IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

download IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

of 4

Transcript of IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

  • 7/29/2019 IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

    1/4

    A SRONG IMMUNE SYSEM IS HE SINGLE MOS IMPORAN FACOR O LASING HEALH

    Pillars of HealthVol. 37 Te Health and Wellness Newsletter Fall 2012

    Te Norwegian

    Secret for Super

    Immunity

    O all the systems in the

    miraculous human body, theimmune system may be themost vigilant and hardworkingo all. Responsible or protect-ing the body against invasionby disease and other pathogensincluding viruses, bacteria andparasites, it also plays a vitalrole in the normal healingresponse to trauma, providing

    protection against inection.o keep an incalculable num-

    ber o organisms and illnesses

    at bay, your immune systemengages a sort o tag-teammethod comprised o two sub-systemsyour innate immunesystem and your adaptive im-mune system. Understandinghow your innate and adaptivesystems work together is impor-tant to helping you take controlo your own health.

    Te Frontline1

    Te ght against inectionwithin your body isnt entirelydierent rom what happens ona battleeld. Your innate im-

    mune systemthe natural re-sistance you were born withisyour bodys rst line o deense,much like the ground troopsthat lead an invasion.

    Engaging an arsenal o mecha-nisms and cells to deend thehost, an invading organism mayrst be hit with inammation,engineered by macrophage cells,

    as the primary response by theinnate immune system. Inam-mation is triggered when a cellis injured and it serves to createa physical barrier against thespread o inection. Te mac-rophage cells also help mediatethe inammatory response to

    keep it in check. Sometimes theinammatory response can goawry in an unbalanced immunesystem and this is reerred to asan autoimmune response.

    I this initial strategy does notstop the enemy in its tracks, theinnate immune system sendsout the big gunsphagocytecells, including Natural Killercells. Phagocyte cells are largecells that literally envelop theinvading oreign organism, us-ing acid to rst kill then digestit. Natural Killer cells proved aswi response, attacking virallyinected cells and respond to

    tumor ormation.However, like any warrior, theinnate immune system is not in-allible. Factors that can weakenits response include poor nutri-tion, stress, and environmentalactors. I the innate immunesystem cannot deeat the enemyit does one more thingandthats to activate your adaptive

    immunity into action.

    Plan B2

    Te best way to understandadaptive immunity is to under-stand how a person developsit. Te rst way is reerred to as

    INSIDETHIS ISSUE

    Te Frontline 1 Plan B 1Modern MedicineFriend or Foe o Your

    Immune System? 2 Te Search orBetter Immunity 2

    Te Molecule that Caughtthe Attention o theScientifc World 3

    Te Future o Immunity 4

    1

    1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innate_immune_system2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_immune_system

  • 7/29/2019 IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

    2/4

    naturally acquired active im-munity. Tis occurs when weare exposed to disease or illnessand are able to ght it o. Ourimmune system builds anti-

    bodies that make us less suscep-tible to contracting the illnessagain, i at allor at the veryleast, drastically lower the dura-tion and severity o symptoms iwe do contract it again.

    What makes adaptive immu-nity work are memory B cellsand memory C cells that help theimmune system remember and

    recognize invading pathogens ithey are encountered again.

    Tis type o immunity canalso be achieved through theuse o vaccines that contain an-tigens to invoke antibodies. Tisis called articially acquiredactive immunity.

    A perect example that ex-plores both types o adaptive

    immunities is the develop-ment o the smallpox vaccineby Dr. Edward Jenner in 1796.Seeing that milkmaids whocaught the cowpox virus didnot catch smallpox was an in-dication o naturally acquiredimmunity, which o courseprompted the doctor to intro-duce antibodies via vaccine,and prevent development osmallpox through artiiciallyacquired immunity.3

    It sounds like the perect sys-tem. But i thats the case, whydo we still get sick?

    Modern Medicine

    Friend or Foe o Your

    Immune System?

    It would be unrealistic to ex-

    pect a completely impenetrableimmune system. Viruses, likethe human immunodeciency

    virus (HIV) mutate rapidly toavoid the bodys immune de-enses. However, the last thingone might expect is that conven-tional medicine may be partly toblame when the immune systemdoesnt work as it should.

    According to the Centers orDisease Control and Prevention(CDC) antibiotic resistance isone o the worlds most pressingthreats.4 Its estimated that morethan 50% o antibiotics are un-necessarily prescribed or viralillnesses on which they haveno eect. In addition, misuseby patients that do not nish a

    ull-round o antibiotics becausethey begin to eel better weakensthat medicines eect. Te resultis bacteriaincluding super-bugsthat have become rapidlyresistant to more than one typeor class o antibiotic.

    But in light o new inorma-tion, antibiotic resistance maynot be the most distressing newso all. A study5 published in theJournal o Immunologyoundthat the successul treatment oa bacterial inection with antibi-otic hinders the development oacquired immunity (that would

    be your adaptive immune sys-tem). In other words, the studyound that during antibiotictreatment enough immunitywas acquired to cure the inec-

    tion but the immunity was notsustained (not remembered bythe adaptive immune system),leaving the patients naturalimmune system incapable oprotecting against a secondaryinection. I our adaptive im-mune system loses the ability torecognize and remember bac-teria, what is our next option to

    protect our health?

    Te Search or

    Better Immunity

    With the realization that theadaptive immune system maybe at a higher risk o ailure,the next logical step would beto protect and boost the innate

    immune systemyour originalline o deense.

    Immune-boosting stimulants,starting with ancient naturalhealing methods, have beenavailable or millennia. Mod-ern research has been able tosupport some o these healthclaims and the health supple-ment industry has become verypopular or those seeking tocontrol their own health. How-ever, no one supplement ornatural ingredient has changedthe landscape o modern im-munology like Norwegian Beta-

    2

    Vol. 37 Te Health and Wellness Newsletter Fall 2012

    3 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallpox_vaccine4 http://www.cdc.gov/getsmart/healthcare/learn-rom-others/actsheets/antibiotics.html5 http://www.jimmunol.org/content/183/2/1263.ull

  • 7/29/2019 IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

    3/4

    1,3/1,6-Glucan (NBG).Beta glucana primitive

    cousin to NBGhas a his-tory that goes back as ar asChinese medicine. But it was

    just 60 years ago that it becamethe subject o modern medicalstudies because o a medicationwidely used in Europe. Tat

    medicine was Zymosen and itcaught the attention o scien-tists who realized its ability topotentiate the immune system.

    It was known that Zymosenwas derived rom yeast cells,but in the 1960s Nicholas Di-Luzio, Ph.D., was able to zeroin on beta glucan as the centralcompound responsible or acti-

    vating the immune system. Dr.DiLuzio was the rst to use betaglucan to stimulate macrophagecells (the rst cells naturallyactivated by your innate im-mune system) to mobilize anddestroy certain tumors and ght

    inections during his research atulane University.6

    His research proved beyondthe shadow o a doubt that betaglucan possessed the ability toincrease undamental deensemechanisms that enable thebody to resist bacterial, viral,ungal, and parasitic diseases. It

    was also demonstrated to inhibittumor growth and progression.7Since Dr. DiLuzios death in1986, research into the immune-enhancing abilities o betaglucan has continued to turn thescientic world on its head.

    Te Molecule that Caught

    the Attention o theScientifc World

    During the last decade an evenbigger breakthrough has beenmade concerning the efcacy oa particular beta glucan, whichled to the availability o a su-

    perior orm o this remarkableimmune-enhancing molecule.

    Beta Glucan can be derivedrom several sources includingungi, grains, mushrooms, and

    yeast cell walls. But NorwegianBeta Glucan (NBG) comes romthe cell wall o Saccharomycescerevisiaebakers yeastasource that scientists speculatedwould produce the most active,immune-enhancing orm obeta glucan.

    However, the level o activ-ity and potential to aect the

    immune system depends onthe extraction method. I thedelicate side chains, uniqueto the powerul beta-glucanmolecule are damaged, it isunable to bind to the tinyactivating receptors ound onthe surace o macrophages,granulocytes, and NaturalKiller cells to potentiate the

    innate immune system.In 1991, a small group o

    Norwegian scientists, led byDr. Jan Raa, perected thisextraction method and wereinally able to isolate beta-1,3/1,6-glucanperectlyintact. Ater numerous clini-cal trials demonstrating thepositive beneits o NBG,the worlds most eectiveimmune-enhancer was madeavailable to the public.

    Te immune-stimulatingabilities o NBG are ar-reach-ing and especially valuable tothose with weaker immune

    3

    Vol. 37 Te Health and Wellness Newsletter Fall 2012

    6http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37947567http://journals.lww.com/immunotherapy-journal/Citation/1986/12000/In_Memoriam.10.aspx

  • 7/29/2019 IM-PR100 the Norwegian Secret for Super Immunity Low Rez

    4/4

    systems. As the human bodyages, the eectiveness o the im-mune system decreases, makingNBG benecial even to healthyadults. Use o NBG can help:

    Enhance protection againstvirus, bacteria, ungi, andparasites by mobilizing in-

    nate immunity. Enhance specic antibodyproduction against vaccineantigens.

    Stimulate wound healing andrepair o damaged cells.

    Counteract inammationsinduced by inections.

    Balance proper unctions othe immune system.

    Reduce the eect o outsideorces than can lower theeectiveness o the immunesystem such as physical andmental stress, poor diet, ag-ing, exposure to pollutants,as well as lack o sufcientexposure to develop naturalantibodies.

    Further research ound thatNBG has an anti-aging e-ect, due to its ability to pro-mote epidermal immunity.NBG can penetrate the outerlayer o the skin and then bindto the surace o skin repaircells that protect and regener-ate the skin. In studies where

    NBG was applied topically,the perormance o skin repaircells was increased.

    Te Future o Immunity

    Tere is a close unctionalconnection between the innateimmunity and the adaptive in-ection deenses. But in biology

    as a whole, innate immunityis, by ar, the most importantinection deense system.

    As medicine enters and takeshold o the 21st century, itlooks as though there is a real

    value in returning to the basicso good health. Te innate im-mune system each o us is born

    with maybe our strongest allyagainst antibiotic resistance,superbugs, and an adaptiveimmune system that nds itharder to remember who the

    enemy is.Because Norwegian Beta-1,3/1,6-Glucans have provenextremely eective as immunestimulants that enhance resis-tance time again, in study aerstudy, they appear to be thesecret to the super immunitythat may be required to protecthumankind.

    IM-PR 2012 4

    Vol. 37 Te Health and Wellness Newsletter Fall 2012

    Material ound in theNorwegian Secret or SuperImmunity is publishedby Pillars o Health, LongBeach, CA and is protectedby the copyright laws o theUnited States o America.Reerences taken romother sources are properly

    credited. Any improperinringements or plagiarismo the material ound inthis document will beprosecuted to the ull extento the law. Te inormationand statements made inthis publication have notbeen evaluated by the FDA.Te ingredients discussed

    and recommended are notintended to diagnose, treat,cure, or prevent any disease.Individual results may vary.Seek the advice o yourhealthcare proessionalor questions or concernsregarding your speciichealth conditions and/orneeds.