Fantastic! This cheap product prevents pain and regulates blood flow

New research suggests that the cocoa can ease the pain of kbbwa during walking for people with peripheral artery diseases. PAD is a painful condition that causes the narrowing of arteries, reducing blood flow from heart to heart. Touch over 8.5 million people in the United States who are 40 years old and older. [...]
New research suggests that the cocoa can ease the pain of kbbwa during walking for people with peripheral artery diseases.
PAD is a painful condition that causes the narrowing of arteries, reducing blood flow from heart to heart. Touch over 8.5 million people in the United States who are 40 years old and older. The most common symptoms are pain, tribulation, cramps, weaknesses, or other discomforts in leg muscles during walking.
“Arapy is available to improve performance in people with PAD”, said lead study author Dr. Mary McDermott in a news release. She's a professor of preventive medicine at Feinberg Medical School at Northwestern University in agoikago. Besides reducing the flow of blood on foot, people with peripheral artery diseases have shown that they have damaged the machine in their muscles”.
Mittochondria, she said, is known as the cell's thermal power plant turning food into energy. The best mitocolndial activity is accompanied by the best performance in walking. Researchers believe that the epicatechin, an component of cacao, can increase mitocolordial activity and muscle health at the feet of patients.
The study, published in the magazine Crisis Research of the American Heart Association, examined 44 people with PACE who were at least 60 years old. Those who drank a drink containing cocoa three times a day for six months were able to walk up to 42.6m more in a six-minute test on foot, this is compared to those who did not drink any cocoa content. Those who consumed cocoa had also adjusted the flow of blood to their feet and certain muscle functions.
If our results are confirmed in a larger study, these findings suggest that cacao a relatively cheap, secure and accessible product can potentially produce significant improvements in leg muscle health, blood flow and walking performance for patients with PAD”, McDermot said.









