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Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary defines
coenzyme Q as ubiquinone (suggesting its widespread occurrence in
nature) and describes it as "a quinone that functions as
an electron transfer agent between cytochromes in the Krebs cycle."
Today, in a version known as coenzyme Q-10 (CoQ-10)
or ubiquinol, this nutrient has become a popular seller and a product
that is synonymous with increasing users’ cellular
energy. Further, many studies have shown, it has value
in combating various forms of cardiovascular disease, reducing
the number and size of some tumors and treating gum disease.
In fact, according to the newsletter Nutrition News, it has extended
the life span of laboratory animals up to 56%. Yet, for almost 30
years, this powerful nutrient languished in the shadows, little
understood and used by a scant few of the nutritional cognoscenti.
Today, CoQ10 has been clinically shown to improve heart
function!
In the book All About Coenzyme Q-10, an
entry in Avery Publishing Group’s series on Frequently Asked
Questions (FAQ's), author Ray Sahelian, M.D., reports
that CoQ-10’s discovery dates all the way to 1957. It was
then that Frederick Crane, Ph.D., working at the
University of Wisconsin, isolated an orange substance from the mitochondria
of beef heart. The following year, says Sahelian, Karl Folkers,
Ph.D., and coworkers at Merck synthesized the orange molecule
in the laboratory. As one of the pioneering researchers, Folkers
played a role in naming the substance CoQ-10. When he was in his
80s (he now is deceased), he mused about whether it would have sold
better earlier had it been called a vitamin.
Technically speaking, however, CoQ-10 is not a vitamin.
According to Sahelian, vitamins are nutrients that cannot be manufactured
by the body, but must be ingested. CoQ-10 is manufactured
by the body, but rarely in sufficient amounts to confer significant
health benefits. Therefore, CoQ-10 is "vitamin-like"
in that supplementation is needed.
In the mid 1970's, the Japanese perfected the industrial
technology of fermentation to produce pure CoQ10 in significant
quantities. To this day, virtually all CoQ10 still comes from Japan.
There are two different methods of manufacture. One is via fermentation
and the other is via a combination of fermentation and synthesis.
In the early 1970s, there were discoveries that people
with gum disease and heart disease were deficient in CoQ-10. The
momentum began to build and, by the early 1980's, CoQ-10 had
reached a level of consumption in Japan that rivaled that country’s
five top medications. In fact, all along, it has been the Japanese
and the Europeans who have conducted the majority of clinical trials
using CoQ-10.
Q-Gel® is a hydrosoluble
CoQ10 supplement and the ONLY CoQ10 supplement
that passes the dissolution test.
All of our Q-Gel®
CoQ10 is produced via the fermentation process using a 100% natural
yeast food source. All CoQ10 is obtained either
by 100% fermentation using a special strain of yeast which yields
NATURAL -- 100% ALL TRANS CoQ10 (the type we use in Q-Gel) -- or
the cheaper synthetic alternative which involves partial fermentation
and then synthesis using “solanesol” a chemical extracted
from the tobacco leaf, (we do NOT use this type!).
Please rest assured that there is no residual yeast in our Q-Gel
products.
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