Would YOU choose to live forever?
Can We Achieve A Healthier Body With The Help Of This Drink?
LOS ANGELES (SHN) -- It's been a year when several health industry innovations have already made headlines. And now, we have a new one to add.
Dr. Rand McClain, the Los Angeles based "Doctor to the Stars," released his new technique for what he calls the ultimate "Body Health" formula.
Dr. McClain wowed industry colleagues and members of the press with his new creation, which he revealed he's already offering to his celebrity and pro-athlete clients with incredible results.
In the presentation, he detailed how his patients — including some very big name athletes — are achieving healthier bodies and even more energy.
But what's really turning heads is that McClain isn't offering this as an injection, surgery, or medical procedure — which is what his health clinic in Los Angeles is famous for.
Instead, the method involves one simple thing: A drink.
"It's a really interesting concept, taking his research and bringing it to regular people," said Benjamin Tiegal, a health industry expert in attendance. "I think people are really going to respond to it."
McClain feels the formula — made with ingredients shown to boost energy and improve performance — works best for people over 40, particularly those who may be experiencing excessive fatigue, weaker bodies, and even foggy thinking.
And when Dr. McClain dropped the final bombshell — video footage of the results he experienced after using the method on himself — it became clear to everyone that the discovery is nothing short of groundbreaking.
Previously, McClain's area of expertise was performing hormone-replacement and plasma therapies for athletes. Now, he feels he can offer Americans a new, groundbreaking alternative which they can do without doctors, right in their own home.
But the latest development in this story came yesterday, when the video version of the presentation (put together by Dr. McClain for industry professionals who were unable to attend the conference in person this year) was made available to the public online.
Watch the shocking presentation:
This video has already caused a bit of an uproar, based in part on the honest, no-nonsense way Dr. McClain calls out both the medical industry and certain government agencies. One viewer commented: "This is so interesting...Rand is telling it like it is...we need more doctors like this!"
But Dr. McClain's breakthrough has also caused some controversy.
When we reached out to other doctors for comment, many stated that, as with any newly released technique, people should be advised to watch the entire video report before committing to such an unconventional solution.
"We don't want people to start using these quick shortcuts to better health," said one pharmaceutical executive at the conference who asked to remain anonymous. "The presentation is very exciting. But people can't forget about diet and exercise. There's no magic bullet."
Age-reversing pill that Nasa wants to give to astronauts on Mars will begin human trials within six months
- Scientists have discovered a key signalling process in DNA repair
- They have used this process in the development of a drug to reverse ageing
- Trials on mice found that the pill repaired DNA damage after a week
- Nasa wants the new technology to protect its astronauts from solar radiation
Scientists have made a discovery that could lead to a revolutionary drug that actually reverses ageing.
The drug could help damaged DNA to miraculously repair and even protect Nasa astronauts on Mars by protecting them from solar radiation.
A team of researchers developed the drug after discovering a key signalling process in DNA repair and cell ageing.
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Scientists have made a discovery that could lead to a revolutionary drug that actually reverses ageing. A team of researchers developed the drug after discovering a key signalling process in DNA repair and cell ageing
'The cells of the old mice were indistinguishable from the young mice after just one week of treatment,' said lead author Professor David Sinclair.
Human trials of the pill will begin within six months.
'This is the closest we are to a safe and effective anti-ageing drug that's perhaps only three to five years away from being on the market if the trials go well,' said Professor Sinclair.
The work has drawn the attention of Nasa, which is considering the challenge of keeping its astronauts healthy during a four-year mission to Mars.
Even on short missions, astronauts experience accelerated ageing from cosmic radiation, suffering from muscle weakness, memory loss and other symptoms when they return.
On a trip to Mars, the situation would be far worse: Five per cent of the astronauts' cells would die and their chances of cancer would approach 100 per cent.
Professor Sinclair and his colleague Dr Lindsay Wu were winners in NASA's iTech competition in December last year.
'We came in with a solution for a biological problem and it won the competition out of 300 entries,' Dr Wu said.
Cosmic radiation is not only an issue for astronauts. We're all exposed to it aboard aircraft, with a London-Singapore-Melbourne flight roughly equivalent in radiation to a chest x-ray.
Professor David Sinclair (front centre) and his research team. During trials on mice, the group found that their anti-ageing pill directly repaired DNA damage caused by radiation exposure or ageing. Human trials will begin within six months
In theory, the anti-ageing pill could mitigate any effects of DNA damage for frequent flyers.
The other group that could benefit from this work is survivors of childhood cancers.
Dr Wu says 96 per cent of childhood cancer survivors suffer a chronic illness by age 45, including cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, and cancers unrelated to the original cancer.
'All of this adds up to the fact they have accelerated ageing, which is devastating,' he said.
'It would be great to do something about that, and we believe we can with this molecule.'
The experiments in mice, from a team at the University of New South Wales, suggest a treatment for these issues is possible through a new drug.
While our cells can naturally repair DNA damage - such as damage caused by the sun - this ability declines with age.
The scientists identified that the call signalling molecule NAD+, which is naturally present in every cell in the body, has a key role in protein interactions that control DNA repair.
Treating mice with an NAD+ 'booster' called NMN improved their cells' ability to repair DNA damage caused by radiation exposure or ageing
For the past four years, Professor Sinclair and Dr Wu have been working on making NMN into a drug substance with their companies MetroBiotech NSW and MetroBiotech International.
The human trials will begin this year at Brigham and Women's Hospital, in Boston.
Would YOU want to be immortal? Netflix debuts first trailer for new dystopia sci-fi Altered Carbon where 'death is a mere inconvenience' and the wealthy can upgrade their bodies forever
- Altered Carbon is set in a dystopian universe five hundred years in the future
- Consciousness is digitized and stored in cortical stacks implanted in the spine
- This allows humans to survive physical death and essentially become immortal
- Mega wealthy humans have the ability to continually upgrade their bodies
The epic trailer for Netflix's Altered Carbon was released on Monday, a world set 500 years in the future where humans live in a dystopian universe.
The show, based on the 2002 sci-fi novel by Richard K. Morgan, revolves around human beings who can digitally store their personalities.
It begins with an eerie computer-esque narrator as she says 'centuries ago mankind discovered a way to transfer consciousness into a new body, making death a mere inconvenience.'
Altered Carbon, based on a 2002 novel, is set five hundred years in the future where humans live in a dystopian universe where their personalities can be stored digitally (a snippet from the trailer here)
The show centers on Enovy soldier (who are elite interstellar warriors) Takeshi Kovacs, played by Joel Kinnaman from House Of Cards (pictured here)
'Psychasec, live forever in the body you deserve,' she disturbingly concludes.
The epic new show has been described by IMDb as a world 'where consciousness is digitized and stored in cortical stacks implanted in the spine, allowing humans to survive physical death by having their memories and consciousness "re-sleeved" into new bodies.'
The mega wealthy humans of this universe have the ability to continually upgrade their bodies and essentially become immortal.
The epic new show has been described as a world where consciousness is digitized, allowing humans to survive physical death
The show centers on Enovy soldier (who are elite interstellar warriors) Takeshi Kovacs, played by Joel Kinnaman from House Of Cards.
He is downloaded from an off-world prison and transferred into the body of a disgraced cop, which was commanded by Laurens Bancroft, a highly influential aristocrat, played by James Purefoy.
The mega wealthy humans of this universe have the ability to continually upgrade their bodies and essentially become immortal
Bancroft was killed, and the last automatic backup of his stack was made hours before his death, leaving him with no memory.
Police deemed it a suicide, however Bancroft is convinced he was murdered and enlists Kovacs to find out the truth.
The ten-episode TV adaptation was announced in 2016 and will debut on Netflix February 2, 2018.
The narrator says 'Psychasec, live forever in the body you deserve'
The ten-episode TV adaptation was announced in 2016 and will debut on Netflix February 2, 2018
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