obtain the rest of the antioxidants it needs. These exogenous antioxidants are commonly called dietary antioxidants. Fruits, vegetables, and grains are rich sources of dietary antioxidants. Some dietary antioxidants are also available as dietary supplements. Examples of dietary antioxidants include beta-carotene, lycopene, Acetyl l-carnitine, and vitamins A, C, D, and E (alpha-tocopherol), and the mineral Selenium.

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Special Anti Aging Program