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DragonBear

06/16/20 11:24 AM

#174155 RE: samsamsamiam #174153

It appears they did other “clinical studies” on other diseases for their diet supplementary products

As in pre-clinical animal testing.

The new data supports the possibility that NanoStilbene™, a proprietary formulation of pterostilbene [2], may increase effectiveness of drugs that activate the immune system to kill cancer.



I once sat down with some claim that was being made by another scam, from the results of rat&mouse testing. The supplement was going to be marketed for $20/mo, with a recommended dose of 2 magic tablets per day. When looking at the raw data, and the dosage given to the rats, converting from mg/kg for the rats to my weight, I came up with an equivalent human dose of something like 200 pills/day. No, I wasn't obese when performing the calculations. Of course then there's the purity of their product. Along with does having it in the oxidized or reduced state matter after manufacturing?

Another favorite claim is to use tissue culture cells. Where they claim inhibitory in micro-gms/ml. Then they try to convince the reader their 1 gm pills are sufficient.


They appear to be curing mankind of every conceivable disease out there with their products. I wonder how they get away with so many claims?



By inserting this...

"These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease."

So instead you get some ingredient might help support normal immune function.

Review some of the Covid scams the SEC took out. They went overboard claiming a cure or that their scam product was a treatment.

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janice shell

06/16/20 3:11 PM

#174177 RE: samsamsamiam #174153

They appear to be curing mankind of every conceivable disease out there with their products.
I wonder how they get away with so many claims?


"Dietary supplements" and "nutraceuticals" are kind of like cosmetics. You can talk about "clinical tests" that aren't really like clinical trials, you can make up names for ingredients, you can create meaningless "statistics", and you'll be fine as long as you don't claim whatever it is cures cancer. Or literally makes your skin younger. That's why cosmetic ads carefully say you'll enjoy "the appearance of younger skin".