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Nutritional Support For Joint Structure And FunctionThe first health care claim of deer velvet antler to be substantiated by scientific evidence, in compliance with US Food and Drug Administration dietary supplement regulations, was announced by the North American Elk Breeders Association (NAEBA) recently.
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More ArticlesNew Zealand Athletes Taking Deer Velvet At Olympics Deer Velvet Boost To Strength And Recovery | |||||
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More ArticlesDeer Velvet Boost To Strength And Recovery ... designed to determine what role New Zealand deer velvet antler has in athletic performance by affecting recovery from muscle injury. A substance found in the bloodstream called creatine kinase, was used as an indicator of muscle tissue damage. more. The thirty athletes in the trial ran downhill on a treadmill ... New Zealand Athletes Taking Deer Velvet At Olympics ... traditional Chinese medicine and has been used consistently for over 2000 years. More recently Russian athletes have taken an extract of deer velvet to improve their athletic performances. A joint venture between the New Zealand deer industry and AgResearch directs investment of over one million dollars ... ... tremendously impressed by this plant, which is now available as a supplement in U.S. health food stores. What is Maca? Maca, Lepidium meyenii, is an annual plant which produces a radish-like root. The root of maca is typically dried and stored, and will easily keep for seven years. The plant is cultivated ... ... skilled in tribal wisdom and the use of plant medicines. There in the world's greatest jungle, we encountered two potent sex-boosting plants with a long history of safe use. Our flight into Brazil put us into the Amazon city of Manaus, where we met with Antonio Matas, the most highly respected herbalist ... ... anti-inflammatory peptides, hormones, gangliosides and glycosaminoglycans, and Insulin-like Growth Factor-1. The composition of velvet supplements depend on the diet of the deer, climate, time of year, age of stag and the various concentrations of substances in different regions of the antler velvet itself. ...
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