A proper micronutritional profile affects three
aspects of the circulatory system: the pump (heart), the
vessels (arteries, veins, and capillaries), and oxygen transport
(one of the blood’s principle functions). We want to increase
the maximal capacity of the pump and use the least amount of
energy in the process—just the opposite of the sedentary
lifestyle witnessed today. Oxygen transport performance
refers to the blood’s capacity to carry oxygen to not only the
muscles—including the heart muscle itself—and internal
organs, but to every cell in the body.
Cardiovascular performance is measured by cardiac output
in liters per minute, which is equal to the volume of blood
ejected from the heart (stroke volume) multiplied by heart rate
measured in beats per minute. To the business professional,
for biological preservation reasons, optimizing and then
maintaining overall cardiovascular performance is crucial. If
cardiovascular performance is crippled by a sedentary lifestyle
and modern (40% fat, low fruit and vegetable content) diet,
then the risk of a heart attack by the age of 50 or 60 is
extraordinarily high. For example, there is a traumatic
cardiovascular event every 29 seconds in the United States
today in contrast to almost nil at the dawn of the
twentieth century.
The circulatory system—just like any other organ system—
must be modeled intact as a functioning whole using an
organismic perspective. From a scientific perspective in
carefully controlled studies, single nutrients have improved
properties like contractility (muscular force of contraction of
the heart), stroke volume, cardiac efficiency, blood pressure,
vascular resistance, and oxygen carrying capacity. Granted,
many of these properties are interrelated—of course, you
would expect them to be interrelated simply because
organisms adapt in unpredictable ways oblivious to
scientifically imposed, artificial boundaries. For example, the
mineral iron, since 1832, has been the classic “magic bullet”
solution to solving various anemia scenarios, but, in addition to
iron, mammals require the essential nutrients copper, zinc,
pyridoxine, cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12), ascorbic acid
(vitamin C), tocopherol (vitamin E), and some other trace
minerals—all while synchronized to proper exercise in order to
maximize oxygen transport.
Humans respond to stress (exercise) by triggering genetic
programs that produce adaptations using micro- and
macronutrients from the environment (your food) and from
internal origin (from stored or recycled sources).
Summary
You need dozens of micronutrients coupled with proper
exercise to successfully impact cardiovascular performance
and decrease your risk of heart disease. BIONX is the world’s
most comprehensive product designed to support the optimal
function of all facets of the cardiovascular system.
PRIMARY NUTRIENTS
Hawthorn (standardized), Ginkgo biloba (standardized), Panax ginseng
(standardized), sodium phosphate, L-carnitine, coenzyme Q10,
alpha-lipoic acid, d-alpha-tocopherol succinate (vitamin E), essential
fatty acids EPA and DHA, iron Ferochel® amino acid chelate, copper
Chelazome® amino acid chelate, zinc Chelazome® amino acid
chelate, calcium ascorbate Ester-C®, pyridoxine (vitamin B6),
cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12), folic acid, trace mineral complex
For more info or to order Bionx or 8aday please go to www.bionetworth.net/sd
Marco Manuel Luis
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I had heard about this product many years ago. Thanks for info. I cant believe the price is 125/ bottle now, when i heard about it I think they said it was 400/month and it was like 5 bottles. It looks like from the website they have combined the 5 into 1. Brilliant. I already place my order. My friend had read Jim Autio's book and said he was a "really smart guy" So anything that he would recommend would be legit. Im gonna tell her about Bionx too. Thanks
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