Stemulite, specifically the biochemistry behind Stemulite, is a complicated topic.
That’s probably why so many ignorant (again, in the technical, not the pejorative sense) people are quick to say it doesn’t work or that Stemulite’s a scam.
Here’s yet another study that led Dr. Summers to first create Endothil CR and then it’s superior, Stemulite.
Cellular and molecular regulation of muscle regeneration.
Chargé SB, Rudnicki MA. Ottawa Health Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Under normal circumstances, mammalian adult skeletal muscle is a stable tissue with very little turnover of nuclei. However, upon injury, skeletal muscle has the remarkable ability to initiate a rapid and extensive repair process preventing the loss of muscle mass.
Remember, weight training due to fatigue results in micro-damage, or a small degree of “injury” to the target muscles.
Skeletal muscle repair is a highly synchronized process involving the activation of various cellular responses. The initial phase of muscle repair is characterized by necrosis of the damaged tissue and activation of an inflammatory response.
This phase is rapidly followed by activation of myogenic cells to proliferate, differentiate, and fuse leading to new myofiber formation and reconstitution of a functional contractile apparatus.
Activation of adult muscle satellite cells is a key element in this process.
Muscle satellite cell activation resembles embryonic myogenesis in several ways including the de novo induction of the myogenic regulatory factors.
Signaling factors released during the regenerating process have been identified, but their functions remain to be fully defined.
Dr. Robert Shorr, co-creator of Stemulite, specializes in studying these signaling factors.
In addition, recent evidence supports the possible contribution of adult stem cells in the muscle regeneration process.
In particular, bone marrow-derived and muscle-derived stem cells contribute to new myofiber formation and to the satellite cell pool after injury.
The evidence is clear.
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