Mr. Lee
walked in to Dr. Dexin Yan’s office because he was out
of options. At only 45 years old, he had been experiencing memory
loss, muddled thinking, high blood pressure and cholesterol
levels, dizziness, chest pains, buzzing in his ears, numbness
in his arms and legs, and purple lips. Five years of prescription
drugs had only made his problems worse. Dr. Yan specialized
in treating blood and circulatory disorders and was gaining
a reputation for his success with difficult cases like Mr. Lee’s.
It turned out that Mr. Lee’s blood pressure
was 180/110, his pulse was weak, and blood samples showed that
his triglycerides were frighteningly high, at 1150. Dr. Yan
prescribed a specialized herbal formula he’d developed
called Vital Cell.
After just 45 days, Mr. Lee reported that
all of his previous complaints and symptoms had resolved. Even
more impressive: His blood pressure stabilized at 170/90, and
his triglycerides dropped almost 900 points, to 253.
Vital Cell heals the body by going straight
to the source of so many aches and pains—the blood. Combining
modern science with China’s rich herbal tradition, Dr.
Yan’s groundbreaking formula has helped thousands of patients
recover their health and energy by reconditioning blood cells
and improving circulation to levels normally seen only in the
very young.
When you hear someone mention circulation you probably think
of the heart and major arteries—and for good reason. Circulatory
disorders such as hypertension (high blood pressure) and atherosclerosis
(hardening of the arteries) are major risk factors for heart
disease, heart attacks, and stroke. But there’s more to
it than that. With all the attention on the heart and arteries,
it’s easy to overlook serious health problems affecting
the smallest components of the circulatory system—microscopic
blood vessels called microcapillaries, where the critical exchange
of oxygen and nutrients actually takes place. If blood isn’t
flowing through this web properly, it can trigger all sorts
of health problems, many of which may not seem related to circulation
at all.
A number of factors contribute to poor circulation
as we age. Arteries and veins become stiff and congested as
cholesterol and calcium plaques accumulate and restrict blood
flow. Spasms in the smooth muscles surrounding the circulatory
arteries and veins can also choke off circulation. These same
processes also occur in our microcapillaries, reducing microcirculation
and impairing the critical exchange of nutrients and gases in
tissues and major organs.
This problem only gets worse as we get older
because of changes in the composition and structure of blood
cells. As you reach middle age, the blood starts to thicken
and congeal as platelets and blood proteins make cells sticky.
Plus, the spleen—the organ that removes old, damaged blood
cells from circulation—begins to slow down with age, which
means new, healthy blood cells are replaced at a sharply reduced
rate. And to make matters even worse, as blood cells age, they
become stiff and no longer appear round and evenly shaped. This
makes it harder for them to pass smoothly through the capillaries.
In fact, the angular, jagged shape of the old cells can damage
the fragile microcapillaries even further.
Eventually, these age-related changes take
their toll on the microcapillaries, reducing circulation to
the tissues and blocking the flow of nutrients and oxygen. Removal
of carbon dioxide and other metabolic waste products is also
hindered. This leads to a slow buildup of metabolic garbage
that can gradually bury the cells in their own waste products.
In time, the cells, poisoned by their own metabolic byproducts,
begin to waste away and ultimately cease to function altogether.
The combined effect of poor circulation and
old blood contributes to a host of symptoms, including deep
fatigue, fuzzy thinking, frequent infections, and lowered sex
drive—all conditions usually considered just “normal
parts of aging.” If circulation doesn’t improve,
it can lead to more serious conditions, such as high blood pressure,
heart attack, stroke, diabetes, and arthritis. But giving your
body a fresh supply of healthy blood may target all of these
problems and more.
As
a professor and physician, Dr. Yan had received extensive training
in both Western and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). And
in Chinese medicine “blood stagnation” is considered
to be the primary underlying cause of many conditions characterized
by pain. When blood stagnation occurs, the body's internal organs
don't receive their normal nutrients, and waste products aren't
carried away at a sufficient rate. This stops the organs from
performing their functions, resulting in weakness, disease,
and aging.
Dr. Yan recognized that the Chinese view of
blood stagnation had a strong corollary in Western medicine—especially
in the case of diabetes. In diabetes, chronically elevated blood
sugar levels damage the microcapillaries and impair blood flow
to the retinas, kidneys, and peripheral nerves. Eventually that
can lead to blindness, kidney damage, and potential amputation
of limbs. Basically, diabetes can be thought of as a sped up
form of the typical aging process in the way it relates to blood
composition and circulatory disorders.
Noting the similar role circulation plays
in both aging and in diseases like diabetes led Dr. Yan to theorize
that many of the health problems he observed in his older patients
might be caused by poor circulation and underlying blood disorders.
He believed that these problems were damaging vital tissues
and organs, just like the damage seen in advanced cases of diabetes.
Dr. Yan joined with other leading medical
researchers at the Shanghai Medical Hospital to form a new research
team called the Blood Stasis and Aging Research Group. The research
group gathered blood samples from young and elderly volunteers
for evaluation. They quickly noticed that blood samples from
young adults were thinner and had a brighter red color than
the samples from the older adults. Intrigued by this simple
visual correlation between blood stagnation and aging, the researchers
wanted to test the beneficial effects of a number of natural
herbs on blood and microcapillary function.
After eight years of gathering clinical data
on microcirculation and evaluating changes in blood flow, Dr.
Yan’s team arrived at a formula made up of 10 powerful
herbs that were shown to promote overall health, enhance energy,
and restore healthy circulation.
By enhancing circulation, nourishing cells,
and eliminating waste products, Vital Cell contributes to overall
improvements in memory, energy, and health while preventing
the onset of a wide range of age-related illnesses.
After numerous animal studies established the safety of the
formula, researchers measured the actual effects of Vital Cell
on the health of various organ tissues in two groups of rabbits.
One group of 10 rabbits received normal food, while the other
10 received food that had been supplemented with Vital Cell.
After two years, the researchers gathered tissue samples from
the rabbits. They also prepared tissue samples gathered from
six-month-old rabbits of the same breed.
The researchers examined samples of tissues
from the thymus glands, hearts, lungs, livers, kidneys, spleens,
brains, and sex organs. The untreated animals showed all the
typical signs of aging: Blood vessel walls were thick, clogged
and streaked with plaque, while liver cells were shrunken, misshapen,
and full of clotted blood. Sex organs were shriveled and had
poor cell structure, and kidney cells were ruptured, essentially
reduced to mush.
On the other hand, the animals that had been
given Vital Cell barely showed any signs of aging at all. In
fact, when they compared the treated rabbits with the young
ones, there was virtually no difference between them.
|
|
| Thymus
- Old rabbit
Thymus with severe atrophy,
heavy fatty infiltration |
Thymus
- Treated rabbit
Firm mass, only slight signs of atrophy |
| >>
See all tissue slides |
The most notable improvement was in the thymus
gland (above). This gland is the key regulator of the immune
system. Usually it shrinks dramatically with age, and the loss
of thymic tissue is thought to be one of the main reasons for
the loss of immune function in the elderly. When the researchers
looked at the thymus glands of the old, untreated animals, the
signs of aging were clear. The thymus gland
had shrunk to less than 1/3 of the size of the younger animals,
and most of the tissue had been replaced with connective tissue
and fat cells. By comparison, the thymus of the old animals
treated with Vital Cell was twice the size of the untreated
animals, and the tissues were identical to the young animals,
with no loss to fatty infiltration or connective tissues.