BEWARE: Big pharm and big brother want to take over the supplement industry Posted by Mike Furci (09/20/2011 @ 9:36 am) Our government, which is getting bigger and bigger, is continually trying to take away the rights of us citizens. Being consistent, the government has taken hold of several industries over the last few years to no benefit, and is now set its sights on the supplement industry. The FDA, a sheep in wolves clothing, is claiming they’re interest in taking over the supplement industry is public safety. However, government statistics show that supplements are basically benign, especially when compared to prescription drugs. Not to mention the outstanding natural health benefits associated with supplement intake. If the government gets their way, they and the pharmaceutical industry know the supplement industry companies won’t be able to afford the FDA’s drug trial process. Most supplement companies will go out of business if supplements, which includes vitamins, are treated as drugs under the new regulations; drug companies like Merk, Pfizer and others will step in and take over. Drug companies are not in the business of building health. It is in their best interest to have as many unhealthy people as possible. Its so important that big pharma spends more money on ads than it does on research (twice as much). It’s a marketing driven industry, trying to convince people they have an affliction and the drug companies have the answer. Is it any wonder why there have been so many drug recalls associated with so many deaths. Perhaps if big pharma spent more on research, and the FDA did their job, many people wouldn’t have lost their lives needlessly. And this is who we’re supposed to put our trust in running our supplement industry? Taken from Mercola.com: Dietary Supplement Labeling Act of 2011, introduced at the end of June by U.S. Senator Richard Durbin (D-Illinois) is trying to treat vitamins as if they are drugs, allegedly to “improve the safety of dietary supplements,” which implies that supplements must be a major safety hazard to begin with. Durbin’s bill goes hand-in-hand with new FDA regulations that amend the definitions for new dietary ingredients (NDI’s), and together, they can threaten your health and freedom of choice, and further serve to strengthen the fatally flawed paradigm of health and medicine. An estimated 106,000 hospitalized patients die each year from drugs that, by medical standards, are properly prescribed and administered, and an estimated two million more suffer serious side effects. How does the safety of supplements compare? In 2001, 84.6 percent of all substances implicated in fatal poisonings were pharmaceutical drugs, according to that year’s American Association of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC) report. This compares with 0.8 percent for all dietary supplements combined, even including substances such as dinitrophenol, a dangerous (and illegal) substance banned in 1938, as well as the central nervous system stimulant Ma Huang (Ephedra). ONE drug alone, the anti-asthma drug theophylline, which was responsible for 15 deaths that year, amounted to 66 percent more than all the available dietary supplements combined. According to CDC mortality data for 2005, prescription drugs killed more than 33,500 people that year, second only to car accidents. That same year, the American Association of Poison Control Centers reported 27 deaths that were associated with dietary supplements Legal DRUGS are killing massive numbers of people, not vitamins and supplements. Unfortunately, one reason for all these drug deaths could be the lax way the FDA “regulates” the drug industry by not requiring that all serious events in a trial be made public: “When a clinical trial that is undertaken by drug companies shows that a drug has serious side effects, there is no law that says that study has to be published or made public in any way,” Dr. Dean says in her book. Vioxx is a perfect example of a product that was approved without having published all the clinical studies where serious events that resulted in the deaths of over 60,000 people were discovered. What’s obvious is that the number of people taking supplements and vitamins is continuously growing. It’s a $60-billion-a-year industry, and the drug industry wants a piece of that pie, as evidenced by drug giant Pfizer, which recently announced that it’s going into the supplement business to counter some of the losses from its blockbusters that are soon going off-patent. The FDA is apparently on-track to protect its client’s vitamin and supplement interests by proposing the new policy it slipped in just before July 4.
What can you do? Go HERE and get involved. Posted in: Anti-Aging, Creatine, Ephedra, Fat burners, Fatty acids, Glutamine, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Protein, Supplements, Testosterone boosters, Vitamin D, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: best weight loss supplement, bodybuilding supplements, calcium supplements, dietary supplements, FDA, fda approval, fda food dye, fda ms pill, fda recalls, fda website, fda.gov, health supplements, natural supplements, nutritional supplements, probiotic supplements, Supplements, Supplements to help boost sex drive, Supplements to help build muscle, Testosterone supplements, upcoming fda approvals, vitamin supplements, weight loss supplements
Calorie theory doesn’t hold water Posted by Mike Furci (08/05/2009 @ 10:48 am) In my latest Q & A I answer questions about supplement usage for raising testosterone and gaining muscle while offering advice to a reader who lost prescription drug coverage. I also delve into the “calorie theory,” below, explaining how burning food in a calorimeter just isn’t the same as eating it. Yum. Q: Hi Mike, First I just wanted to say I find you articles very informative, and am glad you’re debunking the myths of saturated fat and cholesterol causing heart disease. These myths just won’t die. I was curious though as to what you suggest someone do to get shredded. I believe you have mentioned that you believe reducing carbs is the best way to get lean, as Vince Gironda did? But do you believe in calories in vs calories out as well? If you are cutting weight do you reduce your food as well (same as reducing calories) or do you just drastically reduce or eliminate carb sources of food (grains, fruits, veggies, dairy)? Thanks for your help, Antaeus A: Antaeus, A calorie is the amount of heat needed to raise 1 kilogram of water 1 degrees Celsius at sea level. What does this mean? A Double Whopper with cheese contains 990 calories. If we were to burn this burger, it would produce 990 calories. This is enough energy to raise 990 kilograms of water 1 degree Celsius. Calories are measured in sealed device called a “calorimeter” which locks in heat of burning food. A small vacuum of water is contained above the food. Once the food is completely burned, the temperature of the water is measured. The rise in temperature will determine the amount of calories. The calorimeter can show the total amount of energy of a Big Mac, but it cannot account for what the body doesn’t absorb, or the energy used in the digestion and assimilation of it. Does counting calories consumed matter, or even necessary when trying to lose weight? In a word, NO. Counting calories is completely inaccurate and a waste of time. Our bodies do not process food like a calorimeter. Our bodies do not use all the food we consume as energy, nor do we assimilate it all in the same manner. More-over, we do not store food we consume with the same efficiency. The assertion that macro-nutrients are all processed the same between individuals is just foolish. This is the basis for the calorie theory. The best thing one can do is eliminate as much sugar and processed foods from their diet as they can. Eat as many whole natural foods as you can, including: beef, fowl, fish, vegetables, raw dairy products and some fruit. The following Nutritional principles will help anyone on their way to getting leaner. Plan your meals in advance. Prepare your food in advance. Do not starve yourself. Eat when you?re hungry and stop when your full. Eat at least 4 times per day. Eat protein with every meal.
Q & A with Mike Furci Posted in: Cholesterol, Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Hormone replacement, Men's Health and Wellness, Sexual Health, Supplements, Testosterone boosters, Vitamins/Minerals, Weight training Tags: 6OXO, Add new tag, Bad Calories, boosting testosterone levels, calorie theory, calories, Calories in food, calories in versus calories out, cause of low testosterone, counting calories, Diet and testosterone, does calories matter, does stemulite work, Magnesium and the human body, mineral difficiency, should you count calories, stemulite, stemulite reviews, stemulite side effects, Supplements to help build muscle, Testosterone supplements that boost muscle and sex drive, Tribex Gold, zinc, zinc and testosterone, ZMA
Muscle Armor Posted by Mike Furci (04/30/2009 @ 11:08 am) A training program in the form of progressive resistance exercise builds muscular size and strength. In order for a training routine to be productive, however, it must first provide the correct stimulus to induce an adaptive response. Second, a workout that stimulates and adaptive response must provide for recovery. Third, in order for recovery and subsequent size and strength increases to occur, nutrients, which are of limited supply in our bodies, must be provided. It is clear that the most important nutrient for recovery is protein. In particular, essential amino acids contained in complete protein sources; dairy, meats, and fish. It is well documented that essential amino acids consumed before, during, and after resistance training boost strength and size gains. HMB is a metabolite of the essential amino acid L-leucine. During many studies on protein effects, L-leucine seemed to be the single greatest contributor to muscle protein synthesis. A recent study examined the effects of an essential amino acid based product, Muscle Armor (MA); manufactured by Abbott Laboratories contains beta-hydroxy beta-methylbutyrate (HMB). Seventeen healthy men were randomly assigned to one of two groups and performed twelve weeks of periodized heavy resistance training while supplementing with either MA or an isocaloric, isonitrogenous placebo (Control group (CG)). Every two weeks the subject?s strength and power were measured and blood was drawn. More-over the blood draws taken were performed pre, mid and post-training. Researchers found the MA group affected training induced changes in muscular size and strength to a significantly greater extent than the CG. Also found, was reduced levels of circulating muscle damage markers creatine kinase and malondealdehyde compared with the CG. In addition, the MA group experienced increases in resting and exercise-induced testosterone and resting growth hormone levels with reduced pre-exercise cortisol levels. (Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 2009;41(5):1111-1121) Posted in: Anti-Aging, Bodybuilding, Endurance, General fitness, General training, Power lifting, Product review, Protein, Supplements, Weight training Tags: amino acids, boosting testosterone levels, Building muscle, building size, Building strength, cortisol, essential amino acids, HMB, increasing size and strength, L-leucine, Muscle Armor, muscle protein synthess, Protein, protein synthesis, reducing cortisol, supplementing wth HMB, Supplements to help build muscle, Testosterone boosters
More Muscle and More Sex Part 1 and 2 Posted by Anthony Stalter (10/22/2008 @ 6:07 pm) If you’ve always been skeptical of the supplement industry, you’re not alone. But Bullz-Eye.com Fitness Editor Mike Furci says that the right testosterone supplement will not only help you build muscle, but also boost your sex drive. In the first part of this two-part series, Mike looks at supplements that work, and those that don’t. And for those of you looking for Part 2 of Mike?s series, see below. In the first part of his “More Muscle & More Sex” series, Mike explained that the right testosterone supplement can not only help you add muscle, but also boost your sex drive. In Part 2, he extols the importance of zinc and magnesium to your body, and warns of using supplements with the “wrong” ingredients. Click here for More Muscle and More Sex Part 1 Click here for More Muscle and More Sex Part 2 Posted in: Bodybuilding, General training, Motivation, Power lifting, Sexual Health, Supplements, Testosterone boosters, Weight training Tags: Boost your sex drive, Magnesium and the human body, Muscle and sex, Muscle secrets, Supplements to help boost sex drive, Supplements to help build muscle, Testosterone supplements, Testosterone supplements that boost muscle and sex drive, Tips for more muscle, Tips for more sex
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