For millennia, people have believed that as we age,
we naturally lose energy and vitality, but increasingly
we're learning that lhose losses are not incvitablc.
Humans,like all living things, must maintain high levels
of ATP to support physical activity, and damagcd
or strcssed nruscle is slowcr at restoring those criticzrl
levels back to normal. And when ATP levcls drop and
cannoI bc restored quickly, wc do indeed fcel "drained"
or energy.
But remalkable scicntific progrcss has been rladc
in the past few decadcs. Scientists are discovcring
that sin-rply by providing injurc.d, ailing, or l-atigucd
muscle tissue wilh the ingredients for ATP, that tisslre
can be "rciuvenated," restoring cnergy levels and
boosting function. D-ribose, a natLrral sugar molcculc
rvith no known side effects, is one of those key ingredients.
D-ribose supplenrentation powers damaged
heart muscle back to near-normal levels of ftinction,
allowing victir-r-rso f cardiovascular diseasc to begin
the vital rehabilitation process. D-ribose can also
help restore ATP levels in skeletal muscle, relieving
pain and weakness post-exercise, and helping people
1o actually maintain the moderate level of increased
exercise that is so criLical to preventing heart disease
and to recovering from it if it does occur. D-ribose
can improve both cardiac energy and quality of lifea
winnins con-rbination
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