REMEDIAL BENEFITS
FULVICFORCE FULVIC ACID IN HYPERCHOLESTEROLEMIA MANAGEMENT
Although FulvicForce does not make any medical claims, there’s a body of research and scientific papers (refer to a selected list of papers at the end of this page) indicating that fulvic acid offers a significant spectrum of benefits for people afflicted with high cholesterol level. These benefits are summarised below.
Hypercholesterolemia, also called dyslipidemia, is the presence of high levels of cholesterol in the blood. It is a form of high blood lipids and “hyperlipoproteinemia” (elevated levels of lipoproteins). Elevated levels of non-HDL (high density lipoprotein) cholesterol and LDL (low density lipoprotein) in the blood may be a consequence of diet, obesity, inherited (genetic) conditions, or the presence of other diseases such as diabetes and an underactive thyroid. LDL cholesterol is often referred to as “bad cholesterol” because too much of it is unhealthy.

The biological effects in animals treated with natural isolated humic and fulvic acids include: a decrease in total cholesterol, total lipids, an increase of HDL fraction of cholesterol, decrease in glucose level and increase of protein fraction of globulin, hemoglobin, hematocrit and total number of erythrocytes (refer to References Cholesterol, at the end of this post).
Fulvic acid also offers a number of preventative and curative properties to help in attenuating the development and progression of diabetes mellitus. In particular, fulvic acid produces significant reduction in blood glucose levels, simultaneously causing the reduction in total cholesterol level and triglyceride level, increases oral glucose tolerance, improves the lipid metabolism of diabetes and produces beneficial effects on the lipid profile, and prevents and combats free radical damage to pancreatic islet B cells, which is the widely accepted cause for diabetes mellitus (refer to References Diabets, at the end of this post).
Thyroid malfunction, both overactive and underactive, is generally due to autoimmune response by the body. This is where the body’s immune system produces antibodies which attack the gland because the tissues seem foreign to the body. Normal hormone production is upset. Generally, the cause is due to build-up of dangerous toxins, chlorinated substances, viruses, pathogens, infections, pesticides, altered enzymes or hormones, etc., in the tissues of the thyroid gland.
Fulvic acid contains many phytochemicals and enzymes, which are anti-viral, anti-bacterial, anti-microbial and anti-inflammatory. Fulvic acids also work as Nature’s most powerful antioxidants, neutralizing dangerous free radicals, as well as supplying hormone stimulating micronutrients. As a natural chelator, fulvic acid is an effective detoxifier, which help rid the body of heavy metals, radioactive elements, chemical components of highly processed foods we consume, and other toxins. Research also confirms that humic and fulvic acid supplementation results in a strong humoral immune stimulation – humoral immunity refers to antibody production (refer to References Thyroid, at the end of this post).
FulvicForce is South Africa’s one and only fulvic acid product extracted from coal according to a patented process. FulvicForce product is literally an organic extract from plants, which lived hundreds of millions years ago, thus carrying their mineral, nutritional and remedial value, concentrated through a slow natural refinement process of transforming ancient plant matter into coal.
REFERENCES CHOLESTEROL
- The influence of natural peat and isolated humic acid solution on certain indices of metabolism and of acid-base equilibrium in experimental animals, Banaszkiewicz W1, Drobnik M., Rocz Panstw Zakl Hig. 1994;45(4):353-60.
- Biologically active peat substances body resistance stimulators, Solovyeva V P, Lotosh T D., 1984, Dublin, Ireland, Proceedings of the 7th International Peat congress, 4, 428-434, Anemia and hypercholesterolemia (Soloveyva and Lotosh 1984)
- MEDICAL ASPECTS AND APPLICATIONS OF HUMIC SUBSTANCES, Renate Klocking, Bjorn Helbig, Biopolymers for Medical and Pharmaceutical Applications,, 2005, WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim, ISBN: 3-527-31154-8
REFERENCES DIABETES
- Activity of shilajit on alloxan-induced hyperglycaemia in rats, Bhattacharya S. K., Fitoterapia, 1995, vol. 66, no4, pp. 328-332
- Shilajit attenuates streptozotocin induced diabetes mellitus and decrease in pancreatic islet superoxide dismutase activity in rats, Salil K. Bhattacharya, Phytotherapy Research, Volume 9, Issue 1, February 1995, Pages 41–44
- Shilajit-induced potentiation of the hypoglycaemic action of insulin and inhibition of streptozotocin induced diabetes in rat, N. Kanikkannan, P. Ramarao, S. Ghosal, Phytotherapy Research, Volume 9, Issue 7, November 1995, Pages 478–481
- Application of Fulvic Acid and its derivatives in the fields of agriculture and medicine, Yuan, Shenyuan; et al, Diabet Med 1997; 14:S7-S85. Diabetes Care 1998, 21:296-309.
- Effect of shilajit on blood glucose and lipid profile in alloxan-induced diabetic rats, N. A. Trivedi, B. Mazumdar, J. D. Bhatt, K. G. Hemavathi, Indian J Pharmacol, December 2004, Vol 36, Issue 6, 373-376
- MEDICAL ASPECTS AND APPLICATIONS OF HUMIC SUBSTANCES, Renate Klocking, Bjorn Helbig, Biopolymers for Medical and Pharmaceutical Applications,, 2005, WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim, ISBN: 3-527-31154-8
- The Research Survey of Traditional Chinese Medicine Used in Therapeutic Treatments of Diabetes Mellitus, Jiang Fei and Qian Shihui, Chinese Wild Plant Resources, May 2009
- Effects of adjunct therapy of a proprietary herbo-chromium supplement in type 2 diabetes: A randomized clinical trial, Tuhin Biswas K., Gobinda Polley, Srikanta Pandit, Debnath K. Pratip, Mondal Somoresh, Auddy Biswajit, Dipankar Banerjee, Sauryya Bhattacharyya, Pal Debasish, Shibnath Ghosal, Int J Diab Ctries, Juy-September 2010, Volume 30, Issue 3
- Hypoglycemic Effect of Fulvic Acid and Sodium Fulvate on Diabetic Mice, HE Jing,BI Yan-yan,LI Bao-cai, LI Yue-mei, CUI Jia-li,MEI Zhan-qing, Journal of Kunming University of Science and Technology (Natural Science Edition), May 2011
- ANTIDIABETIC HERBAL DRUGS A REVIEW, Pritesh Patel, Pinal Harde, Jagath Pillai, Nilesh Darji and Bhagirath Patel, Pharmacophore 2012, Vol. 3 (1), 18-29
- Comparative Antidiabetic Profile of Ayurvedic Herbo-mineral Formulation and its Constituents on Normal and Streptozotocin-induced Diabetic Rats, Akansha Mishra, Rohit Srivastava, Arvind K. Srivastava, Int. J. Pharm. Sci. Rev. Res., 22(2), Sep – Oct 2013; nᵒ 46, 252-263
REFERENCES THYROID
- Application of Fulvic acid and its derivatives in the fields of agriculture and medicine, Yuan, Shenyuan; et al, First Edition: June 1993
- Effect of humic acids on thyroidal function, Tien-Shang Huang, Fung-Jou Lu, Chang-Wu Tsai, I. J. Chopra, Journal of Endocrinological Investigation, November 1994, Volume 17, Issue 10, pp 787-791
- The New Approach to Low Thyroid Conditions, Biamonte, Michael, DN, CCN; The New York Center for Clinical Nutrition, Manhattan. Balch, James F., MD, and Phyllis A, Prescription for Nutritional Healing, second edition, 1997; Avery Publishing Group
- MEDICAL ASPECTS AND APPLICATIONS OF HUMIC SUBSTANCES, Renate Klocking, Bjorn Helbig, Biopolymers for Medical and Pharmaceutical Applications,, 2005, WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim, ISBN: 3-527-31154-8
- Humic Acid Substances in Animal Agriculture, K.M.S. Islam, A. Schuhmacher and J.M. Gropp, Pakistan Journal of Nutrition 4 (3): 126-134, 2005, ISSN 1680-5194
- Effect of fulvic and humic acids on performance, immune response and thyroid function in rats, A. V. Vucskits1, I. Hullár1, A. Bersényi1, E. Andrásofszky1, M. Kulcsár2 and J. Szabó1, Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition, Volume 94, Issue 6, pages 721–728, December 2010