Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Rejenx Review

Rejenx Review


Rejenx is one of a multitude of resveratrol “wonder” supplements on the market today. Resveratrol is a compound found in red wine that purportedly is responsible for the health and long life of the wine-drinking French and Italian. Rejenx claims their proprietary blend of ingredients reverses aging, burns fat, and fights cancer.

The Rejenx website has a slew of information posted that suggests their product can make you live to 150 years old, cause your DNA to stop your cells from aging, and they make it look as though the product is endorsed by such respectable media outlets as CNN, 60 Minutes, and Fox News. Of course, none of these suggestions are true, although the website appears more respectable than any other we have seen.

How Does Rejenx Work?


The Rejenx proprietary blend is made through good manufacturing process using a cold method that is supposed to retain more nutrients. In addition Rejenx uses something they call nano-micro-nutrient-technology to direct the ingredients to the parts of the body where they are needed. Although directing orally ingested ingredients to various body parts is impossible, it does sound scientific enough for the average person to believe.

Rejenx is said to work because when cells divide, sometimes the DNA is not perfectly replicated. This bad DNA builds up in the cells and resveratrol cleans it out, which, in turn, activates a special gene that makes people live longer. Again, this process sounds good and makes for a great sales pitch but the underlying problem is that none of it has been scientifically proven.

Rejenx Ingredients


Rejenx uses a proprietary blend of ingredients with resveratrol being at the forefront. Resveratrol has proven to be able to help people with type 2 diabetes because it regulates insulin and blood sugar but no other health benefits have been proven. In fact, over 90% of newspapers have reported that it is safer and more effective to drink wine than it is to take resveratrol extract. That’s right. Alcohol is safer than resveratrol. Other ingredients are:

• Quercetin – a bioflavonoid that is linked to mouth ulcers and headaches.
• Baicalein – a mild antioxidant used in Chinese medicine.
• Grape seed extract – has no side effects, but on the other hand, it doesn’t have any beneficial effects either.

Buy Rejenx


Rejenx is sold online directly from the company with bottles of 60 capsules going for $59.95. It is also available from individuals all over the country, as the company appears to be geared more toward recruiting sellers in an Amway-type marketing program than actually selling any product.

Rejenx does not offer any free trials and only vaguely references a 90-day guarantee but provides no details. As mentioned, the Rejenx company is only selling product as an afterthought. Everything about the site is made to recruit new dealers.

Is Rejenx Effective for Anti-Aging?


Just as suspected, Rejenx does not come through with any of its claims. The Rejenx product doesn’t do much of anything and the addition of the ingredient quercetin makes people susceptible to debilitating side effects.

The Rejenx web site looks nice and their false information is presented beautifully, but reading through the information on the website slowly reveals that the executives of Rejenx aren’t interested in helping people. They are only interested in recruiting gullible people to sell their product to family and friends.

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