Professor V. Kintok has been fascinated by human biology since elementary school.
What began as a deep curiosity about how the human body works gradually evolved into a lifelong passion for understanding metabolism, hormones, aging, recovery, inflammation, and the complex systems that shape human health.
After years of studying biology and observing the limitations of modern public health institutions, he became increasingly disappointed by how fragmented and impersonal modern healthcare often feels. Too often, the focus remained on isolated symptoms instead of understanding the body as an interconnected biological system.
Driven by a desire to explore human biology more deeply and independently, he chose to follow his own path as an independent researcher and educational author in the field of human biology.
Throughout his life, he has always been willing to help people facing health struggles, exhaustion, chronic stress, and disease. His work is guided not only by scientific curiosity, but also by a sincere desire to make complex biological topics easier to understand for everyday people.
In this lifelong passion, he has always been supported by his wife and their two wonderful children, whose encouragement continues to inspire his work today.
Why ALIVO?
ALIVO was not created by accident. Even its name reflects the core philosophy behind this project.
The word ALIVO comes from the Latin word alleviare — meaning to lighten, to relieve, to bring comfort.
In Spanish and Portuguese, alivo carries a similar meaning: I relieve. I lighten. I ease.
And that is exactly what this platform was created to do. To lighten the confusion surrounding health. To relieve the fear that often accompanies symptoms, exhaustion, aging, and chronic stress.
To make complex biological topics easier to understand in a calm, practical, and human way.
Because modern health information often feels overwhelming, fragmented, and unnecessarily complicated.
ALIVO takes a different approach.
The goal is not to create fear, extreme solutions, or impossible standards. The goal is to help people better understand the body they live in every day — and to explain difficult biological concepts in a way that feels clear, accessible, and meaningful.
