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The cheapest way to raise your good cholesterol

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The cheapest way to raise your good cholesterol

 

Last week, I told you about the incredible healing

abilities of the herb

goldenseal. This often-overlooked herb can actually

raise your HDL cholesterol

over 6%. HDL is the healthy cholesterol that helps your

body metabolize LDL

cholesterol correctly. It can be very difficult to raise

HDL levels. But

there's another common herb that works even better than

goldenseal. It's available

everywhere. And it's cheap.

 

That herb is garlic. We've known for some time that

garlic is great for

keeping your blood free of clots. And we've even known

that it can lower your bad

cholesterol levels. But new research shows that it can

raise your HDL levels

- significantly.

 

In the new study, the researchers placed 150 patients

with high lipids on a

therapeutic diet. Then they divided the participants

into three different

groups. They gave the first group 400 mg of garlic

(equal to one mg of allicin,

a key component in garlic). They gave the second group a

different aromatic

herb. And they gave the third group a placebo.

 

The researchers followed the groups for six weeks. The

garlic group's

cholesterol dropped 12.1%. Their LDL cholesterol dropped

17.3%, and their

hard-to-raise HDL cholesterol rose by a whopping 15.7%.

The aromatic herb and placebo

groups did not have any favorable changes.

 

Unfortunately, you don't see government and Big Pharma

calling for the

entire population to take garlic supplements as they do

with statins. Yet the

results are telling. You just don't need a statin drug.

Garlic is cheap and

highly effective. Between Healthy Resolve's Advanced

Cholesterol Formula, garlic,

red yeast rice, Seanol, goldenseal, and fiber, you have

the ability to lower

your LDL cholesterol, raise your HDL cholesterol, and

even improve your

overall health without any side effects.

 

Yours for better health and medical freedom,

Robert Jay Rowen, MD

 

Ref: Kojuri J, Akrami M, et al. " Effects

of anethum graveolens and garlic

on lipid profile in hyperlipidemic patients, "

Lipids Health Dis, 2007 Mar 1.

 

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