Home
Clinical Studies
How It Works
Why It's Different
How To Take It
FAQs
What Doctors Say
What People Say
The Media Says
Books About CMO
History Discovery

Frequently Asked Questions

* Where can I get authentic CMO?
* Where does it come from?
* How is it made?
* What's in it?
* Can it come from vegetables?
* How come I never heard of this before?
* How can I spot a fraud or "copy cats" ?
* How is authentic CMO different from all those other "copy cat" CMO products?

Where can I get authentic CMO?
You can verify a distributors authenticity by visiting www.realcmo.com.  Also feel free to visit Dr. Sands' son's online shopping cart if you wish to order directly from him.
 

Where does it come from?
CMO is refined from beef tallow. The tallow is derived from US beef. Authentic CMO does not come from vegetables, marine oils or beavers as some companies have claimed.
 

How is it made?
There are three main steps.  Beef tallow is specially processed by a rendering facility. The resulting product is further processed to extract the CMO fatty acid complex in the form of a "raw" waxy material. The "raw" CMO waxes are then finished by processing them into capsules or cream.

All refining, manufacturing, processing and bottling are conducted in government inspected and licensed facilities here in the USA. 

What's in it?
Authentic CMO contains a group of ten naturally associated fatty acids:
Octanoic (Caprylic)
Decanoic (Capric)
Dodecanoic (Lauric)
Tetradecanoic (Myristic)
Tetradecanoic (Myristoleic)
Pentadecanoic
Hexadecanoic (Palmitic)
Hexadecenoic (Palmitoleic)
Octadecenoic (Stearic)
Octadecenoic (Oleic)

Can it come from vegetables?
No. Authentic CMO does not come from "vegetable sources" and neither can cetyl myristoleate according to our chemists.  The industry standard for materials on the table of oils says there are no viable forms of CMO or  cetyl myristoleate in vegetable source oils.

How come I never heard of this before?
Essential laws governing the food & drug industry have restricted the health claims allowed for "Dietary Supplements".  Despite regulations that were deemed unconstitutional by the court of appeals in January of 1999, only parties that do not profit from the supplement sales can exercise their freedom of speech in books, magazines and other media.  That means no claims in advertising from supplement manufacturers and only word of mouth promotes the truth about CMO and other healing nutritional supplements. 

How can I spot a fraud or copy cats?
Authentic CMO is a powder and it only comes from beef sources. There are some custom formulas that include the addition of Collagen, Sea Cucumber Extract, Shark Cartilage, Glucosamine and/or Chondroitin Sulfate but you should find the authentic CMO logo on the bottle somewhere.

How is authentic CMO different from all those other "copy cat" CMO products?
Comparing CMO to other products that claim their cetyl myristoleate is CMO would be like comparing chelated minerals to a box of rocks. Their may be a lot of minerals in the box of rocks, but their dietary value couldn't compare. The same is true for for authentic CMO.

     

Some web pages contain excerpts from the book. To get all the details, get a copy now!

Last Update: 2/26/2012
Copyright © 2012 by Vertex Publishing Inc. - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Contact | Legal | Privacy