Guest guest Posted January 20, 2007 Report Share Posted January 20, 2007 Hi Everyone, Is any of our members suffering from arthritis? CMO is a natural remedy and quite effective. BTW, one more reason to eat animal fats and not vegetable oils. Barbara CMO+-------- well here is a cut & paste: from bestcmo.comThe discovery of cetylmyristoleateThe effect of cetylmyristoleate on joints was discovered by U.S.National Institutes of Health chemist H. W. Diehl and an article describing its discovery was published in Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences [83(3):296-298]. Cetylmyristoleate, however, had to be injected to be effective. Like other liquid waxes it is composed of large molecules that tend on clumping together forming large impenetrable masses which resists absorption and pass through the digestive system virtually undigested.Making the indigestible digestibleAware of the great potential of the substance, the San Diego Clinic Immunological Center under Dr. Len Sands <dr_len_sands.html>, invented an exclusive way to change the liquid was into a wax solid named cerasomal-cis-9-cetylmyristoleate (CMO). As a solid, CMO has a crystalline structure that shatters in the alkaline environment of the small intestine forming a mesh of small particles that is readily absorbed and digested by the intestines. The exclusive process is responsible for CMO's greater bioavailability and efficacy.Making the digestible even more digestibleFor several years, companies have advised users to take a mixture of digestive enzymes along with the CMO to make it even more digestible. Nutritional Health Services has incorporated 2 lipase enzymes into each CMO+ capsule. To the best of our knowledge, CMO+ is the first and only CMO supplement to contain these two enzymes which are specific in amount and type for optimal digestion of the content of each CMO+ capsule. The built-in enzymes increase both the absorption and the efficacy of CMO+.Products to look out for:Cetylmyristate: Without the "oleate", signifying a salt of oleic acid, the compound is incapable of supporting the natural functions of joints. While these products are cheap and may retail for $3 or $4 a bottle wholesale, they are worthless as joint supplements.Vegetable sources: Beware of products that claim to be "cetylmyristoleates" from "vegetable sources". In order to make any form of myristoleate, including cetylmyristoleate, you have to start with myristoleic acid. The biochemist's bible Baily's Industrial Oil and Fat Products 5th Edition, lists only four sources for myristoleic acid, namely beef tallow, butter fat, chicken fat, and sheep tallow. There are no vegetable sources. Any claim that cetylmyristoleate came from a vegetable source -- including coconut oil or soybean oil -- is fraudulent.Watch out for dangerous synthetics: Synthetic cetylmyristoleate is not the same as natural cetylmyristoleate. The structure of the synthetic molecules is different. Roughly half of the synthetic molecules are what is known as 'trans' molecules (as opposed to 'cis' molecules). The trans molecules are unnatural to the body and cause physical damage by disrupting cell membranes. Because CMO+ is an all-natural product, it contains absolutely no trans molecules. The word 'cis' in cerasomal-cis-9-cetylmyristoleate is your assurance that CMO+ is 100% free of the unnatural, harmful trans molecules found in all of the synthetics. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2007 Report Share Posted January 20, 2007 I was wondering what CMO was-someone on another list was talking about it. I don't have arthritis, but I think it's another side effect of chemo, so I suppose it's possible! Thanks for passing this along... cyndi In a message dated 1/20/2007 11:44:30 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, barbara3 writes: Hi Everyone, Is any of our members suffering from arthritis? CMO is a natural remedy and quite effective. BTW, one more reason to eat animal fats and not vegetable oils. Barbara CMO+-------- well here is a cut & paste: from bestcmo.comThe discovery of cetylmyristoleateThe effect of cetylmyristoleate on joints was discovered by U.S.National Institutes of Health chemist H. W. Diehl and an article describing its discovery was published in Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences [83(3):296-298]. Cetylmyristoleate, however, had to be injected to be effective. Like other liquid waxes it is composed of large molecules that tend on clumping together forming large impenetrable masses which resists absorption and pass through the digestive system virtually undigested.Making the indigestible digestibleAware of the great potential of the substance, the San Diego Clinic Immunological Center under Dr. Len Sands <dr_len_sands.html>, invented an exclusive way to change the liquid was into a wax solid named cerasomal-cis-9-cetylmyristoleate (CMO). As a solid, CMO has a crystalline structure that shatters in the alkaline environment of the small intestine forming a mesh of small particles that is readily absorbed and digested by the intestines. The exclusive process is responsible for CMO's greater bioavailability and efficacy.Making the digestible even more digestibleFor several years, companies have advised users to take a mixture of digestive enzymes along with the CMO to make it even more digestible. Nutritional Health Services has incorporated 2 lipase enzymes into each CMO+ capsule. To the best of our knowledge, CMO+ is the first and only CMO supplement to contain these two enzymes which are specific in amount and type for optimal digestion of the content of each CMO+ capsule. The built-in enzymes increase both the absorption and the efficacy of CMO+.Products to look out for:Cetylmyristate: Without the "oleate", signifying a salt of oleic acid, the compound is incapable of supporting the natural functions of joints. While these products are cheap and may retail for $3 or $4 a bottle wholesale, they are worthless as joint supplements.Vegetable sources: Beware of products that claim to be "cetylmyristoleates" from "vegetable sources". In order to make any form of myristoleate, including cetylmyristoleate, you have to start with myristoleic acid. The biochemist's bible Baily's Industrial Oil and Fat Products 5th Edition, lists only four sources for myristoleic acid, namely beef tallow, butter fat, chicken fat, and sheep tallow. There are no vegetable sources. Any claim that cetylmyristoleate came from a vegetable source -- including coconut oil or soybean oil -- is fraudulent.Watch out for dangerous synthetics: Synthetic cetylmyristoleate is not the same as natural cetylmyristoleate. The structure of the synthetic molecules is different. Roughly half of the synthetic molecules are what is known as 'trans' molecules (as opposed to 'cis' molecules). The trans molecules are unnatural to the body and cause physical damage by disrupting cell membranes. Because CMO+ is an all-natural product, it contains absolutely no trans molecules. The word 'cis' in cerasomal-cis-9-cetylmyristoleate is your assurance that CMO+ is 100% free of the unnatural, harmful trans molecules found in all of the synthetics. Messages in this topic (1) Reply (via web post) | Start a new topic .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2007 Report Share Posted January 21, 2007 I don't have arthritis either but thought I will pass that info for other members' benefit. I saved it too, just in case. Barbara I was wondering what CMO was-someone on another list was talking about it. I don't have arthritis, but I think it's another side effect of chemo, so I suppose it's possible! Thanks for passing this along... cyndi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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