LifeAid Combo trial: rheumatoid arthritis

European Conference on Orthopedics and Osteoporosis
November 29-30 , 2018 Amsterdam , Netherlands

Avissar Koren A and Styr B

Acc Triza Granot Ltd, Israel The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel

ScientificTracks Abstracts: J Clin Exp Orthop

DOI: 10.4172/2471-8416-C1-005

Abstract

LifeAid Combo is a composition of vitamins and CBD developed for a wide array of autoimmune conditions, covering Guillain-Barré, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn, asthma, vasculitis and fibromyalgia. LifeAid Combo is a patient based initiative, created by a patient and tested by the patients via testimonials in the initial trial, advised by the expertise of Baruch Styr, pharmacist, Batya Kornboim, MD, and Igal Yusim research. Methodology: All trial participants have consulted with their personal physicians was informed of the risks and is volunteered. After a thorough screening process, 112 volunteers qualified for the trial in the rheumatoid arthritis group. 107 participants completed the trial. No deaths or medical emergencies were found on follow up; all dropouts didn’t keep up with the regimen for personal reasons. The participants were given a self-report questionnaire to fill out once a day regarding the effects of the LifeAid combo for 100 days over five life aspects: appetite, fatigue, movement, pain, sleep. Effectiveness of the treatment was assessed through simple line regression, over 20% is considered to be effective and less than 20% was considered to be not-effective. Results: Initial trial results have shown the treatment to have the greatest effect on appetite, movement and pain for the rheumatoid arthritis group. The overall reduction in inflammation flaring up (0 episodes amongst the rheumatoid arthritis group during the trial) appears to be correlated to the pain reduction (72% of participant experienced a significant reduction in pain during the trial). This reduction in pain coincides with greater appetite (52% increase) (correlated to reduced pain) and easier movement (increased by 53%) (correlated to reduced inflammation). The treatment was found to be less effective (39%) in reducing fatigue and less effective (27%) in improving sleep quality.

Biography

Anat Avissar Koren, 36 years old, one of the lucky people with Multiple Sclerosis. My first MS attack happened midpregnancy with my daughter Ruth, and put me in a wheelchair. Upon recovering I started looking for a way to walk again. A wheelchair was unacceptable to me. There was nothing I wouldn't do for my baby Ruth. I was looking for information and medicine reviews online and at local communities, but found none. There was no one to explain to me which vitamins will I benefit from, what supplements and life factors are influential alongside the treatment, etc. I started studying and soon came up with the idea for a combo to prevent further attacks. To my surprise, after 2-3 months of trying, it worked. Later, the combo was tried by 1,349 more people in Europe for 3 months with amazing reported results.

E-mail: founder@lifeaidcombo.com