What is Vestige CMD?
Vestige CMD is marketed as a natural sea-mineral supplement. According to the maker, the minerals are sourced from Great Salt Lake in Utah (USA), and concentrated through a solar-evaporation process over about two years.
The idea is to “restore” the full spectrum of trace minerals (ionic minerals) in purified water, to supply minerals that may be missing from modern diets.
In practical terms: the manufacturer recommends adding a few drops of CMD to water (e.g. 7 drops per litre) — thereby “mineralizing” drinking water — and consuming that water multiple times a day.
Benefits by Vestige
According to Vestige promotional and product-description materials, CMD is claimed to offer multiple health benefits:
Balancing body pH / alkalizing water: CMD is said to convert acidic pH into a more alkaline balance, potentially improving gut environment and overall body acidity/alkalinity.
Enhancing hydration and mineral balance: By adding essential trace minerals back into drinking water, CMD aims to support hydration and help meet mineral needs.
Supporting digestion and gut health: The alkaline, mineral-rich water is described as being better for digestion and may support “good bacteria” in the gut.
Detoxification & cellular nourishment: CMD is promoted as supporting detox processes, improving cellular nourishment, helping metabolism, and overall systemic health.
Skin, muscle & immune support: Some materials highlight potential benefits for skin health, muscle function, bone/ cell health, and strengthening the immune system — basically claiming that supplying trace minerals supports many bodily systems.
Vestige positions CMD as useful especially in contexts where diets may be mineral-deficient, or water and soil mineral quality has degraded over generations.
Composition and Certification Claims
Vestige states that CMD provides “84 human-grade minerals” (i.e. a broad spectrum of essential/trace minerals) — thereby making it more than just a few salts, but a comprehensive mineral supplement.
The manufacturing process is described as free from artificial ingredients: the mineral-rich water from Great Salt Lake is subjected to a traditional solar-concentration (evaporation) process.
According to the launch announcement, CMD is claimed to be certified by various certifications including vegetarian / gluten-free / halal / kosher / NSF / GRAS, making it allegedly suitable for a wide audience.
How to Use CMD (as per Vestige)
The recommended usage (as described in materials) is:
Add ~7 drops of CMD to 1 litre of water.
Drink this mineralized water — multiple times a day (for example, some sources say up to three times a day) to maintain optimal mineral levels in the body.
Avoid mixing CMD-water in metal vessels, or mixing with milk/milk-products, as per some guidance.
Scribd
What We Don’t Know (or What Needs Caution)
While Vestige’s promotional materials make many claims, there are a few caveats to note — especially from a critical or scientific perspective:
I did not find credible, independent peer-reviewed scientific studies linked to CMD that validate all the health claims (detox, pH balance, immune boosting, mineral deficiency correction). The sources we saw are promotional materials, press releases, or marketing documents.
The idea that many modern ailments stem primarily from “mineral deficiency” or “acidic body pH / lack of trace minerals in water” is debated in mainstream nutrition/medicine. The human body regulates pH tightly, and a balanced diet — not just mineral drops — is generally recommended for mineral needs.
Overuse or reliance on a supplement cannot replace overall diet, healthy lifestyle, and medical advice when needed.
In Summary
Vestige CMD is a “concentrated mineral drop” supplement from Vestige, meant to re-introduce a broad spectrum of trace minerals into your drinking water — promising benefits related to mineral balance, hydration, digestion, detoxification, skin/muscle health and more, while also converting water (and potentially body pH) into a more alkaline form. The minerals are claimed to be naturally sourced from the Great Salt Lake and processed without artificial additives, with certifications to support suitability for different dietary preferences.
That said — as with many dietary supplements — many of the claims seem based on marketing, tradition, or general theories about mineral deficiencies rather than independent scientific validation. If you are considering using CMD (or any supplement), it would be wise to view it as possibly supportive — not as a guaranteed “cure-all” — and maintain a balanced diet and healthy lifestyle.
Информация по комментариям в разработке