Introduction
For many of us, it sometimes seems as if we are moving
at a whirlwind pace and fatigue is just an unfortunate
by-product of our on-the-go lifestyles. Occasional feelings
of exhaustion and lack of energy can be caused by physical
and emotional stress. However, fatigue becomes a
problem when you struggle every day to gather the energy
and motivation needed to do the things that most of
us take for granted: getting out of bed, excelling at work
and spending time with our families.
Continual fatigue can have a severe negative impact
on quality of life, and it seems to be on the rise. Michael
Sharpe, of the University of Edinburgh Scotland, and
co-author David Wilks, of the Western General Hospital
in Edinburgh, report in the British Medical Journal
that up to 20 percent of all patients who seek medical
care complain of “persistent and troublesome” fatigue.
This makes it one of the most commonly reported
symptoms. The authors also uncover another disturbing
fact: without treatment the prognosis for fatigue
patients is astonishingly poor. More than half will still
be fatigued six months after their initial doctor’s visit.
There are a number of underlying factors that may
cause your malaise. Illnesses such as fibromyalgia, hepatitis
C or chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), or treatments
used in controlling cancer may sap your energy
and motivation. Sometimes, however, doctors cannot
pinpoint any single cause of fatigue. This general fatigue
can be caused by any number of factors including
stress, sleep disorders, depression and physical exertion.
Additionally, women are more likely than men to
suffer from fatigue.
There are a number of steps that your doctor can
take when dealing with fatigue. One of the most commonly
recommended non-drug treatments is engaging
in some physical activity every day. An appropriate
amount of physical activity is required by everyone for
physical and emotional well-being and people who suffer
from fatigue are no exception. A key consideration
for fatigued patients is to know how much to do and
when to stop the activity. Regardless of the level of
activity, the most important guideline is to avoid
increasing your level of fatigue. In general, healthcare
providers advise patients with fatigue to pace themselves
carefully and encourage them to avoid unusual
physical or emotional stress.
Other non-drug therapies your doctor may recommend
include massage therapy, acupuncture, chiropractic,
self-hypnosis, and therapeutic touch. These options
may contribute to feeling better, but they are most effective
when combined with physical activity, including
aquatic therapy, light exercise (adapted to personal capabilities),
and stretching. Some patients may tolerate activities
such as yoga and tai chi that require more energy.
Some drug therapies your doctor may try include:
• Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs):
These drugs can be used to relieve pain in some
patients. Many are available as over-the-counter
medications. They are generally safe when used as
directed, but can cause a variety of adverse
effects, including kidney damage, gastrointestinal
bleeding, abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting.
There is also a slight chance that you may become
dependent on them.
• Low-dose tricyclic antidepressants:
Antidepressants may be prescribed to improve
sleep and to relieve mild, generalized pain. Some
adverse reactions include dry mouth, drowsiness,
weight gain, and elevated heart rate
As you can see, drug therapy sometimes comes
with potentially harmful side effects. They may not
have been shown to cause statistically significant benefits.
Fortunately, there is something you can do to help
add the spring back into your step safely. One of the
most interesting to come along is Biocentric Health's Alexin,
a new homeopathic agent. Alexin
is also among the first of a new class of therapies
known as NanoDrugs™, which you’ll be reading about
a little later. One of Alexin’s components, Taurox SB,
has been clinically shown to help banish fatigue and
improve your focus and energy all day long. It was
developed by researchers at the University of New
Mexico Medical School. The other ingredients in Alexin
also have a history of beneficial effects in the homeopathic
literature.
Keep reading to learn more about this amazing
product and how it can help you to enjoy your life
again. Remember, fatigue may be caused by a serious
medical condition, so be sure to consult your healthcare
provider with any concerns.
What Is A NanoDrug™?
As you discovered in the following section, Alexin’s
primary ingredient, Taurox SB, is one of the first of a
new therapy class known as NanoDrugs. This cutting
edge technology allows scientists to use very small, but
extremely potent, amounts of active ingredients. Such
small doses mean that harmful side effects and toxicity
are almost nonexistent. High potency means that you
have to take the drug less often, making it easier to
comply with your doctor’s prescription and keeping your costs down.
What Exactly Is Alexin?
Alexin contains the homeopathic agent known as
Taurox SB, a chemical combination of taurine, alanine
and an agent to allow oral absorption. The Alexin formula
also contains other homeopathic ingredients for
fatigue and strengthening the immune system. A series
of clinical studies found that Taurox SB helped to
improve energy and focus in people complaining of
fatigue. Over 90% had a reduction in fatigue. The average
reduction was over 50 percent. Because Alexin is
administered in extremely low doses, it is one of the
safest treatments on the market. It is the only one
(except for those that correct anemia) showing statistically
significant benefits.
Alexin works by regulating the amount of cytokines
in your body. Cytokines are proteins that your cells
secrete in order to help regulate your immune system.
Sometimes our cytokine levels get off kilter, however,
and many healthcare professionals believe that this
imbalance can lead to fatigue, lack of focus, myalgia
(muscle pain), and even depression. Alexin’s primary
ingredient, Taurox SB, has been shown to control
cytokine levels in human cells.
Historic Breakthrough
Double-blind placebo-controlled studies indicated
Alexin with Taurox SB had the potential to help individuals
who suffer from the following symptoms. These
were then tested in clinical trials (see details in later
sections).
• Fatigue
• Allergies
• Headaches
• Muscle aches and pains
• Colds
• Viruses
• Premenstrual syndrome (PMS)
• Neurological problems
• Appetite abnormalities
• Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
A Natural Energy Boost
All of the ingredients found in Alexin are based on
natural products. Taken together these ingredients provide
a potent cocktail for relief from fatigue and lack of
focus due to any number of ailments. The other Alexin
ingredients are homeopathically prepared minerals,
which produce benefits from only tiny amounts.
Getting adequate amounts of taurine is essential for
your health and well-being.
Taurine is an amino acid that is produced within
the body. However, sometimes our bodies do not produce
enough of it to keep us healthy. Taurine is concentrated
in your brain, eyes and heart.
The key ingredients are combined to produce Alexin,
in a process known as NanoDrug Manufacturing
Technology. With this technology, scientists can develop
a blend of extremely small amounts of ingredients into a
potent and safe treatment. Because it is delivered to
your body in very low doses there are few, if any, side
effects. This technology is consistent with standard
homeopathic methods. Like other homeopathic drugs,
Alexin is designed to work with the body gently, not by
force, reminding the immune system what is supposed to
do rather than imposing an artificial environment on
your system. NanoDrug technology makes drugs like
Alexin especially potent, probably much more than the
typical homeopathic drug. NanoDrug technology also
benefits you in another way: You need to take Alexin less
often, making it an affordable alternative to pricey prescription
drug therapies.
Pharmaceutical drugs also often have harmful side
effects that can be worse than the condition you are trying
to treat. For example, the popular anti-depressant
Prozac can bring on troublesome side effects such as
difficulty sleeping, anxiety, decrease in libido and rash.
And it can carry a hefty price tag, too: 90 pills will cost
you well over $250! Another fatigue-related drug,
Procrit, only helps anemic patients. It can lighten your
wallet by thousands of dollars and possibly expose you
to headaches, seizures and worsen the anemia.
But Does It Work?
The data presented here comes from presentations at
scientific meetings. As you will see in a later section of
this special report, medical studies have proven time and
again that Alexin is an effective and safe treatment for
both disease-related and general fatigue. Dr. Floyd E.
Taub, who pioneered a series of breakthrough biomedical
technologies for the National Institutes of Health
(NIH), orchestrated clinical studies on Alexin’s main
ingredient, Taurox SB, by independent physicians around
the country. They found that it can be used as an effective
treatment for numerous fatigue-related conditions.
The studies included the use of Taurox SB for the
prevention of allergy attacks, decreased fatigue,
immune system strengthening and improved mental
stamina. The allergy study consisted of 18 patients who
suffered from allergy symptoms. After taking Taurox, 11
of the patients reported a dramatic reduction in symptoms.
The fatigue results were even more convincing.
All but one of the study participants reported reduced
fatigue symptoms and improved sleep after taking
Taurox SB. These patients’ fatigue was caused by a
number of factors including chronic fatigue syndrome,
hepatitis C and cancer.
Scientists were impressed by the “statistically significant”
results. Some patients rated them as miraculous.
To learn more about chronic fatigue syndrome, hepatitis
C, fibromyalgia and cancer-treatment-related
fatigue and see how Alexin may be able to help you,
keep reading this special report. You or your doctor
will want to know the cause of your fatigue so he or she
can determine the appropriate therapy. One of the
miraculous things about Alexin is that is works against
the symptom of fatigue due to all the diseases tested to
date!
What is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
(Also known as Chronic Fatigue Immune
Disregulatory Syndrome).
Doctors believe that as many as half a million
Americans may be living with the mystery known as
chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). CFS is not like the
normal energy ebbs and flows we experience in everyday
life. The early sign of this illness is a strong and
noticeable fatigue that comes on suddenly and often
comes and goes or just never stops. You feel too tired to
do normal activities or are easily exhausted with no
apparent reason. The profound weakness of CFS does
not go away with a few good nights of sleep. Instead, it
slyly steals your energy and vigor over months and
sometimes years.
For many people, CFS begins after a bout with a
cold, bronchitis, hepatitis, or an intestinal bug. For
some, it follows a bout of infectious mononucleosis,
which temporarily saps the energy of many teenagers
and young adults. Often, people say that their illnesses
started during a period of high stress. In others, CFS
develops more gradually, with no clear illness or other
event leading up to it.
Unlike flu symptoms, which usually go away in a
few days or weeks, CFS symptoms either hang on or
come and go frequently for more than six months.
In addition to fatigue, CFS symptoms include:
• Headache
• Tender lymph nodes
• Weakness
• Muscle and joint aches
• Inability to concentrate
Who Gets CFS?
CFS was once stereotyped as a new “yuppie flu”
because those who sought help for the condition in the
early 1980s were mainly well-educated, well-off women
in their thirties and forties. Since this time, doctors have
seen the syndrome in people of all ages, races, and social
and economic classes from several countries around the
world. Still, CFS is diagnosed two to four times more
often in women than in men, possibly because of biological,
psychological, and social influences. However, an
increasingly diverse patient group will likely emerge as
more doctors see CFS as a real disorder.
What Causes CFS?
While no one knows exactly what causes CFS, for
more than a century, doctors have reported seeing illnesses
similar to it. In the 1860s, Dr. George Beard
named the syndrome neurasthenia because he thought
it was a nervous disorder with weakness and fatigue.
Since then, health experts have suggested other explanations
for this baffling illness.
• Iron-poor blood (anemia)
• Low blood sugar (hypoglycemia)
• Environmental allergies
• A body-wide yeast infection (candidiasis)
In the mid-1980s, the illness became known as
“chronic EBV” when laboratory clues led scientists to
wonder whether the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) might be
causing this group of symptoms. New evidence soon
cast doubt on the theory that EBV could be the only
thing causing CFS. High levels of EBV antibodies (disease-
fighting proteins) have now been found in some
healthy people as well as in some people with CFS.
Likewise, some people who don’t have EBV antibodies,
and who thus have never been infected with the virus,
can show CFS symptoms.
How is CFS Diagnosed?
Doctors find it difficult to diagnose CFS because it
has the same symptoms as many other diseases. When
talking with and examining you, your doctor must first
rule out diseases that look similar, such as multiple sclerosis,
in which symptoms can take years to develop. In
follow-up visits, you and your doctor need to be alert to
any new clues or symptoms that might show that the
problem is something other than CFS.
How Can Alexin Help CFS Sufferers?
A study performed by Dr. S. E. Mayerson and Dr.
Floyd E. Taub presented at the First International
Conference on Whole Person Hearing in Bethesda,
Maryland found that CFS patients may benefit by supplementing
their doctor-prescribed treatment plan with
the main ingredient in Alexin. Study participants who
took about two drops once a day for a month showed a
decrease of CFS-related fatigue of almost 50% percent.
The doctors also found no incidences of adverse side
effects in any of the patients who had supplemented
with Alexin. The figure below includes all types of
patients; half had CFS.
Hepatitis C
Scientists isolated and studied the hepatitis C virus
(HCV) 10 years ago. This led to the development of
diagnostic tests to identify people infected with HCV.
Almost four million people in the United States, or
about two percent, are persistently infected, and the
Institute of Medicine now includes hepatitis C virus in
its list of emerging infectious diseases.
HCV damages the liver, one of the body’s most vital
organs. The liver is very important for the overall wellbeing
of your body. It does a number of things to keep
you alive. It removes ”garbage” normally produced by
your body, drugs and other poisons from your blood.
The liver also stores energy for when you need it and is
involved in immunity and production of certain important
proteins including those that allow your blood to
clot after you get cut.
HCV symptoms may include:
• Fatigue
• Nausea
• Fever
• Lack of appetite
• Discomfort or tenderness in the midsection
of the body
• Diarrhea
• Dark yellow urine
• Light-colored stools
• Yellowish eyes and skin
HCV Risk Factors
HCV is spread primarily by contact with blood and
blood products. Blood transfusions or the use, by drug
addicts, of shared, unsterilized or poorly sterilized needles
and syringes have been the main causes of the
spread of HCV in the United States. With the introduction
in 1991 of routine blood screening for HCV antibodies,
and improvements in the test a year later, transfusion-
related hepatitis C has virtually disappeared. At
present, injection drug use is the most common risk factor
for contracting the disease. However, many patients
acquire the disease without any known exposure to
blood or to drug use.
The major high-risk groups for hepatitis C are:
• Injection drug users, including those who used
drugs briefly many years ago.
• People who had blood transfusions before June
1992, when sensitive tests for anti-HCV were introduced
for blood screening.
• People who have frequent exposure to blood
products. These include patients with hemophilia,
solid-organ transplants, chronic renal failure, or
cancer requiring chemotherapy.
• Infants born to HCV-infected mothers.
• Healthcare workers who suffer needle-stick
accidents.
Other groups who may be at slightly increased
risk for hepatitis C are:
• People with high-risk sexual behavior, multiple
partners, and sexually transmitted diseases.
• People who use cocaine, particularly with
intranasal administration, using shared equipment.
Treatment Comes at a Cost
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has
approved treatments that may treat the virus and make
the liver more normal. Three are interferons and the
fourth combines interferon and ribavirin. Unfortunately,
none of these drugs is very effective. Approximately
five percent of infections are eradicated with interferons
and 35 percent with the combination. Newer
preparations may have a success rate of 50% at best. All
have significant side effects. Currently, there is no way
to predict who will or won’t respond.
Side effects may include debilitating:
• Fatigue
• Muscle aches
• Headaches
• Nausea and vomiting
• Skin irritation at the injection site
• Low-grade fever
• Weight loss
• Irritability
• Depression and suicide
• Mild bone marrow suppression
It is quite frequent for the side effects to prevent
patients from working or taking care of their families.
The side effects of treatment are so severe that only a
small percentage of patients take the drugs. Late stage
HCV is the most common cause of liver transplants.
Early on fatigue may be the only symptom.
Alexin Can Help with Fatigue
Fortunately, a safe option exists for fatigued HCV
patients Taurox SB, one of Alexin’s major ingredients,
has been found to decrease the fatigue associated with
hepatitis C. Patients were given Taurox SB for a total
of ten weeks. All of the patients who participated in this
study enjoyed greater energy levels.
One patient, a middle-aged woman, had astounding
results while taking Taurox SB. She entered into the
study with severe persistent fatigue due to the virus.
She had tried everything, including drug therapy, but
nothing seemed to ease her fatigue. After a few weeks
of treatment, the patient was able to get through a
whole day without taking a nap, an idea that would
have been implausible to her prior to starting the Alexin
formula. Another was able to travel to visit her family
for the first time in ten years.
Fibromyalgia
Fibromyalgia is a chronic disorder characterized by
widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue, and multiple
tender points. “Tender points” refers to tenderness that
occurs in precise, localized areas, particularly in the
neck, spine, shoulders, and hips. People with this syndrome
may also experience sleep disturbances, morning
stiffness, irritable bowel syndrome, anxiety, and
other symptoms.
According to the American College of
Rheumatology, fibromyalgia affects three to six million
Americans. It primarily occurs in women of childbearing
age, but children, the elderly, and men can also be
affected.
What Causes Fibromyalgia?
Although the cause of fibromyalgia is unknown,
researchers have several theories about causes or triggers
of the disorder. Some scientists believe that the
syndrome may be initiated by an injury or trauma. This
injury may affect the central nervous system.
Fibromyalgia may be associated with changes in muscle
metabolism, such as decreased blood flow, causing
fatigue and decreased strength. Others believe the syndrome
may be triggered by an infectious agent such as
a virus in susceptible people, but no such agent has
been identified.
How Is Fibromyalgia Diagnosed?
Fibromyalgia, like CFS, is difficult to diagnose
because many of the symptoms mimic those of other
disorders, including CFS. The physician reviews the
patient’s medical history and makes a diagnosis of
fibromyalgia based on a history of chronic widespread
pain that persists for more than three months. The
American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has developed
criteria for fibromyalgia that physicians can use in
diagnosing the disorder. According to ACR criteria, a
person is considered to have fibromyalgia if he or she
has widespread pain in combination with tenderness in
at least 11 of 18 specific tender point sites.
Other symptoms that may manifest themselves in
fibromyalgia patients include fatigue (very frequently),
difficulty sleeping, depression, anxiety, stiffness upon
getting up in the morning, and numbness in the hands
and feet.
The medical community has no definitive answer
for why some people develop fibromyalgia. Theories
include the belief that the sleep disturbances characteristic
of the disease actually cause it to worsen over
time. Other physicians believe that the condition is
caused by changes in the metabolism of your bones and
muscles, leading to the chronic fatigue and weakness
typical of the disease.
Getting Treatment
Treatment of fibromyalgia requires a comprehensive
approach. The physician, physical therapist, and patient
may all play an active role in the management of
fibromyalgia. Studies have shown that aerobic exercises,
such as swimming and walking, improve muscle fitness
and reduce muscle pain and tenderness. Heat and
massage may also give short-term relief. Antidepressant
medications may help elevate mood, improve quality of
sleep, and relax muscles. Patients with fibromyalgia
may benefit from a combination of exercise, medication,
physical therapy, and relaxation.
Alexin Alleviates Fatigue from Fibromyalgia
Because two of the main symptoms of fibromyalgia
are fatigue and sleeping disorders, Alexin may be an
ideal supplement to your doctor-prescribed treatment.
Take the case of Diane, a clinical nutritionist, she had
been diagnosed with fibromyalgia, and experienced
symptoms such as severe fatigue and depression. She
remembered days when she would have to sleep away
more than half the day just to function normally. Diane
decided to give the Alexin formula a try. She was
astounded when, after only five days on the treatment,
she began to regain her former strength and energy.
Most importantly the reduction in fatigue not only
continued while on therapy, it appeared to increase
each week!
Cancer-Related Fatigue
Fatigue is the most common symptom reported by
cancer patients. In fact, an NIH report revealed that at
least 70 percent of cancer patients suffer from life-altering
fatigue that is not alleviated by resting. The exact
cause of this fatigue is not always known. It can be due
to your disease, chemotherapy, radiation, surgery, low
blood counts, lack of sleep, pain, stress, poor appetite,
along with many other factors.
Fatigue from cancer feels different from the fatigue
of everyday life. Patients with cancer have described it
as a total lack of energy and have used words such as
worn out, drained, and wiped out to describe their fatigue.
And rest does not always relieve it. Not everyone
feels the same kind of fatigue. You may not feel
tired while someone else does or your fatigue may not
last as long as someone else’s does. It can last days,
weeks, or months. Fatigue caused by chemotherapy can
appear suddenly. But severe fatigue from chemotherapy
or other therapy does go away gradually if the tumor
responds to treatment. Alexin may help speed the
process.
Alexin is designed to complement standard medical
therapy. It should never be substituted for it. Alexin
treats only your fatigue. Your doctor must identify and
treat any underlying cause.
Coping with Cancer-Related Fatigue
• Studies of Alexin’s Taurox SB component have
found that it may be especially useful to treat the
fatigue endured by cancer patients. Study participants
often report a decrease in fatigue.
General Fatigue
After reading through this report, you may feel that
Alexin is only appropriate for people suffering from
serious illnesses. However, this is not the case. Alexin
can be taken by people suffering from any kind of
fatigue, whether it is stress-related, due to sleeping disruptions.
Fatigue can be a normal and important response to
physical exertion, emotional stress, boredom, or lack of
sleep. However, it can also be a nonspecific sign of a
more serious psychological or physical disorder.
Fatigue that is not relieved by enough sleep, good
nutrition, or a low-stress environment should be
evaluated by your doctor. Because fatigue is a common
complaint, sometimes a potentially serious cause
may be overlooked.
The pattern of fatigue may help your doctor determine
its underlying cause. For example, if you wake up
in the morning rested but rapidly develop fatigue with
activity, you may have an ongoing physical condition like
an under active thyroid. On the other hand, if you wake
up with a low level of energy and have fatigue that lasts
throughout the day, you may have “clinical depression”.
Your doctor will obtain your medical history and
perform a complete physical examination, with special
attention to your heart, lymph nodes, and thyroid. He or
she may ask questions about your lifestyle, habits, and
feelings.
Questions may include:
• How long have you had fatigue? Did it develop
recently or awhile ago?
• Have you had fatigue in the past? If so, does it tend
to occur in regular cycles?
• How many hours do you sleep each night? From
when until when? Do you awake feeling rested or
fatigued? Do you have trouble falling asleep? Do
you awake during the night? Do you snore or does
someone who sleeps nearby tell you that you
snore?
• Do you feel fatigued or tired throughout the day?
Does it tend to get worse as the day goes on or
stays about the same?
• Do you feel bored, stressed, unhappy, or
disappointed?
• How are your relationships?
• Has anyone in your life recently passed away?
• Have you had more activity (mental or physical)
lately?
• What is your diet like?
• Do you get regular exercise?
• Do you have any other symptoms like pain,
headaches, or nausea?
• Have you had any recent change in appetite
(up or down) or weight (up or down)?
• Do you fall asleep uncontrollably during the day?
• Do you take any prescription or non-prescription
medications? Which ones?
Diagnostic tests that may be performed include
the following:
• Blood tests for anemia, thyroid function, and
possible infection.
• Urinalysis
Steps you can take to moderate your fatigue include:
• Plan your day so that you have time to rest.
• Take short naps or breaks, rather than one long
rest period.
• Save your energy for the most important things.
• Try easier or shorter versions of activities you
enjoy.
• Take short walks or do light exercise if possible.
You may find this helps with fatigue.
• Talk to your healthcare provider about ways to
save your energy and treat your fatigue.
• Try activities such as meditation, prayer, yoga,
guided imagery, visualization, etc. You may find
that these help with fatigue.
• Eat as well as you can and drink plenty of fluids.
Eat small amounts at a time, if that is helpful.
• Join a support group. Sharing your feelings with
others can ease the burden of fatigue. You can also
learn how others deal with their fatigue. Your
healthcare provider can put you in touch with a
support group in your area.
• Limit the amount of caffeine and alcohol you drink.
• Allow others to do some things for you that you
usually do.
• Keep a diary of how you feel each day. This will
help you plan your daily activities.
• Report any changes in energy level to your doctor
or nurse.
Side Effects
Adverse side effects are a serious concern in many
treatments for CFS, HCV, fibromyalgia and of course
cancer. Often, the side effects are as bad as, or even
worse than, the symptoms they are trying to alleviate.
Fortunately, you can expect Alexin to be a virtually
side-effect-free therapy for your fatigue. Toxicology
reports done on mice and rats have found that there is
an extremely wide margin of safety between an effective
dosage of Alexin and all its components. and the
amount of material that could be considered harmful. In
fact, mice and rats were given between 133 to 2,000 milligrams
(mg) of pure Taurox SB with no adverse effects.
These dosages are billions of times higher than dosages
in Alexin! The scientists conducting this report stated
that water intoxication would actually prevent a person
from ingesting even one ten-thousandth of the amount
of Alexin anticipated to be toxic.
Effectiveness of Standard Drug Therapy
Pricey prescription drug therapies are not guarantees
against fatigue. A study conducted by Dr. S. Carette
in 1994 found that Elavil and Flexeril were only effective
in a small number of fibromyalgia patients and no
long-term benefits could be established. Although not
performed at the same time and in exactly the same
manner, similar results were found for moclobemide
and Prozac.
Other Fatigue-Busting Steps
There are also several lifestyle changes you can
make that will help regulate your lack of energy and
focus. Here are some tips for reducing fatigue:
• Get adequate, regular, and consistent amounts of
sleep each night.
• Eat a healthy, well-balanced diet and drink plenty
of water throughout the day.
• Exercise regularly.
• Learn better ways to relax. Try yoga or meditation.
• Maintain a reasonable work and personal schedule.
• Change your stressful circumstances, if possible.
For example, switch jobs, take a vacation, and deal directly with problems in a relationship.
• Take a multivitamin. Talk to your doctor about
what you need and what is best for you.
• Avoid alcohol, nicotine, and drug use.
Alexin’s Effectiveness
However, as you’ve seen, data presented at scientific
conferences indicates Taurox SB was effective for
94% of all patients with fatigue who took it regardless of
the cause of their fatigue.
If you have chronic pain or depression, treating
either often helps address the fatigue. However, some
antidepressant medications may cause or worsen
fatigue. Your medication may have to be adjusted to
avoid this problem. Do not stop or change any medications
without instruction from your doctor.
Stimulants (including caffeine) are not truly effective
treatments for fatigue, and can actually make the
problem worse when the drugs are discontinued.
Sedatives also tend to intensify fatigue in the long run.
Call your doctor right away if:
• You are confused or dizzy.
• You have blurred vision.
• You have little to no urine or have recent
swelling and weight gain.
Call your doctor if:
• You have ongoing, unexplained weakness or
fatigue, particularly if accompanied by fever or
unintentional weight loss.
• You have constipation, dry skin, weight gain, or
intolerance to cold.
• You wake up and fall back to sleep multiple times
through the night.
• You have headaches.
• You are taking any medications, prescription or
non-prescription, or using drugs that may cause
fatigue or drowsiness.
• You feel sad or depressed.
• You have insomnia.
Conclusion
Overall, study results presented at scientific conferences
support the hypothesis that Alexin is an extremely
effective aid in the fight against fatigue, no matter the
cause. No one should have to go through life halfasleep.
There is so much to enjoy! Let Alexin help you
regain the vitality and focus you once had.
Click here to learn more about Alexin!
Disclaimer
Individual results from the use of Alexin may vary.
Symptoms may increase before they decrease. This
product and most other homeopathic products and
claims have not been reviewed by the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration. This product is not a substitute
for medication prescribed by your physician. Always
ask your physician before stopping any prescribed
treatments.
Do not take this is you are in need of immediate
medical attention: see a doctor or an emergency room.
If fatigue does not resolve in one month, see a physician.
This product is not intended to diagnose, treat,
cure or prevent any serious underlying disease. It is
only designed to improve quality of life by reducing
fatigue. It is intended only for the treatment of non-lifethreatening
fatigue that patients can recognize and evaluate
without special testing.
Certain of the information and statements contained
in this document are based on certain observations
and scientific data. Such data are inherently
dependent on experimental conditions and may not be
reproduced in other settings.
About The Author
DR. FLOYD E. TAUB, MD
is among today’s most acclaimed
biomedical researchers. His
work in the development of
NanoDrugs™ caps a distinguished
career on the forefront
of cutting-edge medicine. Dr.
Taub worked for years in the
Laboratory of Biochemistry at the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), where his breakthroughs included the
first array image processing system to quantify DNA
hybridization, and plus other achievements in the field
of autoimmune diseases. He went on to found two highly
successful biotech firms.
Dr. Taub is a graduate of the Northwestern
University School of Medicine, and trained in pathology
at the University of Colorado. He is Board Certified in
Anatomic Pathology, and licensed in Maryland and
California.
Decreased Fatigue in Hepatitis C Patients