
He doesn’t recommend anything he wouldn’t take himself.
Staying Skeptical Won’t Get You Results
Skepticism has its place. What it doesn’t have is a path to recovery.
When patients push back on enzyme therapy or question whether a supplement will actually move the needle, Nuriddin’s response is direct. “You can be skeptical,” he says, “but you can’t stay there. Things are not gonna change if you remain a skeptic.”
He doesn’t argue with doubt. He removes it. Is the capsule too large? Break it in half. If swallowing is the problem, empty the contents into applesauce. Whatever the objection, there’s always a practical workaround, because the real obstacle isn’t the capsule, it’s willingness.
That willingness is what Nuriddin is really asking for. Give the product a fair chance, and the product will do its job.
Building Health vs. Masking It
Suppressing a symptom and resolving a problem are two entirely different things.
Nuriddin thinks about this a lot. He sees pharmaceutical approaches doing what they often do, pushing symptoms deeper into the tissue rather than addressing what caused them.
His language on this is deliberate and precise: he wants patients to understand “how advantageous it is to utilize substances that are going to support and build better health, as opposed to drive the symptoms deeper into the tissue.”
That framing, building health rather than masking its absence, sits at the core of how he practices.
He never recommends a single product in isolation. Health, as he sees it, is a system. The gastrointestinal tract, the liver, the gallbladder. These are his starting points with nearly every patient, regardless of what specific complaint brings them through the door.
“If it’s left to me to put them on something to build better health, restore the health, or keep the balance,” he says, “I’m going to give them more than one formula.”
The Proof That Travels With You
There’s a moment that captures it better than any clinical breakdown could.
Nuriddin travelled to Senegal, a demanding trip, long days, stairs, crowds, heat, constant movement. The group he was with were men around 50. He was keeping pace with all of them. More than keeping pace, if he’s honest. “The energy and the vitality was there,” he says, “because of the arterial system working as well as it does.”
He’d lined up everything he was going to take each day: morning, evening, and night, before he left. The Craetegus and the Accelerin working in combination. What he describes as Craetegus opening the cardiovascular pathways, the Accelerant oxygenating the blood and driving it through the system.
Together, they produced something measurable, a clarity and speed in circulation he noticed when rising from prayer, something that simply hadn’t been there before.
He came back from Senegal with his voice worn down from talking so much. Nothing else. “It felt good all the way through,” he said.
That’s what the products do when you actually use them. When you take them consistently, travel with them, build your daily routine around them. The results become personal. They stop being clinical data and start being your own evidence.
A Twenty-Year Track Record
At some point, the length of time you’ve stayed with something says more than any review could.
Nuriddin has been using Marco Pharma products for 20 years. Not because he committed to a brand early and never looked elsewhere. Because the first product he tried worked. Then the next one worked. “Once I used one of the products and that one product worked,” he explains, “the intuitive factor just kicked in to say the others probably worked too.”
Twenty years of consistent personal use. Products taken morning, evening, and night. A Senegal trip run at full tilt. Patients who reorder before their supply is gone. These are the compounding reasons behind a simple, unambiguous statement: “I wouldn’t be using them if they didn’t work.”
About Dr Nuriddin
Imam Abdel J. Nuriddin, N.D., Ph.D., is an Islamic scholar and holistic health practitioner based in Greensboro, North Carolina. He holds a Ph.D. in Holistic Nutrition and a Doctorate in Naturopathy, and together with his wife Connie operates Genesis Health & Nutrition Center LLC. He serves as resident Imam of W.D. Mohammed Islamic Center and is the author of two books on health and wellness. A longtime contributor to the Muslim Journal, he also hosts a live weekly health program on Cable 8 in Greensboro.
This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Statements regarding Marco Pharma International’s products have not been evaluated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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