About Me

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Napa, CA, United States
I am 59 years young and I live in the wine country of Northern California. I am very passionate about maintaining good health through natural means. I love to research new and effective methods of improving one's own health and financial situation. I am currently operating two websites called, healthy-life-vitamins.com and iloveacaiberry.com These sites are very informative where you can learn about vitamins, acai berry, and research your nutritional supplement needs. You will find very low prices on all the popular vitamins and save on pure organic acai berry. Come on over for a visit, and when you do, please feel free to leave your comments on the "About Us" or the "Contact Us" page!

Sunday, April 27, 2008

New Product

I think I have found the perfect supplement that has plenty of anecdotal and scientifically validated evidence. It is called the "Acai Berry," and it is an excellent fruit from the Amazon forests of South America. It has a wonderful taste like a blend of dark chocolate and blueberry. It has very large compliment of nutritional ingredients essential to cellular good health.

I have decided to market this product which is harvested and processed, completely through organic methods, by the Amazon Thunder company. It is called "Amazon Thunder Acai Berry Juice and flash-dried powder. You can read more about it at: https://www.amazonthunder.com/members/purplelove

I will be using this blog to promote my new Amazon Thunder Acai Berry! Please feel free to ask me any questions you may have about this great product and about a business opportunity as well!
Terry

Update!!

Brazilian berry destroys cancer cells in lab, University of Florida study shows,
Filed under Research, Health, Sciences, Agriculture on Thursday, January 12, 2006.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A Brazilian berry popular in health food contains antioxidants that destroyed cultured human cancer cells in a recent University of Florida study, one of the first to investigate the fruit’s purported benefits.

Published today in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, the study showed extracts from acai (ah-SAH’-ee) berries triggered a self-destruct response in up to 86 percent of leukemia cells tested, said Stephen Talcott, an assistant professor with UF’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

“Acai berries are already considered one of the richest fruit sources of antioxidants,” Talcott said. “This study was an important step toward learning what people may gain from using beverages, dietary supplements or other products made with the berries.”

He cautioned that the study, funded by UF sources, was not intended to show whether compounds found in acai berries could prevent leukemia in people.

“This was only a cell-culture model and we don’t want to give anyone false hope,” Talcott said. “We are encouraged by the findings, however. Compounds that show good activity against cancer cells in a model system are most likely to have beneficial effects in our bodies.”

Other fruits, including grapes, guavas and mangoes, contain antioxidants shown to kill cancer cells in similar studies, he said. Experts are uncertain how much effect antioxidants have on cancer cells in the human body, because factors such as nutrient absorption, metabolism and the influence of other biochemical processes may influence the antioxidants’ chemical activity.

Another UF study, slated to conclude in 2006, will investigate the effects of acai’s antioxidants on healthy human subjects, Talcott said. The study will determine how well the compounds are absorbed into the blood, and how they may affect blood pressure, cholesterol levels and related health indicators. So far, only fundamental research has been done on acai berries, which contain at least 50 to 75 as-yet unidentified compounds.

“One reason so little is known about acai berries is that they’re perishable and are traditionally used immediately after picking,” he said. “Products made with processed acai berries have only been available for about five years, so researchers in many parts of the world have had little or no opportunity to study them.”

Talcott said UF is one of the first institutions outside Brazil with personnel studying acai berries. Besides Talcott, UF’s acai research team includes Susan Percival, a professor with the food science and human nutrition department, David Del Pozo-Insfran, a doctoral student with the department and Susanne Mertens-Talcott, a postdoctoral associate with the pharmaceutics department of UF’s College of Pharmacy.

Acai berries are produced by a palm tree known scientifically as Euterpe oleracea, common in floodplain areas of the Amazon River, Talcott said. When ripe, the berries are dark purple and about the size of a blueberry. They contain a thin layer of edible pulp surrounding a large seed.

Historically, Brazilians have used acai berries to treat digestive disorders and skin conditions, he said. Current marketing efforts by retail merchants and Internet businesses suggest acai products can help consumers lose weight, lower cholesterol and gain energy.

“A lot of claims are being made, but most of them haven’t been tested scientifically,” Talcott said. “We are just beginning to understand the complexity of the acai berry and its health-promoting effects.”

In the current UF study, six different chemical extracts were made from acai fruit pulp, and each extract was prepared in seven concentrations.

Four of the extracts were shown to kill significant numbers of leukemia cells when applied for 24 hours. Depending on the extract and concentration, anywhere from about 35 percent to 86 percent of the cells died.

The UF study demonstrates that research on foods not commonly consumed in the United States is important, because it may lead to unexpected discoveries, said Joshua Bomser, an assistant professor of molecular nutrition and functional foods at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.

But familiar produce items have plenty of health-giving qualities, he said.

“Increased consumption of fruits and vegetables is associated with decreased risk for many diseases, including heart disease and cancer,” said Bomser, who researches the effects of diet on chronic diseases. “Getting at least five servings a day of these items is still a good recommendation for promoting good health.”

Saturday, April 26, 2008

My New Health Blog

Hello,
My name is Terry Beckham. I have created this blog to support my efforts in my new endeavor with marketing one of the most powerful natural health products in the world-acai berry juice and juice powder! I am excited about this new program and I believe it will be a lot of fun and financially rewarding. I am very interested in scientific research that validates the use of natural health supplements to achieve and maintain excellent health. I am always striving to find health supplements that provide superior support, at the cellular level, and are marketed by word of mouth.

I believe this to be an excellent model of marketing, and that anecdotal evidence of the success of this product, will provide a means of upward financial mobility for the many people who use the supplement and who share their stories with others.