ROCHESTER, N.Y., March 23 /PRNewswire/ -- You went on a diet. Great. You lost weight. Awesome. But what are your chances of keeping the weight off? What are your chances of avoiding the notorious Yo-Yo diet? The Center for the Biology of Chronic Disease recommends that you turn to your doctor and ask for a referral to a simple blood test that measures the concentration of your IgG antibodies against two prevalent viruses, EBV (Epstein-Barr Virus) and CMV (Cytomegalovirus). Look at the results. The higher the IgG values, the lower are your chances of keeping the weight off for the long run.
Suppose the blood test shows that you have high IgG values; how can you improve your chances of maintaining the lower body weight? By taking Gene-Eden (http://www.gene-eden.com/), a new dietary supplement based on Dr. Hanan Polansky's discovery that can assist in controlling the level of latent viruses in your body.
What is the relationship between latent viruses and weight gain?
According to Dr. Hanan Polansky's highly acclaimed scientific discovery published by the Center for the Biology of Chronic Disease (http://www.cbcd.net/book.htm), viral DNA, which lays hidden in adipocytes (fat cells), starves the human DNA in these cells. As a genetic parasite, the latent viral genes use resources they "steal" from the human genes. The "starved" human genes produce an abnormal level of proteins, which leads to diseases, such as obesity, cancer, heart disease, arthritis, and diabetes. This effect of the latent viral DNA on human genes inspired Dr. Hanan Polansky to call the discovery the "starved" gene phenomenon.
The irregular behavior of the human genes in infected adipocytes causes an increase in the number of these cells and an increase in their fat content. Recent independent studies confir
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