According to mydailydose.com, a new patented product with 2AP is available.  MyDailyDose’s primary patented ingredient is 2-AEP which is the actual biochemical component making up the outer cell membranes of our bodies.  Their claim is this product will delivers 2-AEP directly to the outer cells thus providing benefits which include strengthening the seal and protecting healthy cells while repairing damaged cells.  They claim it was only available in Germany by a doctor but is now available in America without a prescription.

The complete claim includes:

  1. Slows the aging process
  2. Increase energy levels
  3. Speeds up metabolism
  4. Reduces wrinkles and skin spots
  5. Restores shine and color of hair
  6. Strengthens hair and bones
  7. Rebuilds and rejuvenates cells
  8. Feel healthier in less than one month

It’s delivered in five doses per day in handy daily packs and has a seven day trial offer.  Watch the small print!

Their clinical trial section on the web boasts of delivering 50,000 daily doses to 300 study participants in one study.  They also note that they have been researching this from 1963 and on.  For more information on their claimed studies and findings, go to http://www.mydailydose.com/v2/prodinfo_scientific.htm

On one website evaluating the claims on anti-aging and a product called Longevity (has AEP in it), I found this:

“This is utter bull,” said Caleb Finch, professor of gerontology at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. Neither he nor noted expert on aging Leonard Hayflick, a professor of anatomy at the University of California in San Francisco, had ever heard of 2-AEP with respect to research on aging. When asked for medical references pertaining to 2-AEP, Oden said people could find it for themselves. “This is Looney Tunes,” Finch said. “On request you were not given verifiable data for their scientific claims. If they don’t have data, there’s nothing to say.”

Olshansky, Hayflick and Bruce Carnes of the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago gave Longevity the second annual “Silver Fleece” award as “the product with the most ridiculous, outrageous, scientifically unsupported or exaggerated assertions about aging or age-related diseases.” The award, which the three experts created as a lighthearted way to call attention to anti-aging quackery, was announced at a March conference of the National Council on the Aging and the American Society on Aging.

Save  your bucks, as it appears this place, mydailydose, has been reported numerously over potential scams on their product:

  1. www.ripoffreport.com
  2. www.scam.com
  3. www.complaintsboard.com