There are a multitude of articles, books, interviews, studies and films that address this topic, and the most common problem is the contradiction of data. There are parties that claim that a ketogenic diet helps to balance the hormonal system, there are other parties that claim that it turns everything upside down. We are dealing with a complex and, at the same time, delicate subject, and in the data we have at our disposal it is very possible that both of them are right and at the same time, paradoxically, neither one nor the other is right. This is because we live in duality, in a polarized reality, but also because there are missing pieces of the puzzle.
Initially, when I started writing this article, I intended to take and dissect each metabolic disease separately. While studying the subject, the text changed its form. I realized that what matters is to know the mechanisms by which these metabolic imbalances occur, and as I analyzed them, I realized that they all converge to one: Leptin resistance! Thus, I prefer to define some terms and some notions, for the specialized language to be understood, and to put the spotlight on the metabolic processes involved. I will expand only on the current one.
Stem Cell Regenesis – because we`re worthy of it… There are several technologies that involve stem cells worldwide. One of these is Laminine. The story of Laminine[1] begins in 1929 with Dr. John R. Davidson (Canada), who discovers during his research that the fertilized chicken egg triples in size in one of the first 14 days after fertilization. His research on how this information could be used for the benefit of mankind continued only after another 50 years, when Dr. Bjodne Eskeland (Norway) managed to isolate these components that trigger the activation of stem cells and created the formula for what we call today LAMININE®.