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Velvet Antler as an Anti-Aging Supplement
By Stephen A. Center, M.D.
Board Certified in Anti-Aging Medicine |
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A Long History of Use
Velvet antler refers to the living tissue from the
growing antler of the Cervus genus of deer, notably the
red deer, Cervus elaphus, as well as elk.
Chinese doctors have coveted velvet antler of male
deer as a medicinal product for over 2000 years.The
first written record of its use dates back to a scroll
from the Han Dynasty of China, where medical use
of antler was documented for 52 different illnesses. |
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A Naturally Renewable Resource
Much like wool is obtained from
sheep, antler is obtained humanely from farmed deer or elk.
Velvet antler is harvested by veterinarians or certified
farmers during the peak of the growing season before the antler
has a chance to ossify, or harden like bone.
(In the wild, after antlers harden, they are used as grappling
weapons during the mating season, then shed and re-grown the following
year.) During the growing
stage, the antler is cloaked with a velvety covering, and is richest
in concentration of critical growth factors and cofactors.
The highest quality antler is obtained during the peak of
this growth stage.
Science and History Agree on Velvet Antler
Highlighted by groundbreaking research at Harvard University
in the 1940’s and 1950’s by George Wislocki, velvet antler has long
been studied internationally in Asia, New Zealand, Europe and North
America. Richard J.
Goss, Div. of Biology and Medicine at Brown University, wrote an
article in “The Anatomical Record” in 1995, where he commented:
“There hardly has been a year in the past century and a half that
someone, somewhere has not been seriously studying deer antler.”
He later stated: “The rewards for studying antler are that
practically everything one finds out . . . is a new discovery.”
Research Confirms Velvet Antler’s Efficacy
Though much research has been done on velvet antler, in contrast
to more abundant and commonly used herbs and nutraceuticals, there
is currently more literature on the structure and physiology of
velvet antler than on its clinical benefits.
This is in the process of changing, as anti-aging has become
a recognized sub-specialty of medicine, and more research is being
performed, including on-going clinical studies.
Clinical and experimental research with humans and animals
continues to expand the growing list of conditions that can benefit
from regular velvet antler use.
From the attached partial list of available antler literature,
there are three studies that are especially intriguing.
1. Anti-Aging
In order to assess velvet antler’s effects on longevity, anti-aging
studies can be performed most practically on animals with short life
spans. While velvet
antler has long been revered as an anti-aging tonic in Chinese medicine,
it took the work of Wang, et al., in 1988 (#2) to begin documenting
this anti-aging effect and help pave the road to understanding why
it occurs. Using specially
bred mice vs. control mice, Wang’s researchers found that in the
treated group, velvet antler increased RNA polymerase 2 activity,
thereby increasing cellular protein synthesis. Antler actively decreased
oxidative activity in the liver and increased plasma testosterone.
All of these diverse effects resulted
in the treated animals living substantially longer than the control
animals. Wang stated that these results were the best evidence to
date for a “measurable restorative function” for velvet antler.
More recent studies, including those by Clifford (#1), have
confirmed these anti-aging effects.
Current research looks to the presence of large amounts
of diversified growth factors in velvet antler as one of the keys
to its anti-aging benefits, which is now beginning to be documented
in humans.
2. Athletic
Strength and athletic enhancement benefits of velvet antler
have been observed in numerous research studies performed on three
continents. A 1999
study by Fisher et al.. (#14)
examined the effects of a velvet antler extract on healthy
police recruits. This placebo-controlled study found that velvet antler exerts
an anabolic effect, increasing muscle strength or mass when combined
with strength training. Many
Russian and New Zealand studies have reported similar findings,
including dramatic aerobic benefits, which explains why so many
of their well informed athletes use velvet antler as a safe, effective,
performance enhancer.
3. Sexual
Sexual benefits of velvet antler have been well known to practitioners
of traditional Chinese medicine for millennia. In the twentieth
century, hundreds of articles and textbooks have reported the sexual
enhancement effects of velvet antler, beginning with initial clinical
studies in Russia 70 years ago.
Clinics throughout Russia and Asia have long used antler
to improve sexual vitality.
Antler is considered one of the most effective known remedies
for impotence, as well as for increasing libido and general sexual
performance.
Gotlib and Yag (#29), reported in
their Moscow study that Pantocrin, an alcohol based extract of velvet
antler, significantly increased sexual performance in treated men.
Albov (#30) reported numerous benefits for menopausal women, including
enhanced libido, plus significant stress reduction, which also improved
intimacy. These benefits have been attributed to enhanced testosterone
production brought about by the adaptogenic effects of velvet antler,
as well as a possible vasodilatory effect for the sex organs, which
some refer to as a “Viagra-like” effect.
A Rich Source of Growth Factors and Vital Cofactors
The most exciting components of velvet antler are diversified
growth factors, including IGF-1, IGF-2, epidermal, nerve, fibroblast,
transforming, epithelial and others. These antler components exist in similar ratios that occur
in the human body. Velvet antler has the highest concentration of growth factors of any mammalian
structure, which helps explain how this remarkable tissue grows
at such a phenomenal rate each year.
Growth factors are critical for cellular repair and regeneration;
and many anti-aging physicians believe that declining growth factors
is a primary reason WHY the body ages.
Velvet antler also contains a plethora
of vital cofactors that contribute to our health, performance and
appearance. These cofactors include: glycosaminoglycans such as
chondroitin and glucosamine sulfate
(lubrication and rebuilding of joints), essential amino acids
(structure and enzymes), phospholipids (cell membrane integrity),
type 2 collagen (joint structural matrix), hypoxanthine and uridene
(anti-aging nucleotides), anti-inflammatory prostaglandins, polyamines
(RNA stimulants), gangliosides (enhancers of memory and learning),
and numerous minerals (cofactors and structural support).
The combination of these diverse cofactors and growth factors
is what makes velvet antler so effective over a broad range of bodily
systems and functions.
Scientific Advancements Make Velvet Antler More Effective
Several studies have indicated that heating can destroy or reduce
the beneficial properties of velvet antler by denaturing the proteins;
therefore it is vital that it not be heated during processing.
Flash-freezing and freeze-drying preserves the antler compounds
in pristine condition. The essential technological advancement required
for effective delivery of velvet antler compounds into the human
body, however, was a method of protecting and escorting it into
the body without loss of potency.
As a result of research at the Universities of Chicago and
Colorado and elsewhere, a special protective envelope, called a
“polymer matrix,” has
been developed. It
serves two functions:
First, it enables a normally short-lived
extract or formula, such as velvet antler, to be suspended in liquid
and retain its integrity and potency during its shelf life as a
packaged liquid.
Second, it is remarkably effective
at allowing complex proteins to pass into the bloodstream directly
through the mucous membranes of the mouth. This trans-membrane technology
enables complex growth factors and cofactors, such as those found
in velvet antler, to bypass the digestive system and avoid degradation
of the potency and effectiveness of the formula.
In contrast to this method, antler consumed as a tea, capsule
or liquid will inevitably lose potency, first through the action
of stomach acids during digestion and, second, through “first pass”
metabolism in the liver.
Aging Vs. Anti-Aging
Just like a busy city has different operating systems, the cells
within the human body have similar vital roles. These roles include
protein synthesis/anabolism (manufacturing), nervous system (communication),
circulation (transportation), immune system (safety and defense).
During our lifespans, our body's cells divide and replicate. As
we age, our ability to grow, repair and regenerate these cells declines,
much like an aging city can deteriorate, creating slums and poverty.
The result is diminished bodily function and appearance, which is
typically regarded as a natural consequence of aging.
The anti-aging medical community
believes the progressive decline of function in the body as we age
is not inevitable, and can be slowed.
During our youth, our bodies produce large quantities of
human growth hormone (HGH), which, in turn, stimulates liver and
bone production of growth factors (protein polypeptides) that are
the building blocks for growth at the cellular level.
Once our bodies become fully grown and developed (typically
by around age 20), our natural production of HGH declines dramatically
with age. Some say
this is WHY we age.
Anti-aging physicians advocate compensating for declining growth
factors with lifestyle improvements, nutritional supplements, and
growth factor enhancement or replacement, in order to promote life
extension and optimum health of the aging individual.
How Velvet Antler Works
Velvet antler contains the same growth factors that are stimulated
by human growth hormone in the human body during youth.
Ingested sublingually, velvet antler growth factors (and
cofactors) do not have to stimulate any further production by the
body—they able to be received directly by the body and go right
to work, promoting cellular growth, repair and regeneration. While
some benefits of velvet antler are visible externally, most of the
benefits occur internally, in both men and women. Some benefits
manifest themselves rapidly, while others develop cumulatively over
time. Velvet antler
has five major areas of benefits:
Mental:
Athletic:
Cosmetic:
Sexual:
Systemic: |
Improved energy,
mood, ambition, sleep, memory and focus
Strength, aerobic output, flexibility and healing of injuries
Weight and fat loss, better hair quality and skin tone
Enhanced libido and performance and gonadal regulation
Better digestion, improved immunity, reduction of pain and
stiffness, supporting a healthy heart and blood pressure,
enhancing internal organ function, and many other effects |
Modern Physicians See Results With Velvet Antler
Internists, physicians and anti-aging doctors who have used
the latest form of sublingual spray velvet antler in their practice
(in both healthy and ailing patients) are seeing with their own
eyes subjective and objective clinical improvements in their patients.
They are seeing many patients with recalcitrant conditions such
as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome and irritable bowel syndrome
respond to regular use of velvet antler.
They have been able to document patient reports of more energy,
better memory, more initiative, improved sex life, greater stamina
and strength, and many other benefits. The enthusiasm of these clinicians
about positive patient results is sparking more research to help
the medical community better understand how velvet antler has so
many beneficial effects on the human body.
Velvet Antler vs. Other Anti-Aging Supplements
While velvet antler has been used throughout centuries for a
variety of health benefits, the creation of the “polymer matrix”
envelope has recently improved velvet antler’s effectiveness and
spurred its use as a specific anti-aging supplement.
How do other anti-aging products compare?
Artificial “growth hormone” (somatotropin)
was developed as a treatment for individuals suffering from growth
deficiency or recovering from serious injury.
Though its use has expanded to include anti-aging intervention,
it is a physician-administered drug with considerations of injection,
inconvenience, and especially high cost that are prohibitive for
most people. Oral and sublingual growth hormones have been developed,
but have obstacles such as controversial over-the-counter availability
as well as suspect absorption into the body.
Bovine colostrum, which does contain growth factors, is
primarily an immune supporter, and not well established as an anti-aging
supplement.
Many newer supplements fall into
a category of HGH “activators” that attempt to stimulate the body
to produce more HGH. These
are likely to be more effective on younger people, since the body’s
natural ability to produce HGH declines drastically after age 20,
therefore the body has diminished ability to respond to activators
as it ages. Homeopathics,
by definition, are weaker concentrations of ingredients intended
to work in synergy with the body.
Homeopathics tend to be aimed at specific aspects of bodily
function rather than addressing cellular repair and regeneration
throughout the body’s systems. This also tends to be the case with
many nutraceuticals that have anti-aging “properties,” though they
may have higher concentrations of purpose-specific ingredients.
It should be noted that the typical strategy of “anti-aging”
homeopathics and nutraceuticals is to achieve anti-aging benefits
indirectly rather than serving as a direct source of growth factors
such IGF-1, a benchmark for cellular health and aging.
11/2000 By Stephen
A. Center, M.D.
© 2000 MHP Inc.
All rights reserved.
References
Anti-Aging Effects
1. Clifford, et al..
“Inhibitory effects of the extract of pilose antler on monoamine
oxidase aged mice” Ch J Chin Mat 17 (2) 107-128
1992
2. Wang, BX, et al..
“Effects of repeated administration of deer antler extract on biochemical
changes related aging in senescence accelerated mice” Chem Pharm Bull
1988: 38 2587-92
3. Wang, BX, et al..
“Advances in research of chemistry, pharmacology and clinical application
of pilose antler” Proceedings of the 1996 International Symposium
on Deer Science and Deer
Products
1996: 14-31
Anti-Arthritic Effects
4. “Alberta Universities
Begin Clinical Trials on Elk Velvet as Arthritis Relief Medicine”
Wapiti Review, July/August 1998, p.13
5. Hansen, T.J.
“Claims of Velvet Antler and Chondroitin Sulfate” Watertown,
MA; North American
Trade Experts, 1998
6. Sim, J.S. and H.H.
Sunwoo. “Canadian Scientists Study Velvet Antler for Arthritis Treatment”
Canadian Elk and Deer Farmer, Winter, 1999 39-40
7. Sunwoo, H.H. et
al. “Glycosaminoglycans
from growing antlers of wapiti (Cervus elaphus)
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B 1998: 273-283
Anti-Inflammatory Effects
8. “Evaluation
of New Zealand Velvet Antler—Efficacy and Diagnostic Testing, Varnz
Document, 1997
9. “Velvet Antler
Under the Microscope” Wang, BX
1996
10. Gavrilenk, V.S. “Pantocrin in Combined Treatment of Patients
with Tubercular Lungs.” In:
Pantocrin: A Publication of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties
of Pantocrin. Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O
11. Medexport Suttie, J.M., and S. Haines. “Evaluation of
Velvet Antler: The Effect of
Aqueous Velvet Extracts on the Immune System.” Report to Varnz, Nov 1996
Athletic Enhancement—Aerobic and
Strength Improvement
12. Anderson, D. “Velvet
Boost for Athletes.” Rural News. In: The New Zealand Game Industry Board Media Statement, Feb 18, 1998
13. Church, J. Velvet Antler: It’s Historical Medical Use,
Performance Enhancing Effects and Pharmacology. For Elk Tech International,
1998 Fisher, B.D., and D. Wiles.
14. Strength Training Parameters in Edmonton Police Recruits
Following Supplementation with Elk Velvet Antler (EVA). University
of Alberta, 1998
15. Gerrard, D.F., G.G. Sleivert, A. Goulding, S.R. Haines and J.M.
Suttie. Clinical Evaluation of New Zealand Deer Velvet Antler on
Muscle Strength & Endurance in Healthy Male University Athletes
16. “Velvet Research Gets International Attention!”
Sports Illustrated, Jun 22, 1998, In:
Wapiti Review, July/August 1998, p. 19
Cardiovascular Benefits
17. Albov, N.A., V.A.
Borovskaya and I.E. Kofanov. “Clinical Observations on the Influence
of Pantocrin on Cardiac Patients.” In:
Pantocrin: A Publication of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties
of Pantocrin. Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O Medexport
18. Tsjuibo, et al.
“Hypotensive Activity of Velvet Antler" 1987
19. Albov, et
al. “Cases of
treatment of high and low blood pressure” 1969
Immune Enhancing Effects
20. Buchan, G. “Effects
of Various Velvet Extracts on the Immune System.” Research Report on AgResearch Contract No. 4109
21. “Evaluation
of New Zealand Velvet Antler—Efficacy and Diagnostic Testing”
Varnz Document, 1997
22. Arapov, N.A. “Some
Data on Using Pantocrin in Surgical Practice.” In: Pantocrin: A Publication of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties
of Pantocrin. Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O Medexport, Date
Unknown.
23. Gavrilenk, V.S. “Pantocrin in Combined Treatment of Patients
with Tubercular Lungs.” In:
Pantocrin: A Publication
of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties of Pantocrin.
Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O Medexport
24. Pavlenko, S.M.,
A.B. Silayev, L.A. Filippova and V.S. Kiselyov. “Some Data on the
Chemical Properties of Unossified Horns and Pantocrin.” In: Pantocrin: A Publication of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties
of Pantocrin. Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O Medexport
25. Suttie, J.M., and
S. Haines. “Evaluation of Velvet Antler: The Effect of
Aqueous Velvet Extracts on the Immune System.”
Report to Varnz, Nov 1996
Memory and Learning
26. Archer, R.H. and
P.J. Palfreyman. “Properties of New Zealand Deer Velvet – Part I.
Search of Literature – Vol. I
27. Duarte, A.
The Benefits of Velvet Antler: The 2000-Year-Old Health Food For
All Reasons. Self Published, 1995
28. Holubitsky, J.
“Science Takes a Serious Look at Ancient Oriental Tradition: Properties
of Elk Antler Under Microscope.” The
Edmonton Journal, In: North
American Elk, Spring 1998, p. 49
Sexual Enhancement
29. Gotlib, Yag. “The
Use of Pantocrin in Treating Some Sexual Disorders in Men.” In:
Pantocrin: A Publication
of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties of Pantocrin.
Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O Medexport
30. Albov, N.A., and L.F. Krupennikov. “The Influence of Pantocrin
on Menopause.” In: Pantocrin:
A Publication of Articles on Studies of Curative Properties of Pantocrin.
Pavlenko, S.M. (ed). Moscow: V/O Medexport
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