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The Willner Window Product Reference Catalog, Summer 2014
since 1911
• Willner Chemists •
the nutritional supplement professionals
Omega-3 Visage
New, Improved Willvite
Multivitamin/Multimineral Tablets
How do you make the best even better?
Incorporate the latest research!
• Reduce calcium from 1000mg to 800 mg
• Increase magnesium from 500mg to 600 mg
• Increase vitamin D3 from 400 IU to 800 IU
• Increase vitamin B12 from 100 mcg to 200 mcg
• Reduce selenium from 200 mcg to 100 mcg
• Reduce chromium from 200 mcg to 100 mcg
• Use chelates and active coenzyme forms
• Add natural lycopene, 2 mg
• Increase lutein from 1 mg to 2 mg
• Increase CoQ10 level from 5 mg to 20 mg
• Increase levels of B-vitamins by 20%
• Reduce zinc to 20 mg
Willvite is a unique, specially designed multivitamin-multimineral
supplement, designed to satisfy the needs of those seeking to limit their
supplement intake to as few products as possible, as well as those looking
for the best "foundation" formula to which they can add specific nutrients
relative to their individual health requirements.
Ask for New Willvite Tablets -- Available Now!
Willvite, 120 Tabs, Product Code: 30439
Willvite, Iron Free, 120 Tabs, Product Code: 44384
Willvite: Suggested Dose: 4 tablets daily.
so far are from omega-3 fatty acids.
Omega-3s preserve brain size
The brain shrinks with age and also in
Alzheimer’s disease. In this study, doctors
measured the omega-3s EPA and DHA in
1,111 older women, and followed up for
eight years. Women with higher levels of
omega-3s had larger brain volume overall,
particularly in the hippocampus, the centrally
located part of the brain that plays an impor-
tant role in memory, and is where brain atro-
phy begins before signs of Alzheimer’s dis-
ease emerge.
Adding omega-3s through diet and supple-
ments may potentially delay the normal loss
of brain cells by one or two years, doctors
said.
Reference: Alzheimer’s and Dementia;
February, 2014, Published Online
Omega-3s may slow
Alzheimer’s disease and
preserve brain size
Recovering from the inflammation
cycle
Testing an entirely new theory, doctors
have found that the final “cleanup” phase of
the inflammatory process may be disrupted
in Alzheimer’s disease. In healthy individuals,
when pathogens attack the body, the
immune system releases infection-fighting
cells which kill the invaders. Then, other
“cleanup” molecules digest and clear the cell
debris, and growth factors stimulate tissue
repair. In Alzheimer’s disease, these cleanup
and recovery molecules are at lower levels
than in healthy people.
In the study of 35 participants with mild
cognitive impairment or Alzheimer’s disease,
and 21 healthy people, researchers also
found a link between these lower levels of
cleanup and recovery molecules and
impaired memory function.
Discussing their findings, doctors said that
stimulating the final cleanup phase of the
inflammatory process may reduce brain
nerve-cell death, slowing the disease and
improving cognition. In the lab, they have
begun testing how cleanup molecules may
help preserve brain nerve function, and the
most promising molecules they have found
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