A Natural CURE for Alzheimer’s?!
In this life, you only get one brain.
That’s why you do everything you can to protect it.
But if you’re having “senior moments”… like forgetting your neighbor’s name … or where you parked your car, you might be worried.
But don’t be.
Because researchers have just discovered an all-natural way to CURE Alzheimer’s.
And it may be sitting in your kitchen right now
Turmeric is the trademark yellow spice used in Indian food. But it is much more than a flavor enhancer.
Turmeric has been used for its healing properties for thousands of years.
A compound within this tasty spice called curcumin has remarkable antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.
It is so potent that it has been shown to be beneficial in some of the worst diseases of our time, like cancer, heart disease, and arthritis.
In a recent study, scientists gave a curcumin supplement to patients with Alzheimer’s disease. These patients all had severe behavioral symptoms, including irritability, agitation, anxiety, and apathy.
After just 12 weeks of taking the curcumin, all the participants showed DRASTIC improvements on their neuro-psychiatric inventory questionnaire.
This is a BIG deal. The behavioral symptoms of Alzheimer’s are often as devastating as the memory loss that characterizes the disease.
But here’s the really exciting part… Within ONE YEAR of taking curcumin, patients who had forgotten their family members recognized them AGAIN.
Results like these strike at the heart of Alzheimer’s disease, offering the hope of reversing hands-down the most heart-wrenching effect of the disease.
If that’s not a CURE, I don’t know what is.
The downside of this study is that it only included three patients. But I don’t care if it only included ONE.
These are unheard of results in Alzheimer’s treatment.
And even though more research does need to be conducted, there’s no need to wait for that to happen to start taking a curcumin supplement – or giving it to a loved one facing dementia.
I know that’s what I would do.
To a brighter day,
Dr. Richard Gerhauser, M.D.