Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Peripheral Artery Disease

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Peripheral Artery Disease

Peripheral Artery Disease is a disease of the blood vessels that are outside the heart and is outside the brain. It involves the legs, arms, the vessels of the stomach and the organs.

Reynaud’s syndrome is considered a peripheral artery disease that spasms when your hands go into spasm from cold and other precipitating problems. This is not what is usually called peripheral artery disease.

In the past peripheral artery disease was thought to be unique and a separate disease but it is not. It is part of the cardiovascular system and cardiovascular disease has a similar disease pattern throughout the body.

What are the symptoms of peripheral vascular disease? Intermittent claudication, cramping in the legs while walking, is the main symptom. Buttock pain when walking is another form of claudication,

But more subtly, people find that their legs are weak. They don’t talk about pain, they talk about weakness. Their legs are becoming old, they just don’t have the push, the strength, the vitality they use to and their legs use to be the strongest part of their body. Often that is the most significant symptom because people adjust to physical weakness as they age. Different colors occur in the legs with decreased blood flow, a bluish or reddish tone. Physically cold feet are a frequent symptom.

I have had exceptional success using l-arginine. We have had no problems with amputations and no problems with sores we couldn’t heal. We have had exceptional success with no amputations in 17 years.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Gerald Reavan

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I am very excited to share with you that we are now moving to a new phase. I will be interviewing Gerald Reaven MD PhD the physician researcher that coined the phrase Syndrome-X (metabolic syndrome) and then defined the term.

The September 8th show (posting date) will feature Dr. Reaven. The topics will include his current passion/focus addressing metabolic syndrome in the Hispanic community.

Metabolic Syndrome/Syndrome-X includes weight gain, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, etc. now affects the majority of all adults in America.

Look at this site for recent programs and sign up so you will not miss this event. It will also be on the 90 seconds on health.

www.RadioForYourHealth.com

This will be a watershed event.

Dr. Joe

Monday, August 25, 2008

Penelope is here THIS week

Dr. Prendergast states in this video that Penelope Mayes, RN, CDE will be in the office next week. That is THIS week (August 25-29). This video was to be sent out last Friday, but due to technical difficulties, it was not.

Schedule your appointment with Penelope!

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Friday, August 22, 2008

Managing Your Diabetes

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Managing Your Diabetes

A program to learn to use Byetta, to learn what Byetta is about if you are thinking about trying Byetta and learn why Byetta is creating such a stir in the diabetes community.

September 11, 10-11:30 AM (Thursday)

It will be held at our office. Let us know if you are coming.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Autonomic Neuropathy II

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Autonomic Neuropathy: Diagnosis and Treatment

Joseph Prendergast, M.D.


Ask most people with diabetes what neuropathy means and they'll quickly refer to symptoms of burning feet or numbness in the extremities. But these well-known manifestations of peripheral sensory neuropathy only tell half the story; in fact, as many as 60 percent of people with diabetes may suffer from autonomic neuropathy, another less-mentioned form of peripheral neuropathy. And while autonomic neuropathy may actually be considerably more deadly than its more familiar cousin, awareness of the condition and its dangers is only beginning to grow among doctors and patients alike.

While diabetic sensory neuropathy damages the sensory nerves in the extremities, diabetic autonomic neuropathy involves damage to the nerves serving the heart, all internal organs, and other processes that are not under direct conscious control. Impairment of the nerves serving the bladder or genitalia may cause urinary incontinence or erectile dysfunction. Sweat gland function may be affected, leading to uncontrolled perspiration, or a lack of it, resulting in overheating and dry skin. Autonomic neuropathy may also affect the nerves that internally sense blood pressure, leading to blood pressure that is too high or too low. Yet another complication is gastroparesis, a dysfunction of the stomach’s autonomic nerves that may lead to slowed digestion, bloating, constipation, diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting.

Recent research indicates that autonomic neuropathy’s most common and life-threatening consequences may be cardiac. Cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy can affect both heart rate control and cardiovascular dynamics. Add these effects to the already-serious tendency of diabetes to raise blood lipids and you have a condition ripe for disaster. Studies indicate that the onset of later-stage, symptomatic diabetic autonomic neuropathy is associated with a 50 percent mortality rate over the following five years

Early detection and intervention are of prime importance in heading off the potentially serious consequences of autonomic neuropathy. Yet surveys indicate that as few as 8 percent of diabetes patients know what autonomic neuropathy is, and only 2 percent believe they have undergone screening. To compound the awareness problem, diabetic neuropathy has a slow and insidious onset, and many patients may suffer from the condition unknowingly for years. Case reports abound in which autonomic neuropathy has gone undetected in patients with other chronic conditions such as Parkinson's disease. Studies indicate that as many as 60 percent of all people with diabetes have some form of neuropathy, although an estimated 30 to 40 percent of those are in the pre-symptomatic stage and are therefore unlikely to know of their condition .

In our practice, we make a concerted effort to quickly identify patients with pre-symptomatic and symptomatic autonomic neuropathy, and then use a variety of interventions to get their condition under control. We routinely measure patients’ heart rate variability, which research shows can help detect diabetic autonomic neuropathy in its early pre-symptomatic stages.

The American Heart Association and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists both recently declared heart rate variability as a recommended test for detecting autonomic dysfunction in diabetes . Heart rate variability testing has previously been limited to the research lab setting due to the fact that it called for customized and computerized analysis of electrocardiograms, but today physicians nationwide can incorporate a heart rate variability test, such as the DyAnsys System, into a single office visit.

Using the DyAnsys test, we look at heart rate variability response. We are able to track patients’ heart rate variability over an extended period of time. With these and other test results as our guide, we can quickly set an individualized treatment regimen. People with diabetes should be tested for heart rate variability at least once per year as part of their personal diabetes management routine.

More than 25% of diabetics achieve heart rate variability test scores below the 5th percentile (and therefore abnormal) for a healthy population. Therefore, this form of testing identifies a large group with autonomic dysfunction .

When we detect diabetic autonomic neuropathy, the first and most important focus of treatment is blood sugar control. We find that many of our patients, particularly those with Type 2 diabetes, have not been under tight control for some time. Until recently, researchers were unsure as to whether high blood sugar levels were actually responsible for complications of diabetes. In 1993, the results of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) largely put those doubts to rest. The nationwide study looked at 1400 people with Type 1 diabetes, half of whom followed their regular self-treatment regimen, and half who adopted a tighter standard for blood sugar control. Early signs of kidney and eye disease were significantly lower in the tighter-control group, and their rates of diabetic neuropathy were 60 percent lower . Tight blood sugar control appeared so beneficial that the study was stopped a full year early so that the results could be announced.

Tight blood sugar control is now the standard treatment for Type 1 diabetes, and additional studies from Japan and Europe indicate that controlling blood sugar slows the development of complications in people with Type 2 as well. Patients with Type 2, however, must walk a finer line; tight blood sugar may have the somewhat paradoxical effect of increasing weight in many patients, and weight gain exacerbates diabetes. Maintaining healthy blood sugar levels while controlling or reducing weight remains a challenge for many people with diabetes. Most diabetologists recommend that people who want to avoid neuropathy should work with an endocrinologist, a dietician and a diabetes nurse educator.

Those without diabetes begin treatment with ProArgi9 plus at a double dose and Mistica at a double dose. Retesting beginning at 30 days sets the pace for the time for reversal. If the situation is not progressing fast enough, the addition of Core Greens is necessary. Treatment continues until normal and then checked each 6 months until one year. Then it is checked yearly.

The consistent yearly check is necessary since the etiology is unknown. With diabetes we have a traditional series of measurements where all the neuropathy can be watched in addition to the autonomic neuropathy. New medications as Byetta and Januvia appear to add efficiencies to diminishing the swings of blood glucose and may add to success.

Type 1 diabetes can use all these therapies but in the past we have developed proven therapies that have shown to be quite useful.

We begin our intervention by introducing the patient to the use of an insulin pump, which we have found extremely effective in helping to control even the most “brittle” diabetic patients. The pump can deliver a slow, steady dose of insulin, mimicking the role of the pancreas, which normally supplies the body with insulin. At the same time, the pump can be set to deliver large “bolus” doses of insulin at mealtimes, again, just as the pancreas does. Our goal is to consistently bring patients’ glycoslated hemoglobin levels below 7.0%, and using the pump, we can usually achieve this within one month.

We also use a number of other interventions to ward off coronary artery disease, including administration of 800 mg of the antioxidant vitamin E per day, and l-arginine, an amino acid that smoothes the internal lining of blood vessels.

Perhaps the most important things we can do for our patients with diabetes are to make them aware of autonomic neuropathy, to let them know whether they have it, and to help them keep blood sugar levels in an acceptable range. Doing so not only helps reduce the risk of heart disease, but also lowers the risk of diabetic eye, kidney and nerve disease, each of which patients dearly want to avoid.

Diabetic autonomic neuropathy has been called a “silent killer,” because so few patients realize that they suffer from it, and yet its effects can be so lethal. With a brief, 15-minute test that we can administer in the office, and some relatively modest interventions, we can help many patients live longer, healthier lives.

Dr. Joseph Prendergast, M.D. F.A.C.P. F. A.C.P. is an endocrinologist and founder of Endocrine Metabolic Medical Center, Palo Alto, California 94306

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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Autonomic Neuropathy

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Autonomic Neuropathy

Autonomic Neuropathy is a relatively common disease that has manifestations that are distressing but sometimes is ignored. Our device for the measurement of Autonomic Neuropathy has only been around in this generation for about the past 10 months, having just approved by the FDA.

  • Knowing you have this disorder is very important. The symptoms consist of,
  • Dizziness and fainting feeling upon standing, caused by a drop in blood pressure.
  • Difficulty starting urination, overflow problems that make you lose control and inability to empty your bladder completely.
  • Sexual difficulties that includes erectile dysfunction or ejaculation problems in men, and vaginal dryness and difficulties with arousal and orgasm in women
  • Retention of food in the stomach that can cause a feeling of fullness after eating, loss of appetite, diarrhea, constipation, abdominal bloating, nausea, vomiting and heartburn
  • Sweating abnormalities, especially increased sweating, so the body can't regulate its temperature; also decreased sweating, sometimes after eating
  • Sluggish pupil reaction, with difficulty adjusting from light to dark. Driving at night can be a problem.
  • Exercise problems occur when your heart rate remains unchanged instead of increasing and decreasing in response to your activity level. This is a dangerous situation.
  • Lack of usual warning signs to hypoglycemia, which often includes shakiness, increased heart rate, sweating and palpitations.
We have additional handouts that describe further late stage symptoms. Like most situations, early identification of the problem is best. Over the last 7 years, we have worked on the treatment that for most people works well fairly rapidly. There are some who do not respond well at all. It seems to depend on the cause to determine how well things respond.

The testing takes 9 minutes. The price is only $100 on Wednesday mornings and afternoons; normally it is $150. The treatment is usually successful in two or three months and as soon as 30 days in some individuals.

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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Culture of Believers

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Monday, August 11, 2008

Rx for Managing Your Health

Doctor Joe search for “Dr. Joe’s” Rx for Managing Your Health” on Amazon.com

After a year I got curious about what the world thought about by book and found only a couple have been sold and only a couple reviews (there were ten the first week it came out in the first year).

But what really surprised me was the two other Amazon-like Internet book sales stores that had it up for $51.00 and $90.00. There were as many as 3369 mostly positive ratings!

I wonder how my second book will do…

Friday, August 08, 2008

Peripheral Neurometer

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Thursday, August 07, 2008

Cardiovascular Profiler

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Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Effects of Intensive Glucose Lowering in Type 2

New England Journal of Medicine, Article June 12, 2008. “Effects of Intensive Glucose Lowering in Type 2 Diabetes.”

This has to do with an article that just used one drug, a Sulfonylurea, to lower the glucose. This one drug significantly lowered the hemoglobin A1C and changed other metabolic measurements.

This program increased glucose control for 3 ½ years, resulting in increased mortality but no other evidence of cardiovascular disease or success. Another major outcome was kidney improvement.

The additional difficulty I have seen in my practice is dramatic worsening of retinopathy. We had one 35 year old woman in a situation where she was getting 4 to 5 operations per month to control retinal bleeding with a detached retina

This study again indicates that diabetes is a multifactorial problem and control of glucose alone may not be the best treatment.

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Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Vitamin D Prevents Peripheral Heart Disease

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Monday, August 04, 2008

The Oral Systemic Connection

There is a new weekly radio show starting in the San Francisco Bay area the first weekend of August. The weekly broadcast will be streamed live online at
http://radiotime.com/station/s_35297/KDOW_1220.aspx

( all radio broadcasts will be archived & podcast down loadable on AskDrSmiles too)

www.AskDrSmiles.com radio broadcast.

It will be featuring my www.drjoe.drsmiles.net “Professional SmilesPage” on the Professional Members registration page:
http://www.drsmiles.net/index.cgi?file=membership_professionals_index.nrml

patients can register for their FreeSmilesPage provided by DrJoe. (see FREE SmilesPage tab).

Lastly , here is a link to “Why DrSmiles ? “
http://www.drsmiles.net/bol.cgi?file=whydrsmiles.nrml

that presents the Ask Dr. Smiles themes and reasons why patients should join Dr.Smiles.net …the iRx Community That Your Doctor Prescribes !

In the San Francisco Bay area on Saturdays and Sundays at 9 AM.

KDOW - 1220 AM Palo Alto, CA - Listen Online
KDOW - 1220 AM Palo Alto, CA - listen online, hosts, location, and broadcast information.
radiotime.com/station/s_35297/KDOW_1220.aspx

At the Annual American Diabetes Association held in San Francisco last June it was said that 20 % of all atherosclerotic lesions begin in the mouth. Inflammation that begins in the gums “seeds” into other vascular tissue in the body.

This radio show is similar in intent, coming from the dental community, to the Cardiometabolic Health Conference to be held in Boston October 15-18, 2008.
www.cardiometabolichealth.org
“Cardiometabolic risk is the new paradigm that challenges us to understand patients’ risk for developing cardiovascular disease and diabetes. This conference is THE place to hear all the latest information on CM risk.” – Christopher Cannon, MD

Sunday, August 03, 2008

8 Reasons Why Physicians Should Use Arginine

Anti-aging benefits. Promotes release of human growth hormone (hgh)

R
educes cholesterol and plaque formation

Great tasting

Improves memory function

Nitric oxide aids in keeping blood vessels elastic. Improves circulation.

Infection killer. Increases immune system, decreases inflammation.

N
utritional supplement. Quick and easy.

Energizing. Boosts energy levels.

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Saturday, August 02, 2008

New Rules for Healthcare

This short opinion piece was submitted to LA Times and was published in the Fourth of July weekend in their "Blowback" section on-line. Jacob Kuriyan is a good friend and a great thinker about the best approach for increasing quality and decreasing costs in health care.

Dr. Joe

New rules for healthcare
A focus on chronic disease would mean lower costs and easier access
By Jacob Kuriyan

In “Insurance ‘eggheads’ make women pay,” Times columnist David Lazarus explains how insurance companies set different rates by sex. This leaves employers to use age and sex as the main criteria for predicting costs. Because older people tend to have more medical needs and employees age, these models always predict a rise in annual medical costs. Recognizing that aging is immutable, employers are resigned to the fate that cost increases are inevitable.

The Golden Rule of business, that he who has the gold sets the rules, is true in most markets—except in U.S. healthcare.

A different model of healthcare costs—one that uses parameters that can be monitored and controlled—is needed. Employers could then bring their considerable financial skills to bear in managing costs. The good news is that this is not difficult to accomplish.

The basis for this new model comes from a simple observation: Over 80% of all medical costs can be attributed to patients with chronic diseases like diabetes, asthma, coronary artery disease and cancer. Since chronic disease is a much better indicator of cost than age and sex, why not use the number of chronic patients and the severity of their diseases to build a better cost model for healthcare expenditures?

By definition there is no cure for chronic disease and when neglected these diseases can become severe and result in soaring medical costs. Analyzing claims and lab data could establish the correlation between costs and the severity of the disease, as measured by factors like blood pressure, cholesterol, body mass index and blood sugar. An employer’s goal for cost saving would then become quite simple: make sure that the chronic diseases of their employees do not get any worse. By setting target values of risk factors for their employee population, employers could be active participants in controlling and managing healthcare costs.

As the emphasis shifts to preventing employees’ chronic problems from getting worse, employers – and this includes anyone who pays for healthcare – would in effect impose new rules on insurers, providers and patients, which would require them to behave and operate differently.

Insurers could no longer pretend that preventive care is already part of the healthcare delivery program and that doctors are consistently providing such care. The new rules would require that they go further: They would have to formulate incentives for patients to participate in the program, offer fair compensation to physicians for rendering this care and carefully monitor the outcomes, as measured by trends in risk factors.

Providers would have to adjust to the new market demand for preventive care programs. Right now, our current predicament in healthcare is like having auto repair shops for major problems, but no shops for simple maintenance services. The new rules would demand that providers offer less acute and more accessible settings than the local clinic or hospital. Providers might need to develop alternative settings for delivering care, such as retail “walk-in” clinics or pharmacies.

Providers also would have to meet rising demand for preventive care while keeping costs low. With nurses in short supply and doctors busy treating sick patients, the new rules would require a new class of service providers: health coaches for chronic patients. With lesser clinical training, these health coaches would not treat patients or prescribe medications. Their role would be to help patients comply with evidence-based preventive care regimens; answer questions; monitor and interpret lab results; and alert both patients and their doctors when intervention is needed. Because one-on-one monitoring would be expensive, more innovative approaches would be required.

Patients in our current system are often accused of being unaccountable, even though they share expenses through copayments and deductibles, and sometimes with health savings accounts. But these programs have met with mixed success. The change an employer would demand, as part of the new rules, would be more fundamental: make patients accountable for their health status by teaching them to self-manage their diseases in partnership with their doctors.

Once employers buy into the notion that their financial management skills can lower healthcare costs, other innovative practices could emerge. Many services would move to the web in spite of institutional resistance and preventive care would become more convenient and less disruptive of daily activities. Geographic boundaries will fade as arcane trade practices are abandoned. Tools like Google Health will become invaluable, especially when patients in rural areas want to seek help from specialists affiliated with prestige institutions like the Mayo Clinic. Uniform standards of practice would reduce costs and improve quality of care.

This is all about bringing economic sensibilities to the healthcare market, one step at a time. It starts when employers - whether companies or government organizations – begin to take advantage of the Golden Rule and unleash pent-up market forces seeking to improve efficiency, quality and profits. Arcane trade and business practices and those who profit from them resist change. Let’s give mandates and regulations a rest. Instead, give free markets a chance to correct these problems.

Jacob Kuriyan Ph.D., is president and CEO of Physmark Inc.
Physmark develops software to help self-insured companies, providers and healthplans improve operating efficiencies, lower costs and better manage the delivery of care.

Friday, August 01, 2008

RejuvaMatrix

From Dr. Norm Shealy:

As some of you may know I have been studying ways to enhance health and longevity. My latest study is use of the RejuvaMatrix™ which bathes the body in a human DNA field of human DNA frequency, 54 o 78 GHz. Telomeres are the tail of DNA and present the best estimate of longevity. The telomere study results came back today. In our pilot study in 6 individuals, telomere length increased an average of 2.9% in 10 months, versus the expectation of 1% shrinkage each year! Theoretically, assuming these results continue, in 7 years a 50 year old would have telomeres the length of a 25 year old; a seventy-five year old would be at the 25 year range in 14 years. Even if there was no continuing shrinkage, this suggests tremendous benefit for health and longevity. I plan on continuing and expanding the study over the next 5 years. Assuming success, it will be by far my greatest discovery.

C. Norman Shealy, M.D., Ph.D.
www.normshealy.com

Producer, Medical Renaissance The Secret Code
www.medicalrenaissance.net

President, Holos University Graduate Seminary
www.holosuniversity.org

Master’s, Doctoral, and Post-Doctoral Degrees and Easy-Access Certificate Programs Accredited by the New Thought Accreditation Commission— www.newthought.org

Dr. Joe's Weekly Internet News Radio

Extra, Extra, Read All About It.......

Dr.'s Shealy and Prendergast have been invited to do weekly internet news radio shows (podcasts).

Where

www.yaktivate.com is the place to tune in.

FYI: Company after company has pursued Yaktivate and Synergy Worldwide has the distinct privilege of being the very first MLM to be able to leverage their huge and growing audience.

A little about Yaktivate.com and their reach

Yaktivate.com is a podcasting network with 88 channels, broadcasting into 90 countries around the globe.

In May, 2008 an estimated 3.7 million visits were paid to Yaktivate's existing podcasters with an estimated 3.2 million downloads. The reason this is an estimate is that once the podcasts are delivered to the more than 100 affiliates where visits and downloads occur, there is no formal reporting mechanism from all the affiliates to get an exact number.

The Deal

Yaktivate after negotiations has agreed to cross market both Dr. Shealy and Dr. Prendergast immediately to their entire network as soon as we get the two shows ready. We expect to see the first shows within the next couple of weeks!!!

Both Dr.'s Shealy and Prendergast are currently working on their inaugural shows and the shows that are to follow.

Just imagine professionally produced weekly shows with fresh material across the healthcare spectrum that you will be able to have your downlines and prospects listen into. The formats will be slightly different from each other as you might expect, but both will have an opening segment where the Dr.'s share something new and hot off the wire. This segment will keep listeners tuning in to hear the latest developments in healthcare and science. The next segment will be the main body of the shows, a listener call-in where listeners can ask preapproved questions of the Dr.'s and the Dr.'s will respond. The shows will end with announcement of the topics in up coming shows and an offer to allow listeners to call in and get their questions addressed by the Dr.'s.

Important Note

To preserve both Dr.'s professionalism and more specifically to prevent them from looking like product peddlers, no mention of Synergy Worldwide nor of any of Synergy's products or products the Dr.s are personally affiliated with financially will be made. The Dr.'s will be referencing ingredients instead. In some cases, the ingredients will be just that and available from sources other than Synergy, but in a large percentage of the cases, since no one has products as powerful and life changing as Synergy, the ingredients will be identically the same as those in our products.

Your Help Is Needed

In the next couple of weeks, both Dr.'s are planning on recording their first show but will need a kick start in the form of call-in guests. If you would be willing to help, send an email ASAP. We will bring you up to speed on when the first shows will be recorded.

The process will be simple:

  • You email your willingness to participate;
  • Questions that you will ask will be chosen;
  • You will call into a teleconference line;
  • You'll chat before the recording takes place with the producer to prepare you;
  • Then when asked to participate, your line will be opened and you'll ask your question;
  • The Dr. will answer and if desired by the Dr., he will ask a follow-up question of you.

MLM-Network Marketing First

To my knowledge, Synergy Worldwide will be the first MLM to have its distributors or in this case, have members of its Medical Advisory Board be syndicated across any national news like broadcast medium let alone a globally syndicated podcasting network the size of Yaktivate.

Timing for Synergy Worldwide Just Became Critical.

Expect to see fellow distributors capitalize on this and literally explode their volumes with downline growth that is unprecedented. If you ever wished or prayed to be in the right place at the right time just once, consider your prayers answered.

In that the Dr.'s and I am really buried right now, please don't call them or me for more info, just stay tuned, I promise to keep everyone on this email list fully up to date on the developments.

Proud.... Synergy Worldwide Distributor,

Daniel J. SwinDell
Founder, The Duplication Masters Group