Bulavita is marketing their M20 Boost supplement as a way to “inhibit the growth of human cancer cells”.

Ruh-roh…

If you attempt to visit “bulavita.com”, you’re redirected to “the new Bulavita website” at “m20boost.com”.

M20 Boost is a nutritional supplement containing muscadine grape, pink Fijian ginger, and Fijian turmeric.

According to Bulavita,

each (ingredient) is a potent superfood that helps to detox the body, reduce inflammation, repair digestion, and pave the way for essential nutrient absorption.

Sounds like your usual supplement marketing spiel. You can find similar claims on almost any supplement themed MLM company website.

If you scroll down the M20 Boost website though, Bulavita focuses on muscadine grapes.

With 2 more chromosomes (a total of 20) than regular grapes, Muscadines have an unbelievable natural immunity that resists mold, bacteria, and viruses without the use of harmful chemicals.

The human immune system produces  antibodies when under attack. Similarly,  Muscadine grapes produce the highest levels of antioxidants because of the stress from the environment it grows in.

So
muscadine grape seeds
have a high ORAC count. Still nothing particularly eyebrow raising.

M20 has undergone over $20,000,000 in clinical trials and research at Wake Forest University.

OK. 
Now you’ve got my attention.

In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover human clinical trial of M20 BOOST*, the product resulted in a significant increase in resting brachial artery diameter, which translates into an increased capacity of nearly 14%!

Other in-vitro laboratory studies show that M20 BOOST may inhibit the growth of human cancer cells from 60% to over 92% (depending upon the specific type of cancer) – suggesting that Muscadine extracts may be a new treatment for human cancers.*

Did you spot the asterisks? They point to an FDA disclaimer further down the page.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.

This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

We have Bulavita simultaneously claiming their M20 Boost supplement “may inhibit the growth of human cancer cells from 60% to over 92%”, and that M20 Boost is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Talk about pseudo-compliance.

Bulavita themselves 
don’t 
provide a link to this supposed $20 million study into M20 Boost.

That’s suspicious enough on its own. When I went looking for the study, surprise surprise nothing came up.

It’s bad enough when MLM companies pull the old

X ingredient has clinical studies showing effectiveness against studies into it for Y disease.

Our supplement contains X ingredient and therefore our supplement also has effectiveness against Y disease.

This doesn’t fly with the FDA. And it’s not even what Bulavita are claiming.

The company is flat out stating their M20 Boost study can prevent cancer but winkwink isn’t intended to prevent cancer.

Bulavita i


🤖 Quick Answer

Does Bulavita's M20 Boost supplement have approved claims for cancer cell inhibition?
No scientific evidence supports M20 Boost's claims about inhibiting cancer cell growth. The supplement contains muscadine grape, pink Fijian ginger, and turmeric. Such disease claims on dietary supplements violate FDA regulations unless substantiated by rigorous clinical research and approved through proper channels.

What are the ingredients in M20 Boost?
M20 Boost contains muscadine grape extract, pink Fijian ginger, and Fijian turmeric. The company markets these as superfoods claiming detoxification, inflammation reduction, digestive repair, and enhanced nutrient absorption benefits.

Are muscadine grapes nutritionally different from regular grapes?
Muscadine grapes contain 20 chromosomes compared to 16 in common grape varieties. While musc


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