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Benefits of using O2xynergy
We all know how important water, vitamins, minerals and water are to our health and vitality. Although we can actually exist without food for about 40 days, and water for about seven days…without oxygen, life ceases to exist in only minutes. A growing number of researchers have now confirmed that the best way to improve health may be related to the optimum Oxygenation of Every Cell.

OXYGEN & Your Overall Wellness
We eat, drink and breathe everyday. We may find eating and drinking a lot more fun but it is actually breathing that makes us alive. Research shows that we can survive for 3 weeks without eating solid food. We can live for 3 days without drinking water. But without Oxygen even in just 3 minutes may cause many health problems. Yes, ‘Oxygen is the spark of life’. Without Oxygen life will be impossible.
Oxygen is a colorless gas that makes up 21 percent of Earth's atmosphere. It is the third most abundant element in the universe. The human body is about two-thirds oxygen.

OXYGEN and Your Blood
The blood is a vitally important fluid for the body. The blood transports oxygen from the lungs to the cells of the body, where it is needed for metabolism. Oxygen-rich blood travels through arteries and arterial branches to deliver oxygen and essential nutrients to your body.
When your body doesn’t receive enough oxygen and you have a low blood oxygen level hypoxemia or hypoxia, cyanosis and other conditions may occur. Hypoxemia or hypoxia occurs when your body has insufficient oxygen and can range from mild to severe. Symptoms of hypoxia can include severe shortness of breath, wheezing, constant coughing, a choking feeling and a bluish discoloration of the skin (cyanosis).
Chronic hypoxia can lead to cerebral hypoxia or brain hypoxia, which means that your brain cells could become seriously damaged within minutes.

OXYGEN and Your Brain
The brain is an energy-demanding organ. While it makes up only 2 percent of our body’s weight, it consumes more than 25 percent of our body's need for oxygen just to create the electrical energy it needs to function. Unfortunately, the brain is incapable of storing significant amounts of glucose, which, when combined with oxygen, creates this energy.
If the brain does not get the energy it requires, it simply loses its ability to properly code and process sensory information. Our brain's need for oxygen is more than ten times greater than the rest of our entire body. Because brain cells will die if the supply of blood that carries oxygen is stopped, the brain has “top priority” for the blood.

OXYGEN & Your Skin
The skin is our largest organ.
The skin is a wonder whose complexity is partially indicated by the facts that our skin covers an average of nineteen square feet and weighs about seven pounds. A cross section reveals three defined layers. Together, these three layers form the miraculous 'living fabric' known as skin. The skin serves to maintain our health and well being in an amazing variety of ways.
Unbroken, the skin is our first line of defense against disease and bacterial invasion. It regulates body temperatures, sends neurological messages to the brain, detoxifies by excreting wastes from the body, respires (absorbs oxygen and releases carbon dioxide), absorbs nutrients, manufactures vitamin D and protects the body from ultra violet damage from the sun.

OXYGEN & Your Strength
During physical activity, the blood vessels in the muscles dilate so that more blood
can flow through these vessels and capillaries. It is like the difference between water flowing through a fire hose compared to a garden hose. Obviously, more water can flow through the fire hose because it is larger in diameter.
The blood carries the much-needed oxygen to the muscles. Blood that would have gone to the stomach or the kidneys goes instead to the muscles.
The lungs and the rest of the respiratory system has to provide more oxygen for all the blood that is now being directed to the working muscles. When exercising, breathing becomes more rapid and deeper. This is because sympathetic nerves stimulate the respiratory muscles to increase the number of breaths per minute.
