What’s the Big Deal About Stem Cells?

What’s the Big Deal About Stem Cells?

Everyone asks me this question.

What do stem cells do? Why are they so controversial?

The first thing you need to know is that most diseases in the human body are caused by inflammation.

And the root cause of inflammation is ingesting too much sugar.

When we eat more than a teaspoon of sugar a day, it sticks to our nerves and their surrounding tissues.

The body responds by creating a low-grade inflammation, like a fever.

Or, perhaps, more appropriately, like you’re cooking yourself to death.

Over time, this inflammation reaction can destabilize the body’s natural functions and defenses.

The body often responds by creating what’s medically known as fibrosis, meaning scarring.

What’s the Big Deal About Stem Cells?

The more scarring we develop internally, the less readily our cells can communicate with one another, and the less circulation we have.

Things begin to go wrong, and these various symptoms manifest themselves as disease.

And here’s why stem cells are so important to the healing process:

One small application of stem cells can completely reverse this scarring effect.

Wipes it out like it was never there in the first place.

Currently, there isn’t a medical treatment known to human science that even comes close to what stem cells can do.

They’re the best weapon we have against practically every disease that afflicts us.

Now you may be asking, “If that’s true, why is the government essentially banning stem cells from wider use?”

That’s a very important question, the answer to which might just save your life.

My name is Dr. Richard Jacoby. I’m known as one of the world’s most accomplished peripheral nerve surgeons.

I’m also the author of the celebrated book “Sugar Crush” and my new book “Unglued.”

To get the answer to the question I just mentioned, and to receive an overview of new products and therapies that can drastically improve your existence, please stop by my website:

www.drjacoby.academy.

My goal is to help you live a longer, happier, healthier life than you once dreamed possible.

 

What is an Urban Carnivore?

What is an Urban Carnivore?

Let’s try a thought experiment.

Let’s trace human beings back to their evolutionary ancestors. What do you find?

We’re descended from a biped pre-historic pre-human whom anthropologists call AL 288-1 of the species Australopithecus afarensis.

More commonly known as Lucy.

There’s no question our bodies evolved from this curious and interesting progenitor and all of her kind.

There’s also no question that Lucy never ate something we modern humans feast on.

She never ate sugar.

My name is Dr. Richard Jacoby. I’m known as one of the world’s most accomplished peripheral nerve surgeons.

I’m also the author of the celebrated book “Sugar Crush” and my new book “Unglued.”

After operating on countless diabetic patients to relieve peripheral neuropathy, one thing I can tell you for certain is that sugar is a poison.

Ingesting more than a teaspoon per day corrodes our nerves and does other terrible things to our bodies.

We were never designed to eat sugar.

Our bodies are only supposed to eat meat and leafy green vegetables.

But look at what’s going on today.

Sugar has become an additive in practically everything we eat. And it’s causing a health crisis the likes of which people can barely begin to fathom.

If you suffer from chronic health problems that won’t go away, I think I can help.

The first step I’ll recommend in every case is to get yourself off sugar as fast as possible.

The best way to do this?

Take my online Urban Carnivore course at www.drjacoby.academy.

In this course, I offer step-by-step instructions on how to change your diet so health becomes your new natural state.

I also offer an overview of new products and therapies such as stem cells present—therapies that can drastically improve your existence.

My goal is to help you live a longer, happier, healthier life than you once dreamed possible.

 

Wharton’s Jelly Stem Cell Research

Thomas Wharton was an English anatomist and physician who lived in the 17th century.

He discovered a jelly-like substance within human umbilical cords.

Wharton was intrigued by this jelly because of its miraculous properties.

Wharton’s Jelly Stem Cell Research

For instance, back in Wharton’s day, about 50% of women died in childbirth.

It was commonly observed that if a baby passed through the birth canal and its mother perished, it could still live up to five days due to nutrients contained in the umbilical cord connected to its naval.

Wharton had no idea at the time, but stem cells were part of the power contained in the jelly.

We know that Wharton’s jelly contains several types of stem cells.

These cells can be extracted, refined, and implanted into sick people to help cure diseases.

In one case study, tissue transplantation from Wharton’s jelly reduced traumatic brain injury in laboratory test rats.

This is just the tip of the iceberg.

In 2003, Senator John McCain of Arizona put together a stirring conference for the U.S. Senate on the potential use of non-embryonic stem cells.

The Senators were shown how autistic children treated with stem cells learned to speak.

Children afflicted with muscular dystrophy were treated with stem cells and suddenly walked.

“It’s a miracle!” the Senators said.

Wharton’s Jelly Stem Cell Research

So why aren’t stem cell treatments part of mainstream medicine?

In my opinion, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is slow-walking a potential cure for too many ailments to list.

My name is Dr. Richard Jacoby. I’m known as one of the world’s most accomplished peripheral nerve surgeons.

I’m also the author of the celebrated book “Sugar Crush” and my new book “Unglued.”

Stop by my website at www.drjacoby.academy.

I’d like to offer you an overview of new products and therapies, such as stem cells, which can drastically improve your existence.

I aim to help you live a longer, happier, healthier life than you once dreamed possible.

 

How My Interest In Stem Cells Began

Years ago, after opening the Wound Care Center at a hospital in Scottsdale, Arizona, I had an epiphany moment.

How My Interest In Stem Cells Began

A nurse came limping by. She was wearing an air cast on one of her feet.

When I asked her what was wrong, she said she had tendonitis in her Achilles tendon.

Most people know that tendonitis is an acute inflammation of a tendon.

Tendonosis occurs when this inflammation becomes chronic.

I asked this nurse how long she’d been wearing her air cast. She told me: “A year and a half.”

“And that still hasn’t fixed it?” I said.

She shook her head. Moreover, she confided in me that she feared that she might lose her job because the cast was making it hard for her to stay mobile.

As it happened, I had access to stem cells through a company I was working with.

I asked this nurse if she’d be up for trying a procedure where I injected her inflamed Achilles tendon with stem cells made from amniotic fluid.

She agreed, and I gave her the injection. “Come by tomorrow,” I said. “I just want to check and see how you’re doing.”

She wasn’t limping when she came into my office the next day. Nor was she wearing her cast.

I was amazed when she said she felt no pain in her leg. “Should I still wear the cast?” she asked.

“Hmm? Yes,” I said. “To be safe, come back in two weeks, and we’ll see how you’re doing.”

She came back in two weeks and reported that nothing had changed. She was cured.

That’s when my interest in stem cells began.

My name is Dr. Richard Jacoby.

I’m known as one of the world’s most accomplished peripheral nerve surgeons.

I’m also the author of the celebrated book “Sugar Crush” and my new book “Unglued.”

In my online course, Urban Carnivore, I teach practical life hacks like stem cell healing and other alternative healing techniques.

If you’re interested, stop by my website at www.drjacoby.academy.

I aim to help you live a longer, happier, healthier life than you once dreamed possible.

 

Playing Pickle Ball Halts Aging Process

 

My name is Dr. Richard Jacoby.

I’m known as one of the world’s most accomplished peripheral nerve surgeons.

I’m also the author of the celebrated book “Sugar Crush” and my new book “Unglued.”

Playing Pickle Ball Halts Aging

I’m in my early 80s. I love to exercise and want to stay in shape, but going to the gym every day is boring.

Fortunately, there’s an answer.

Pickleball has become one of the fastest-growing sports in the world.

It features fast action centered around hand-eye coordination, demanding players start and stop quickly and repetitively over long intervals.

As it happens, this is precisely how our human bodies were designed to function, and it is one of the best ways to keep them healthy for long periods of time.

I once met a professional athlete, Ricky Henderson—one of the greatest baseball players ever.

Ricky Henderson never lifted a weight. But he was in phenomenal shape with excellent muscle definition.

You see, in the prehistoric past, our ancestors had to sprint for, say, 40 yards in this direction or that to either capture prey or avoid becoming prey.

Running long distances can tear your body down.

Playing Pickle Ball Halts Aging

Doing short sprints can stimulate your body to become leaner and more muscular while converting oxygen into fuel through a more refined process.

I teach practical life hacks like this in my online course, Urban Carnivore.

Stop by my website at www.drjacoby.academy.

I aim to help you live a longer, happier, healthier life than you once dreamed possible.

Stop by and check it out now.

Who Is Hiding The Truth About Stem Cells?

 

Stem cells are one of the most confusing subjects in most people’s minds.

People constantly ask me: What are stem cells? How do they work? Why do they work? Why can’t we get them? What is the big mystery?

Who Is Hiding The Truth About Stem Cells?

Stem cells are organic material that’s passed down from one generation to the next.

Yet, everyone has stem cells in their bones, fat, and teeth; they’re a naturally occurring substance.

Unfortunately, over time, we lose the amount of stem cells in our bodies.

When most people reach total growth—at age 20, on average—they have about 100% of the stem cells they were born with.

By the time most people reach 50, they’ve lost about 90% of their stem cells.

However, there’s good news.

Prenatal stem cells, which are some of the best for healing purposes, can be harvested from substances like amniotic fluid, Wharton’s Jelly, and the umbilical cord.

These are all other afterbirth products, meaning they’re ejected from the mother once the fetus is born.

Who Is Hiding The Truth About Stem Cells?

That’s about as short-sighted as throwing out bricks of gold because you don’t know which room in your house you should keep them in.

When used allogeneically, stem cells hold the key to healing many diseases.

In this case, allegorically means that the stem cells were harvested from one person and applied as healing agents to another person.

Now, back in 2003, Senator John McCain held a U.S. Senate hearing on the many uses of stem cells. 

The conclusion of that hearing was senators calling stem cells “a miracle.”

So why have twenty years passed, and they’re still considered off-limits for healing diseases?

Something is wrong, and it’s time we got answers to simple, direct questions.

Write to your senators today and ask why stem cells are banned in many therapeutic use cases.