The Dangers of Creatinine
In today’s attempt to be a healthy society, we continue to destroy our bodies with toxins that we do not have knowledge about.
The purpose of writing this book is to educate on The Dangers of Creatinine.
Creatinine is a very dangerous bio-waste material produced by spent creatine. But, you can also ingest creatinine.
This can occur by how you cook your meats or from commercially available creatine products.
While creatine can be thought of as essential ‘bio-fuel’, creatinine – irrespective of its origin must be considered ‘bio-waste’. While no one in the scientific arena questions the safety of normal physiological-level creatine, the occasional controversy arises when the physiological creatine level is artificially maintained at super-physiological levels. In such instances, the amount of this spent fuel generated can increase significantly, along with its potential to cause physiological burden and unknown negative impact over time. It is this latent potential, suggested in some of the animal studies, as well as occasional antidotal human reports, that has caused the sounding of a cautionary note with regard to the perpetual, chronic use of large gram quantities of creatine monohydrate.
This book will also address where creatinine comes from and how to avoid it along with what are the causes of creatinine on the body.
1007975281
The purpose of writing this book is to educate on The Dangers of Creatinine.
Creatinine is a very dangerous bio-waste material produced by spent creatine. But, you can also ingest creatinine.
This can occur by how you cook your meats or from commercially available creatine products.
While creatine can be thought of as essential ‘bio-fuel’, creatinine – irrespective of its origin must be considered ‘bio-waste’. While no one in the scientific arena questions the safety of normal physiological-level creatine, the occasional controversy arises when the physiological creatine level is artificially maintained at super-physiological levels. In such instances, the amount of this spent fuel generated can increase significantly, along with its potential to cause physiological burden and unknown negative impact over time. It is this latent potential, suggested in some of the animal studies, as well as occasional antidotal human reports, that has caused the sounding of a cautionary note with regard to the perpetual, chronic use of large gram quantities of creatine monohydrate.
This book will also address where creatinine comes from and how to avoid it along with what are the causes of creatinine on the body.
The Dangers of Creatinine
In today’s attempt to be a healthy society, we continue to destroy our bodies with toxins that we do not have knowledge about.
The purpose of writing this book is to educate on The Dangers of Creatinine.
Creatinine is a very dangerous bio-waste material produced by spent creatine. But, you can also ingest creatinine.
This can occur by how you cook your meats or from commercially available creatine products.
While creatine can be thought of as essential ‘bio-fuel’, creatinine – irrespective of its origin must be considered ‘bio-waste’. While no one in the scientific arena questions the safety of normal physiological-level creatine, the occasional controversy arises when the physiological creatine level is artificially maintained at super-physiological levels. In such instances, the amount of this spent fuel generated can increase significantly, along with its potential to cause physiological burden and unknown negative impact over time. It is this latent potential, suggested in some of the animal studies, as well as occasional antidotal human reports, that has caused the sounding of a cautionary note with regard to the perpetual, chronic use of large gram quantities of creatine monohydrate.
This book will also address where creatinine comes from and how to avoid it along with what are the causes of creatinine on the body.
The purpose of writing this book is to educate on The Dangers of Creatinine.
Creatinine is a very dangerous bio-waste material produced by spent creatine. But, you can also ingest creatinine.
This can occur by how you cook your meats or from commercially available creatine products.
While creatine can be thought of as essential ‘bio-fuel’, creatinine – irrespective of its origin must be considered ‘bio-waste’. While no one in the scientific arena questions the safety of normal physiological-level creatine, the occasional controversy arises when the physiological creatine level is artificially maintained at super-physiological levels. In such instances, the amount of this spent fuel generated can increase significantly, along with its potential to cause physiological burden and unknown negative impact over time. It is this latent potential, suggested in some of the animal studies, as well as occasional antidotal human reports, that has caused the sounding of a cautionary note with regard to the perpetual, chronic use of large gram quantities of creatine monohydrate.
This book will also address where creatinine comes from and how to avoid it along with what are the causes of creatinine on the body.
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Product Details
BN ID: | 2940015112115 |
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Publisher: | BookLocker.com, Inc. |
Publication date: | 09/03/2012 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 148 |
File size: | 934 KB |
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