| Hair
Formula 37™
Herbal Booster / Enhancer
Ingredient
List | See
HF37 Labels in Detail
(To be used with Step One and Two )
Dosage 2 tablets daily.
To
meet the growing demand of a superior herbal hair formula... Hair
Formula 37™ has developed a Hair Formula 37™
Herbal Booster.
Hair Formula 37™ Herbal Booster is not design to replace either
Hair Formula 37™ Step One or Step Two...but rather to be a
booster to both steps. It is an addition that will enhance
all hair types hair.
Hair Formula 37™
Herbal Booster
Enhancer
(To be used with Step One and Two )
Dosage 2 tablets daily.
Order Now Online (Secure)
(CLICK
HERE)
| In
a base of : Nettle, Rosemary,
Burdock, Birch, Rose Hips, Irish Moss, Coltsfoot, Dandelion,
Yellow Dock, Elder Flowers, Shave Grass |
Order Now Online (Secure)(CLICK HERE)
Added to Step One and Two of the regular Hair Formula 37™ program
the
Herbal Booster adds:
Horsetail -
Strengthens hair, nails, bone, and teeth. Increases calcium
absorption. It strengthens the heart and lungs. It
is specific for internal bleeding and urine retention. Helps to
coagulate the blood and is useful excessive bleeding during menstruation.
Horsetail is very rich in silicic acid and silicates, which provide
approximately 2-3% elemental silicon. Potassium, aluminum, and
manganese along with fifteen different types of bioflavonoids
are also found in the herb. The presence of these bioflavonoids
are believed to cause the diuretic action, while the silicon content
is said to exert a connective tissue strengthening and anti-arthritic
action.3 Some experts have suggested that the element
silicon is a vital component for bone and cartilage formation.4
This would indicate that horsetail may be beneficial in preventing
osteoporosis. Anecdotal reports suggest that horsetail may be
of some use in the treatment of brittle nails.
Fo-ti - The active constituents of fo-ti
have yet to be determined. The whole root has been shown to lower
cholesterol levels, according to animal and human research, as
well as to decrease hardening of the arteries, or atherosclerosis.
Other fo-ti research has investigated this herb’s role in strong
immune function, red blood cell formation, and antibacterial action.
A Healthy Hair Oriented Herbal Blend:
Nettle, Rosemary, Burdock, Birch, Rose Hips, Irish Moss, Coltsfoot,
Dandelion, Yellow Dock, Elder Flowers, Shave Grass all of
which may help your hair.
Vitamin
A - Vitamin A helps cells reproduce normally—a process called
differentiation. Cells that have not properly differentiated are
more likely to undergo precancerous changes. Vitamin A, by maintaining
healthy cell membranes, helps prevent invasion by disease-causing
micro-organisms. Vitamin A also stimulates immunity and is needed
for formation of bone, protein, and growth hormone. In males
and postmenopausal women, up to 25,000 IU (7,500 mcg) of vitamin
A per day is considered safe. In women who could become pregnant,
the safest intake level is being re-evaluated; less than 10,000
IU (3,000 mcg) per day is widely accepted as safe.
Added
Vitamin B-12 - Vitamin B12 is needed for normal nerve cell
activity, DNA replication, and production of the mood-affecting
substance called SAM (S-adenosyl methionine). Vitamin B12 works
with folic acid to control homocysteine levels.
Biotin - Biotin, a water-soluble B
vitamin, acts as a coenzyme during the metabolism of protein,
fats, and carbohydrates. Biotin works with the other B vitamins,
such as folic acid, pantothenic acid also known as vitamin B5,
and vitamin B12. Symptoms of pantothenic acid or zinc deficiency
are lessened with biotin.
Added
Pantothenic Acid - Pantothenic acid, sometimes called vitamin
B5, is involved in the Kreb’s cycle of energy production and is
needed to make the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. It is also
essential in producing, transporting, and releasing the energy
from fats. Synthesis of cholesterol (needed for vitamin D and
hormone synthesis) depends on pantothenic acid. Pantothenic acid
also activates the adrenal glands.1 Pantethine—a variation
of pantothenic acid—has been reported to lower blood levels of
cholesterol and triglycerides.
Added
Folic Acid - Folic acid is needed for DNA synthesis. DNA allows
cells—including cells in the fetus when a woman is pregnant—to
replicate normally. Adequate intake of folic acid early in pregnancy
is important for preventing most “neural tube” birth defects as
well as some birth defects of the arms, legs, and heart. It also
appears to protect against cleft palate and cleft lip formation
in most, though not all, studies.
Folic
acid is needed to make “SAM” (S-adenosyl methionine), which affects
(and may improve) mood. Folic acid is also needed to keep homocysteine
levels (an amino acid) levels in blood from rising. Excess homocysteine
dramatically increases the risk of heart disease and may be linked
to osteoporosis and strokes.
Added
Niacin (but in a Niacinamide form for no flushing) - The body
uses vitamin B3 in the process of releasing energy from carbohydrates.
Added
PABA -
PABA
is the abbreviation for paraaminobenzoic acid, a compound that
is loosely considered to be a member of the vitamin B-complex.
PABA appears to enhance the effects of cortisone, estrogen, and
possibly other hormones by delaying their breakdown in the liver.
PABA also prevents or even reverses the accumulation of abnormal
fibrous tissue.
An
isolated study found that PABA darkened gray hair in some elderly
(but not younger) individuals.
Added
Cysteine - is a non-essential amino acid (protein building
block). Cysteine is one of the few amino acids that contains sulfur.
This allows cysteine to bond in a special way and maintain the
structure of proteins in the body.
Added
Choline and Inositol - Choline
is needed for cell membrane integrity and to facilitate the movement
of fats in and out of cells. It is also a component of the neurotransmitter
acetylcholine. Inositol is required for proper formation of cell
membranes. It affects nerve transmission and helps in transporting
fats within the body.
Linoleic Acid - an “essential fatty acid”
needed for survival.
Calcium - Calcium is the most abundant
mineral in the human body. Of the two to three pounds of calcium
contained in the average body, 99% is located in the bones and
teeth. Calcium is needed to form bones and teeth and is also required
for blood clotting, transmission of signals in nerve cells, and
muscle contraction.
Copper - Copper is needed to absorb
and use iron. It is also part of the antioxidant enzyme superoxide
dismutase (SOD). Copper is needed to make adenosine triphosphate
(ATP), the energy the body runs on. Synthesis of some hormones
requires copper, as does collagen (the “glue” that holds muscle
tissue together) and tyrosinase (the enzyme that puts pigment
into the hair and skin).
Selenium - Selenium activates an antioxidant
enzyme called glutathione peroxidase, which may protect the body
from cancer. A recent double-blind study following over 1,300
people found that those given 200 mcg of yeast-based selenium
per day for seven years had a 50% drop in the cancer death rate
compared with the placebo group. Selenium is also needed to activate
thyroid hormones.
Manganese - Manganese is needed for
healthy skin, bone, and cartilage formation as well as glucose
tolerance. It also helps activate superoxide dismutase (SOD)—an
important antioxidant enzyme.
Zinc - Zinc is a component of more than
300 enzymes that are needed to repair wounds, maintain fertility,
synthesize protein, help cells reproduce, preserve vision, boost
immunity, and protect against free radicals, among other functions.
Iodine - Iodine is needed to make
thyroid hormones, which are necessary for maintaining normal metabolism
in all cells of the body.
Nettle - There has been a great deal
of controversy regarding the identity of nettle’s active constituents.
One authoritative study came to the conclusion that polysaccharides
(complex sugars) and lectins (large protein-sugar combination
molecules) are probably the active constituents. The leaf has
been shown to be anti-inflammatory by preventing the body from
making inflammatory chemicals known as prostaglandins.1
The root has complicated effects on hormones and proteins that
carry sex hormones (such as testosterone or estrogen) in the human
body. From ancient Greece to the present, nettles have been documented
for its use as a medicine for coughs and tuberculosis, to increase
hair growth, and to treat arthritis.
Rosemary - A number of constituents
have shown activity in the test tube. The volatile oil, including
eucalyptol (cineole), is considered to have potent antibacterial
effects3 and to relax smooth
muscles in the lungs.4 Rosmarinic acid has significant
antioxidant activity.5 Another ingredient of rosemary,
known as carnosol, inhibits cancer formation in animal studies.
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