Stemulite Question from Facebook

by Stephen Holt, Stemulite Fitness Pro


facebook I just got this series of questions from someone who just “friended me” on Facebook. Maybe you have the same questions. (BTW, a better way to keep in touch is by following me on Twitter.)

So i’ve always wondered about stemulite, Is it safe to take? Is it Illegal? Is it really a muscle builder or just an energy booster?

It’s pretty amazing how rumors get spread. Even more ironic is how falsehoods and misconceptions are spread around the Internet when it takes only a click or two to get the truth from web sites you can trust.

Anyway …

Yes, Stemulite is safe to take. Each of the Stemulite ingredients has been deemed “GRAS” or “Generally Regarded As Safe” by the FDA.

No, Stemulite is not illegal. I hope you don’t think I’m the type of person who would sell illegal supplements. (On the other hand, it would make me as famous as Greg Anderson [Barry Bonds' trainer] and Brian McNamee [Roger Clemens' trainer], though. Hmmm.)

The answer to the last question is “Yes.” Stemulite is both a muscle builder (if you lift hard) and an energy booster.

The main ingredient – the eggplant extract derived by a patented process – stimulates (get it?) your adult stem cells to repair and replace any damaged cells.

That’s why thousands of satisfied customers are reporting positive results as varied and wide-ranging as decreases in wrinkling, clearer skin, and thicker hair.

If you’re following a rigorous weight training regimen, Stemulite will help you repair and replace damaged muscle cells. Hence, it can be a muscle builder.

Stemulite also increases your energy levels – naturally – mostly by combining R+ Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA) with acetyl L-carnitine (ALC).

weeks and then compared them with young rats. They were testing the theory that mitochondrial decline is caused by free radical damage. There was already evidence that supplementation with acetyl L-carnitine (ALC) could reverse the age-related decline in mitochondrial activity in rats, increase fatty acid oxidation and boost general metabolic activity.

After a month on ALA and ALC, older (24-month-old) and lethargic rats had more energy and improved on memory tests. The decline in overall activity typical of aged rats was reversed to the level of young-to-middle-aged adult rats, aged 7-10 months.

To compare those numbers to humans (and, yes, I realize rat studies don’t necessarily equal human studies – we’re just comparing relative ages here), the researchers likened this result to 80-year-old humans having the energy of 45-year-olds.

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