- Imagine a natural
substance that creates feelings of well-being and slows the aging process to boot. Would
you take it? I would. In fact, I do. If I could take only one supplement, I'd choose DHEA.
Not just because it will extend my life span (which I'll get to in a moment) but also
because it makes me feel good. DHEA is "the superstar of the superhormones,"
suggests William Regelson, M.D., an oncologist at the Medical College of Virginia in
Richmond, in his book Superhormone Promise. He contends that DHEA rejuvenates
virtually every organ system, so it "actually makes you look, feel, and think
better."
A growing body of research suggests that DHEA can
prevent or reverse the diseases that anti-aging experts have identified as the most
prominent markers of accelerated aging: atherosclerosis (hardening and clogging of the
arteries), cancer, diabetes, and reduced immunity. Moreover, mounting evidence indicates
that the level of DHEA in a person's blood is an excellent predictor not only of these
age-related health problems but also of aging itself. "DHEA is undeniably one of the
most crucial predictive factors in diagnosing aging-related diseases," according to
Ronald Klatz, D.O., president of the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine.
There is no question that DHEA extends the life
spans of animals and holds promise as a defense against the degenerative diseases of
aging. But can the hormone actually extend human life span? While the research literature
strongly supports this claim, it remains unproven.
The definitive answer should come soon. Formerly
relegated to a position of minor importance by the scientific establishment, DHEA has
become the subject of intense scrutiny. A flurry of research is underway, underwritten by
the National Cancer Institute, the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute
on Aging, and the American Cancer Society. These and other major agencies are
investigating DHEA as a potential treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome, depression,
Epstein-Barr virus, herpes, lupus and other autoimmune diseases, menopausal symptoms,
osteoporosis, and even AIDS. What can the average healthy person expect from DHEA?
Although everyone's experience differs, people report that they have more energy, handle
stress more easily, think more clearly, and generally feel better. Other benefits include
enhanced immunity (stronger resistance to colds, flu, and the like) and lower cholesterol.
- Your adrenal
glands are responsible for manufacturing DHEA. Actually,
the cascade of adrenal hormones starts with cholesterol, from which the brain hormone pregnenolone
is made. Pregnenolone is then transformed into DHEA. And DHEA serves as the raw material
from which all other important adrenal hormones--including the sex hormones estrogen,
progesterone, and testosterone and the stress hormone cortisol--are synthesized. DHEA is
the most abundant hormone in your body. But production peaks at around age 20. From then
on, your DHEA level decreases with age. By the time you reach 40, your body makes about
half as much DHEA as it used to. By 65, output drops to 10 to 20
percent of optimum; by age 80, it plummets to less than 5 percent of optimum.
Because DHEA has such
broad-spectrum effects, declining production makes itself known in every system, every
organ, and every tissue of your body. The immune system is especially sensitive to
diminishing DHEA output, opening the door not just to viruses,
bacteria, and other microbes but also to free radicals and the Pandora's box of
degenerative diseases they cause. If levels of DHEA decline with age, can replacing the
hormone reverse aging in humans? Nobody knows for sure. In studies, laboratory animals
given DHEA supplements live up to 50 percent longer than normal. But we humans metabolize
DHEA differently than animals, so these results don't necessarily apply to us.
A host of studies suggest that the lower a person's
level of DHEA, the greater his risk of death from age-related
disease. DHEA levels in 242 men between the ages of 50 and 79 were tracked for 12 years in
a study by noted hormone researcher Elizabeth Barrett-Connor, M.D., professor and
chairperson of the department of preventive medicine at the University of California, San
Diego. The study found a close correlation between higher DHEA levels and reduced risk of
death from all causes. The men who survived had three times the DHEA levels of the men who
died. Research has pinpointed low DHEA levels as a
marker for many degenerative diseases and accelerated aging. The hormone has been
implicated as a contributing factor in a host of health problems, including Alzheimer's
disease, autoimmune disease and other immunological disorders, cancer, chronic fatigue
syndrome, diabetes, heart disease, high cholesterol, memory problems, obesity,
osteoporosis, and stress disorders.
What's more, the
collective indirect evidence from more than 5,000 published studies overwhelmingly
supports DHEA's anti-aging role. Scientists now have proof that DHEA:
- * Enhances immunity
- * Decreases the risk of
heart disease
- * Defends against some
cancers
- * Improves blood sugar
control, decreasing the risk of diabetes
- * Reverses the
age-accelerating effects of the stress hormone cortisol
- * Prevents and reverses
osteoporosis
|
How could any substance that protects us from
virtually every major degenerative disease not protect us from aging as well?
 |
- Living Better Than Ever
|
- Whether or not DHEA extends life
span, it undoubtedly improves quality of life. Most
people who take DHEA do so because the hormone helps them deal better with stress, gives
them more pizzazz, and makes them feel young again. My patients on DHEA almost invariably
report that they just plain feel better. This is not a placebo effect. Research has shown
that DHEA levels in the bloodstream correlate highly with general health and vitality,
sense of well-being, and increased stress tolerance. In 1994, the Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology and Metabolism published the first placebo-controlled human study
examining the therapeutic effects of DHEA replacement therapy.
("Placebo-controlled" means that some participants received DHEA, while others
received fake pills.) The DHEA-takers had more energy, slept better, and handled stress
better than the placebo-takers. The researchers concluded that "DHEA will improve the
quality of life over a longer period and will postpone some of the unpleasant effects of
aging, such as fatigue and muscle weakness."
In another study, researchers at the University of
California, La Jolla, gave people 50 milligrams of DHEA every day
for six months. Sixty-seven percent of the men and 84 percent of the women reported
improvements in energy, sleep, mood, feelings of relaxation, and ability to handle
stress--overall, a remarkable increase in subjective experience of physical and
psychological well-being. |

|
Product Recommendations |

|
Wild Yam & Progesterone Cream contains Dr. John Lee's MD
Certified recommended amount of Progesterone. 440 mg per ounce. |
- Life Time
- DHEA
Pregnenolone
On Sale Now
|
- There has been strong association between
low DHEA and bone loss in post-menopausal women. Both
estrogen and progesterone help to keep bone mass at healthy levels. Estrogen inhibits the
robbing of calcium from the bone while progesterone stimulates bone formation. Since DHEA
helps with the synthesis of both of these hormones as well as protecting against heart
disease, it is easy to understand why DHEA is so widely recommended. Each Capsule
provides: 10 mg. DHEA, 15 mg Pregnenolone
|

|
- Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is produced
naturally in the adrenal glands. Your body's production peaks at about age 25 and declines
as you age. DHEA has been propsed to increase production of testosterone ICF-1 (inulin
like growth factor-1), strengthen the immune system and increase mental alertness.
- On Sale Now

|

|
Supplemental
melatonin has also proved useful in restoring normal slumber in two clinical sleep
problems: delayed sleep phase syndrome and narcolepsy. In addition, in one
study participants sleep time was reduced by about 30 minutes, suggesting that when the
quality of sleep was improved, less sleep was needed. Although the incidence of delayed
sleep syndrome is somewhat rare, it is possible that "night people" are affected
with a subclinical variety of this malady and could benefit from the timely use of
melatonin supplements. Each Tab provides 3 mg. On Sale Now  |
|
 |
- Maximizing Immunity
|
- Does DHEA rejuvenate immune function? You bet. It boosts antibody production;
enhances the activity of monocytes, immune cells that attack cancer cells and viruses;
activates natural killer cells, immune cells that attack and destroy viruses and other
foreign invaders; and maximizes the anti-cancer function of immune cells known as T
lymphocytes. In aging laboratory animals, DHEA restores
youthful levels of cytokines (immune chemicals involved in protection and healing) and
reduces the production of autoantibodies (antibodies that attack healthy tissues). When
administered concurrently with a flu vaccine, DHEA dramatically improved the effectiveness
of the vaccine in aging mice and in older humans. DHEA's power to invigorate the immune
system is closely linked to its potential to fight aging. Remember, heightened immunity
translates directly into protection against oxidation, which in turn translates directly
into protection against degenerative disease. So anything that strengthens your immune
system also has the capacity to lengthen life. Immune deterioration with age is
accompanied by increased incidence of atherosclerosis, autoimmune diseases, cancer,
cataracts, and infections--all evidence of accelerated aging.
An important study conducted by leading DHEA
researcher Samuel Yen, M.D., of the University of California, San Diego, underscores the
hormone's age-opposing activation of immune function. After measuring baseline immune
parameters in healthy older men (average age 63), Dr. Yen put the men on a program of 50
milligrams of DHEA per day. After 20 weeks, the men showed dramatic improvement in all
markers of immune function, including an average of 45 percent increases in monocytes, 29
percent increases in antibody-making B lymphocytes, 20 percent increases in T lymphocyte
activation, 40 percent increases in T lymphocyte anti-cancer response, and 22 to 37
percent increases in natural killer cells. Perhaps most significant of all, DHEA
increases production of insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), a hormonelike molecule that
is used to measure levels of another potent anti-aging compound called human growth
hormone. (Because it is not yet widely available, is administered by injection, and is
very costly--$10,000 a year--human growth hormone exceeds the scope of this book.)
 |
- Stopping Stress in Its
Tracks
|
- DHEA protects
your body from the hormone cortisol and the stress that
triggers its production. Like DHEA, cortisol is secreted by the adrenal glands. If
oversecreted, cortisol injures your body's tissues. When you're under stress, your adrenal
glands release large amounts of cortisol. People under chronic stress have high cortisol
levels (unless their adrenal glands have already burned out, in which case their cortisol
levels are low). The presence of too much cortisol leads to age-accelerating damage. As
stress accumulates over decades, cortisol levels tend to rise as well. Many people over
age 40 have elevated cortisol.
DHEA and cortisol
have an inverse, or adversarial, relationship. When you're faced with prolonged stress,
your cortisol/DHEA ratio--a measure of health status and aging--can rise by a factor of 5.
This means that the excess cortisol is battering DHEA's protective shield. DHEA
supplementation increases your stress tolerance, lowers your cortisol/DHEA ratio, and
protects you against cortisol-induced cellular damage.
 |
- Mending a Broken Heart
|
- The cardiovascular
research community is abuzz about DHEA's potential to conquer America's number one killer,
heart disease. Several studies examining the role of DHEA in heart
disease have produced intriguing findings. Research has shown that depleted DHEA is a more
accurate predictor of heart attack than elevated cholesterol. DHEA levels were
significantly lower in men who died of heart attacks than in men who were healthy. DHEA
level was shown to correlate with the degree of atherosclerosis in 200 men and women
undergoing coronary angiography, in a study by David Herrington, M.D., of Bowman Gray
School of Medicine of Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, which was
published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. He found that as DHEA
levels went up, coronary artery disease (as measured by the frequency and severity of
arterial lesions) went down.
A follow-up study showed that the degree of
development of atherosclerosis in 63 heart transplant patients was inversely correlated
with DHEA levels. In other words, the higher the heart
recipient's DHEA level, the lower his likelihood of developing
post-transplant atherosclerosis. What's more, the heart recipients with high DHEA had a
much better five-year survival rate (87 percent) than the heart recipients with low DHEA
(65 percent).
That's not all. In people undergoing angioplasty (a
procedure in which a balloon is used to open a clogged blood vessel), DHEA reduced the
rate of restenosis--a treated vessel closes off again--from 68 percent to 28 percent. In
healthy males given a clot-promoting substance (arachidonic acid, found in abundance in
meat), DHEA blocked an increase in clotting. (An increased tendency to clot is a risk
factor for heart attack and stroke.) In men, DHEA lowered total cholesterol and
"bad" low-density lipoprotein cholesterol better than and more safely than the
"statin" drugs such as clofibrate and gemfibrozil. DHEA is also nontoxic. Animal
studies are producing similar promising results. When researchers gave DHEA to rabbits
with atherosclerotic arteries, the hormone produced a 50 percent decline in arterial
plaques. The bottom line in all of this: Age-related DHEA declines may
leave us vulnerable to atherosclerosis, while DHEA replacement
therapy appears to offer potent protection.
 |
- Beating Cancer
|
- Can DHEA prevent
cancer? While scientists don't yet know for
certain, the early reports are encouraging.
-
- Low DHEA predicts breast cancer more accurately than
any other known marker. Women with breast cancer consistently have lower-than-normal DHEA
readings. DHEA may help protect against breast cancer by inhibiting glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase, an enzyme required for cancer growth. Also, because DHEA has antioxidant
properties, the hormone probably defends against free radical cancer initiators. In
animal studies, DHEA has provided dramatic protection against tumors of the breasts,
colon, liver, lungs, lymphatic vessels, prostate, and skin. Of course, what happens in
animals doesn't necessarily translate to humans. This is especially true with DHEA because
very little of the hormone is found in the bloodstreams of rodents. So despite a
general feeling among anti-aging experts that DHEA may well inhibit cancer formation, the
jury remains out on the DHEA-cancer link--at least for the time being.
-
 |
- Good to Your Bones
|
- Osteoporosis is like a football game. Build a strong offense, and you're bound to gain
yardage--that is, bone. Make do with a weak offense, and the opposing team will push you
back for a serious loss.
Certain dietary and lifestyle factors give the
opponent a distinct advantage: too little calcium; too much protein; preservative-rich
processed foods; alcohol and other drugs; and lack of exercise. You can retain control of
the ball by recruiting the following players for your bone-building team: regular
exercise, a low-protein vegan diet, vitamins (A, B6, C, D3, K, and
folic acid), minerals (boron, copper, magnesium, manganese, silicon, zinc--and, of course,
calcium), and hormones. Among the anti-aging hormones, DHEA stands out as a multitalented
star with amazing ways of outsmarting osteoporosis. DHEA is the only hormone that
can both inhibit bone breakdown and stimulate bone formation. Plus, DHEA is a
precursor to estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone, all of which prevent bone loss in
their own rights.
Bone cells convert DHEA to estrone, a type of
estrogen that in turn increases the activity of bone-making cells called osteoblasts.
DHEA's transformation into estrone depends on the presence of vitamin D3.
(Likewise, D3 requires DHEA to stimulate osteoblasts. It can't do the job
alone.) Japanese researchers found a positive correlation between DHEA levels and
bone density in women over age 50. The higher the women's DHEA, the denser their bones.
When the same researchers gave DHEA to "postmenopausal" rats (actually, the
animals had had their ovaries removed), the rats' bone density increased. As DHEA levels
decline with age, osteoporosis may appear. People with osteoporosis
have significantly lower DHEA levels than people without the disease. When osteoporotic
lab animals are given DHEA, their bones remineralize--that is, their bones become
stronger. Although human studies have yet to be done, DHEA supplementation would in all
likelihood increase our bone density as well.
 |
- Medicine for the Mind
|
- Don't be surprised if, in the next few years, you
start seeing reports that DHEA is being used to treat Alzheimer's disease and other
degenerative brain diseases. (You can say you read it here first.) While DHEA is no cure
for Alzheimer's, strong evidence exists that the hormone is essential for maintaining
healthy brain cells. DHEA levels sink to markedly low levels later in life,
when the incidence of degenerative brain disease is much higher. DHEA levels in people who
have Alzheimer's are much lower than in people who don't have the disease. Studies show
that even very small doses of the hormone reduce amnesia while improving long-term memory.
When researchers gave 25 to 100 milligrams of DHEA
a day to depressed middle-aged patients, they saw significant evidence not only of reduced
depression but of improved memory as well.
 |
- The Lupus Link
|
- Systemic lupus erythematosus is a chronic autoimmune
disease in which the immune system manufactures autoantibodies, which attack healthy
tissues. In effect, the body turns on itself. Blood vessels, connective tissues, joints,
kidneys, the nervous system, and skin may be affected. Lupus is commonly treated using
immunosuppressive steroids and cancer chemotherapy agents. The treatment damages the
immune system and thus undermines the healing process. Its side effects can be worse than
the disease itself.
Aware of DHEA's immune-enhancing effects,
researchers at Stanford University gave DHEA to 57 women
with lupus. About two-thirds of the women reported some alleviation of their symptoms,
including reduced frequency and severity of joint pain, headaches, rashes, and fatigue.
Many also reported better exercise tolerance and improved concentration. Impressed with
these findings, the Food and Drug Administration is supporting clinical trials to evaluate
DHEA's efficacy as an alternative to conventional lupus therapy.
 |
- Taking DHEA
|
- The recommended daily dose
range is 10 to 50 milligrams for women, 25 to 100 milligrams for men. (Women need less
DHEA than men.) I usually start my patients--women and men--at 25 milligrams once or twice
daily. The initial dose is determined by gender and baseline DHEA level (the lower the
level, the higher the starting dose). For most people, the purpose of DHEA replacement
therapy is to improve quality and quantity of life. But it may be prescribed for certain
medical conditions, including Alzheimer's disease and other organic brain diseases,
chronic fatigue syndrome, depression, diabetes, heart disease, immune deficiency
syndromes, lupus and other autoimmune diseases, osteoporosis, and stress-related
disorders. Patients who, because of family history or other factors, are at higher risk
for any of these conditions can benefit from DHEA as
preventive therapy.
Who shouldn't take DHEA? People under age 35 and
people who have normal DHEA levels ("normal" being the level typical of a
29-year-old). They simply don't need it. Men with prostate cancer and women with
reproductive cancers should consult their doctors before taking DHEA, even though no
adverse effects have been reported. DHEA does stimulate hair follicles and sebaceous
(oil) glands, so it may cause facial hair growth in women or transient acne. (An article
in the New England Journal of Medicine linked teenage acne to the rise in DHEA that
takes place near puberty.) These side effects are rare. If they do occur, they'll
disappear with dose reduction or discontinuation.
 |
- Beware the Wannabes
|
- Commercial DHEA products are
made from diosgenin, an extract from the Mexican wild yam of the Dioscorea family.
Biochemists can convert diosgenin to DHEA by
engineering a series of chemical conversions. The market is flooded with encapsulated yam
products claiming to be "DHEA precursors" or "natural DHEA."
Unfortunately, the human body--or any living system, for that matter--cannot convert
diosgenin to DHEA. It happens only in the laboratory.
The ingestion of Dioscorea plant extracts
can't possibly lead to the formation of DHEA in the body,
according to prominent DHEA expert Seymour Lieberman, Ph.D., of St. Luke's - Roosevelt
Hospital Center in New York City. Products containing Mexican yam or unconverted diosgenin
may produce other beneficial hormonal effects, but they will not raise DHEA levels. The
research studies revealing DHEA's therapeutic effects were all done with real hormone, not
yam extracts. Read labels and insist on 99 percent pharmacologically pure DHEA.
 |
- Expert Observations
|
- Clearly, much remains to be learned about DHEA.
Among the experts, opinions about the hormone range from cautious optimism to enthusiastic
endorsement. When best-selling author Ray Sahelian, M.D., asked several of the world's
leading DHEA researchers "Should I take DHEA?" he got an interesting mix of
responses. Here's just a sampling, from Dr. Sahelian's book DHEA: A Practical Guide.
* Michael Bennett, M.D., of the department of
pathology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas: "Many
strains of mice have lived longer with DHEA. I'm 60
years of age. If my blood test showed that my level was low, I would consider taking low
doses such as 25 milligrams to raise my levels."
* Etienne-Emile Baulieu, M.D., Ph.D., of the
department of hormonal research of the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Medicale in Paris: "We are studying the possible beneficial effects of reestablishing
a 'young' level of DHEA in people over 60 years of age. The comparison to
estrogen replacement therapy after menopause is a good one. However, we need long-term
studies to make sure there are no negative effects on hormone-responsive tumors such as
prostate and breast. . . . I would consider taking 25 to 50 milligrams daily if my blood
levels were found to be low."
* Ward Dean, M.D., medical director of the Center
for Bio-Gerontology in Pensacola, Florida, and co-author of Smart Drugs and Nutrients
and Smart Drugs II: "This steroid is absolutely appropriate for hormone
replacement therapy. I start my patients in their forties, at a dose of 25 milligrams
taken in the morning. DHEA is highest in the morning, and giving it at that time would
follow the normal circadian rhythm."
* Alan Gaby, M.D., researcher, author, and past
president of the American Holistic Medical Association: "DHEA, without a doubt, has a
role to play in hormone replacement therapy. I have treated at least 300 patients and find
this steroid to be helpful for anti-aging purposes, as far as increasing muscle strength,
better density of bone, and improved skin color."
 |
- Pregnenolone: The Feel-Good
Hormone
|
- What hormone can outperform DHEA? Quite
possibly DHEA's "mother": pregnenolone. Notice that I said
"possibly." Less is known about pregnenolone
than DHEA because, until recently, research interest in it has not been as intense.
Pregnenolone has finally captured scientists' attention because of its structural and
functional similarities to DHEA. Perhaps even more intriguing, pregnenolone
alone is the precursor to more than 150 human steroid hormones, including DHEA.
When the studies are done and the results are in, pregnenolone
may well outshine DHEA as an anti-aging hormone.
In the meantime, pregnenolone
has amply demonstrated its potent rejuvenative effects on the body and brain. It boosts
energy, elevates mood, and improves memory and mental performance. It creates a sense of
well-being while improving the ability to tolerate stress. For me, pregnenolone
has lived up to its reputation. It has improved my mood and my mental sharpness. And by
keeping me clear-headed, alert, and focused, it has helped me to write this book.
 |
- All in the Family
|
- I like to call pregnenolone
the grandmother hormone. Perched atop the adrenal family tree, it is the stuff from which
all other steroid hormones are made. Your adrenal glands manufacture pregnenolone
from cholesterol (yes, the same cholesterol that has a knack for breaking hearts). Your
body either uses pregnenolone as is or converts it to one of its two "daughter
hormones": DHEA and progesterone. These, in turn, spawn dozens of
"granddaughter hormones," the most important and prevalent of which are the
three estrogens (estriol, estrone, and estradiol), testosterone, and cortisol.
Pregnenolone's de facto position at the very top of
the hormone heap confers upon it certain unique powers. As the ultimate precursor, ready
and willing to be converted to any of more than 150 adrenal steroids, pregnenolone
can participate in every biochemical action that every steroid hormone is party to.
Thus, pregnenolone influences cerebral function, energy level,
the female reproductive cycle, immune defenses, inflammation, mood, skin health, sleep
patterns, stress tolerance, wound healing, and much, much more. This is one hormone that
knows where the action is and loves to take part. As with DHEA and other
anti-aging hormones, the production of pregnenolone declines with age. Research
will almost certainly prove that pregnenolone replacement therapy can slow
the aging process. Many scientists and doctors, including yours truly, believe that
restoring pregnenolone to youthful levels is a powerful anti-aging
strategy for both body and brain. Pregnenolone supplementation is natural and physically
harmonious, according to Eugene Roberts, Ph.D., a neurobiologist at the City of Hope
Medical Center in Los Angeles. Because of the hormone's role as a precursor, pregnenolone
has the unique ability to bring all of the other hormones into balance. It stimulates
production of those other hormones, but only when they're needed. Taking pregnenolone
therefore normalizes and rejuvenates the entire adrenal cascade.
Let's examine some of pregnenolone's key benefits a
bit more closely.
 |
- The Best against Stress
|
- When you get right down to it, stress is what kills us. It takes many forms: oxidative stress from free
radicals, chemical stress from toxins, trauma, and emotional stress. Your ability to
tolerate stress is directly linked to your health and longevity. Responsibility for coping
with all of this stress falls to your adrenal glands--or, more specifically, to the
hormones they make. Pregnenolone is a powerful anti-stress hormone in its own right, and
it provides the raw material for all of the other anti-stress hormones. In the 1940s,
famed researcher Hans Selye--the "father of stress"--performed some of the
earliest studies on pregnenolone. He concluded that the hormone reduces stress
and fatigue and elevates energy.
Like its daughter DHEA, pregnenolone
blocks and reverses all of the age-accelerating effects of excess cortisol. Cortisol,
you'll recall, is a pro-aging hormone. (It is also a granddaughter of pregnenolone
and the only adrenal steroid hormone that increases with age.) Normally the adrenal glands
produce small amounts of cortisol to protect you from stress. This is okay, at least in
the short run. Prolonged overproduction of cortisol brought on by excessive, unrelenting
stress, however, causes an array of damaging effects: brain dysfunction, accelerated skin
aging, impaired wound healing, excess fluid retention, depression, and poor sleep quality.
All of these shift the aging process into overdrive. Pregnenolone also protects you
against chemical stress. Your liver contains enzyme systems that are responsible for
removing toxins from your body. By protecting these enzymes from cortisol, which degrades
them, pregnenolone reinforces your body's detox power.
 |
- Mental Moxie
|
- As I first mentioned in chapter 29, pregnenolone
is a potent neuronutrient that improves memory, concentration, and mood. It supercharges
your brain by facilitating the transmission of nerve impulses so brain cells can
communicate with each other more easily. Humans given pregnenolone
became more productive on the job, felt better, and coped with stress better. Many
neuroscientists now believe that pregnenolone is the most potent known
memory-enhancer, perhaps many times more powerful than any other memory-enhancer.
Unbelievably small doses boosted memory in animals. Rats fed pregnenolone
whizzed through their mazes. Pregnenolone fights depression, too. In one study, people who
were not depressed had twice the amount of pregnenolone circulating in their bloodstreams
as people who were depressed.
-
 |
- Taking Aim at Arthritis
|
- In the late 1940s, pregnenolone attracted
considerable scientific interest as a potential anti-inflammatory agent for the treatment
of arthritis and related conditions. Several studies, including one published in the Journal
of the American Medical Association, described the hormone's effectiveness in reducing
the swelling and pain of rheumatoid arthritis. It also established pregnenolone's safety
and freedom from side effects. The effective dose was fairly high by today's standards:
500 milligrams daily. Other reports told of pregnenolone's success as a therapy for lupus,
psoriasis, and scleroderma. Back then, these findings attracted little attention.
Pharmaceutical companies dismissed pregnenolone because they couldn't turn a
profit by manufacturing it. (Since it's a natural substance produced by the body, it
couldn't be patented.) When the superpotent steroid drug cortisone came along, pregnenolone
was left in the dust.
Now the hormone is making a comeback, as more and
more people experience the adverse effects of anti-inflammatory steroids like
prednisolone. In my practice, I've found pregnenolone to be extremely effective
against arthritis and other inflammatory disorders.
 |
- The Pregnenolone Prescription
|
- Pregnenolone is extremely, amazingly safe. In
researching this chapter, I could find no references to adverse reactions or side effects.
Scientists consistently comment on the hormone's virtual absence of toxicity. In
laboratory experiments, mice tolerated doses of five grams per kilogram of body weight,
which, in human terms, translates to 34 pound per day. People have taken doses as
high as 500 milligrams daily for several months with no ill effects.
Though long-term toxicity studies have yet to be
done, pregnenolone in modest doses should prove nothing but beneficial. The Food and Drug
Administration must agree with this assessment, since the agency has designated
pregnenolone a natural food product and therefore does not regulate it. As with DHEA,
I measure pregnenolone in all of my patients over age 40. If test
results indicate a shortage of the hormone, I recommend pregnenolone replacement therapy.
I'll continue to monitor the patient with follow-up testing until the pregnenolone
level matches that of a 29-year-old. You'll find pregnenolone
in health food stores and some drugstores. Make certain that you are getting a
pharmacologically pure product, not a yam-derived "precursor." A very safe dose
is between 15 and 100 milligrams per day. (Unlike DHEA, the dose
range for pregnenolone is the same for men and women.)
Melatonin has a reputation as a natural
tranquilizer. But as the next chapter explains, the hormone is much more versatile than
previously believed--especially in the anti-aging arena.
- Big Savings on
Health Supplements
- This Month Specials
-

|
- For Strong Hair,
- Skin and Nail
On
Sale
$9.99
|
|
-

|
-
- Skin Renew Treatment with 10% Alpha Hydroxy,
- On
Sale
- $2.99
Reg $12.99
|
|
-

|
For Woman Only provides nutrients to help support and maintain
the health of today’s active women.
SALE $9.99
|
|
|
 |
Complete high potency multi- vitamin-minerals plus
essential herbal male factors.
- Special
$9.99
Reg $19.99
|
|
|
|
|
Click
here infor |
Click
here infor |
__
__
__
- Visit Our Store
- Christina's Body &
Fitness
- 4748 Pacific Coast Hwy.
- Long Beach Ca 90804
- 562 597-3353
|
These
statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This web site is
not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. |

- Home
- Back Up
- Anti-Aging Contents
- Research
Center
|