This is just one of many scam products that are being campaigned for in the Microsoft Edge's start site "MSN Start" in Sweden.
"Repair high blood pressure!" and the product name is "Cariovico"
When you click on the ad you'll go to a fake medical magazine that says "After this cleaning of the blood vessels, people of all ages will get rid of high blood pressure and nine other diseases claimed "incurable".
And then there is a interview with "the famous cardiologist Prof. Dr. Erik Larsson". But he doesn't exist. In Germany his name is "Friedrich Kuck". In the Albanian ad he has an Albanian name. The portrait of "him" is actually of a Russian pediatrist, Vladimir Tatochenko.
Then there is the patient "Hanna Andersson, 79, from Gothenburg" who got saved from nearly having a heart attack thanks to Cariovico. In Germany the same woman is called "Martina Henna, 79, from Solingen".
The woman on the picture is in reality Rebecca Button, wife of the American congressman Dan Button.
The ad claims that "Cariovico" is based on the "Active oxygen molecules" and claim that it's a Japanese discovery that has landed two Japanese scientists the Nobel Prize, and it's thanks to these "Active oxygen molecules" Japanese people live longer. This is nonsense, and no Nobel Prizes have been awarded for anything close to that.
The ad claims that they use "natural" things like herbs like Ginko biloba to remove all cholesterol and calcuim deposits from the veins, and that Cariovico cures high blood pressure, vericose veins, tinnitus, weight problems, breathing problems, joint pains, swollen limbs, bad eyesight, erectile dysfunction and more.
They claim that Cariovico was developed by the Swedish "Hjärt- och kärlinstitutet" (Heart and vascular Institute), an institute that doesn't exist. In the German version it was developed by the "Berliner Herz- und Gefässinstitut" (Which doesn't exist either).
Scams like these are not only illegal, but also dangerous when they fool elderly that they will be have their blood vessels cleaned after taking these capsules for three months, which would mean that they could throw their proper medication for Angina and other heart problems away.
One bottle costs 899 SEK, which is about 83 USD.
Swedish: https://eu.great-shape.pro/cariovico_se_in3_n?clickid=64725b66c860e60001ca94df
German: https://eu.realnews.life/cardiobalance_de_pp?clickid=63b481ac457e5a0001b0b01a
And this is not the only scam on MSN Start and in Outlook. There is also "Audiovico" that they claim cures tinnitus and deafness. They even claim that totally deaf will get their hearing back. There is "Proctotivo" that will solve all prostate problems and enlarge the **** with 2-3 inches. There is "EternelleFineEyelifter" from a fake "Exclusive French Company" that removes all wrinkles. "Veniseptico" removes vericose veins. There is "BeSlimmer" herb capsules that maked your body fat disappear without you having to do anything. And many more scams. All the "doctors" and "specialists" are fake, and their portraits stock photos.
And the ads have "comments" by people they have used the products and how "awesome" they are. The names are just made up, and the photos are stolen or stock images.
I have reported these ads for MONTHS, both by clicking on the report function on the ads themselves and by using the Feedback function in MSN Edge, but nothing has been done. On the MSN Start page in Microsoft Edge there are between 20 - 50 scam ads all the time. And many of them pop up in the Outlook Inbox too. It's criminal what's going on.