January 26, 2012: by admin

Experimentally-induced heart attack in laboratory mice produced scarred heart on left (white areas) while Longevinex®-treated mice exhibit less scarring as measured in the bar charts presented above the heart images.
To view the entire research paper click here >>
Western blot tests are ink blots that indicate the intensity of protein-making by a gene. While some investigators have called into question the western blot images used in studies like this (shown here) which are often photographically enhanced for reproduction purposes in science journals, please refer to the bar chart for the accurate numerical comparison of gene activation after a heart attack (I-R = ischemia- reperfusion, meaning after oxygenated blood has been resupplied to the heart).

Increasingly, up to 3-months following an experimentally induced heart attack in laboratory mice, the bar chart unequivocally shows the Sirtuin1 survival gene is activated over time in rodent hearts by Longevinex® following a heart attack.
To view the entire research paper click here >>
Superiority Of Longevinex® Over Plain Resveratrol Experimentally- Induced Heart Attack In Excised Rodent Heart Reference: PLoS One December 2010 |
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| Measure | Longevinex® | Plain Resveratrol | ||
| After heart attack, no treatment; | After heart attack, with Longevinex® | After heart attack, no treatment | After heart attack, with plain resveratrol | |
| Size (area) of heart attack (scar tissue) | 35% | 20% (43% reduction) | 35% | 24% (32% reduction) |
| Pumping pressure of the heart (mm Hg) | 70 | 140 (100% improvement) | 75 | 90 (20% improvement) |
MicroRNA analysis was conducted at the Laboratory of Physiologic Studies, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
Posted in Longevinex, Studies
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