SCIENTIFICALLY VALIDATED BENEFITS OF ESSENTIAL AMINO ACIDS

The unique AMINO POWER formula is based on research undertaken in the 90's and is provided below. What makes our amino acid formula so different from other products is our unique ratio amount and quality. 

Essential Amino Acids in and of themselves have decades of supporting scientific research, but it's the unique AMINO POWER formula that makes the true potential of amino acids available to everyone. The research showed that the unique formulation of ratio's and amounts created significantly less nitrogen waste which meant that the actual amino acid utilisation/uptake was as close to 100% as you can get in an almost zero calories delivery mechanism.

THE PRIMARY BUILDING BLOCKS

This allowed test subjects to remove protein sources from their diet, use supplementation that followed this science and incredibly not only retain but also build lean muscle mass.

Extrapolating from this we can see the this form of amino acid supplementation allows these primary building blocks of life to be readily available for all systems of the body that require amino acids such as muscle, connective tissue, brain, neurotransmitters, immune system, hormones and gut to get what they need in the most usable, efficient and effective way possible.

AMINO POWER

A revolution in essential amino acid and protein supplementation.

PUBLISHED SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE

Lucà-Moretti, M. (1998). A Comparative, Double-blind, Triple Crossover Net Nitrogen Utilization Study Confirms the Discovery of the Master Amino Acid Pattern. Age (years), 152(176), 41-5.

Pasiakos, S. M., McClung, H. L., McClung, J. P., Margolis, L. M., Andersen, N. E., Cloutier, G. J., … & Young, A. J. (2011). Leucine-enriched essential amino acid (EAA) supplementation during moderate steady state exercise enhances post-exercise muscle protein synthesis. The American journal of clinical nutrition, 94(3), 809-818.

w.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6107748/ ↩︎

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14669815/

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14964348/ ↩︎

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31021358/ ↩︎