› Forums › General Melanoma Community › Coenzyme Q10 supplements ( “Ubiquinol)
- This topic has 10 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 12 months ago by
Doug-Pepper.
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- June 1, 2011 at 5:28 pm
Hi,
Many people have posted that they take Coenzyme Q10 .
Based on the articles below there is a difference in CoQ10 products. The best one should have "Ubiquinol" on the label not "Ubiquinone".
I have not been able to find Coenzyme Q10 "Ubiquinol"on the label. Common popular brands (Nature Made, CVS, Finest Natural, nature Bounty) just identify Coenzyme Q10 as the active ingredient.
Hi,
Many people have posted that they take Coenzyme Q10 .
Based on the articles below there is a difference in CoQ10 products. The best one should have "Ubiquinol" on the label not "Ubiquinone".
I have not been able to find Coenzyme Q10 "Ubiquinol"on the label. Common popular brands (Nature Made, CVS, Finest Natural, nature Bounty) just identify Coenzyme Q10 as the active ingredient.
This supplement is expensive so I want to purchase the Coenzyme Q10 with "Ubiquinol". I would appreciate any recommendations for a brand/manufacturer of Coenzyme Q10 that you are taking.
Thanks,
Jamie
http://naturalstandard.com/news/news200602007.asp
"In 2006, the ubiquinol form of CoQ10 was first introduced as a dietary supplement. Ubiquinol is an electron donor that is able to neutralize dangerous free radicals as soon as it is ingested—unlike ubiquinone (the only type of CoQ10 available before 2006), it requires no biochemical activation after it is consumed.
Evidence suggests that the body absorbs ubiquinol up to eight times more effectively than ubiquinone.38-40 These findings suggest that ubiquinol may offer the most bioavailable CoQ10 formulation available today."
- Replies
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- June 1, 2011 at 6:40 pm
Someone correct me if I am wrong, but I believe Ubiquinone is the fully oxidized form – the form generally sold commercially. Once ingested and absorbed in the body – (depending on ones age) more than 90% of the ingested Ubiquinone is converted into its “active” antioxidant form called Ubiquinol.
Michael
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- June 1, 2011 at 6:40 pm
Someone correct me if I am wrong, but I believe Ubiquinone is the fully oxidized form – the form generally sold commercially. Once ingested and absorbed in the body – (depending on ones age) more than 90% of the ingested Ubiquinone is converted into its “active” antioxidant form called Ubiquinol.
Michael
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- June 1, 2011 at 9:46 pm
Jamie,
We buy ours at Puritan Pride, see:
http://www.puritan.com/coenzyme-q-10-055?Mcat=1&left
http://www.lef.org has it also, see:
http://www.lef.org/search/?q=Ubiquinol
Best wishes,
Gene
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- June 1, 2011 at 9:46 pm
Jamie,
We buy ours at Puritan Pride, see:
http://www.puritan.com/coenzyme-q-10-055?Mcat=1&left
http://www.lef.org has it also, see:
http://www.lef.org/search/?q=Ubiquinol
Best wishes,
Gene
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- June 2, 2011 at 12:09 pm
Jamie, the one Doug is taking is Ubiquinol QH-absorb. It is by Jarrow formulas. He takes 1 soft gel a day (100mg). There are 60 per bottle & where we get them, they are usually $40. They have actually been $30, the last few times I bought them. Hope this helps, Pepper.
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- June 2, 2011 at 12:09 pm
Jamie, the one Doug is taking is Ubiquinol QH-absorb. It is by Jarrow formulas. He takes 1 soft gel a day (100mg). There are 60 per bottle & where we get them, they are usually $40. They have actually been $30, the last few times I bought them. Hope this helps, Pepper.
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