Description: CORE Nutritionals - OMEGA - High Purity Fish Oil - 120 Softgels - Exp 12/2024 Description: CORE OMEGA When it comes to dietary supplement purchases, consumers are discerning and exact: the dose, form, extract, standardization and more must precisely conform to their standards. The brand matters, the compounds matter, and how those compounds are produced matters. But when it comes to the basic supplements, the staples, most people have the attitude, “It’s all the same.” They travel to their local supplement store, browse quickly online, or grab whatever’s on the grocery store shelves and call it a day. Why? Shouldn’t the staples, something you are placing in your body everyday, be purchased with as much exactitude as the exotic stuff? And more importantly, shouldn’t they be produced with as much care and attention to specifics? At Core, we think they should – and that’s why we’ve released Core OMEGA. Core OMEGA is a fish oil supplement, the Core way. What does that mean? Well, it means carefully selecting a fish oil manufacturer for our product that produces its fish oils under the all important nitrogen barrier – a manufacturing technique that greatly reduces the chance for oxidation, significantly expands the product’s effective shelf life, and all but eliminates any “fish” taste or smell from the oil. It also means ensuring that our fish oil product contains proper levels of the all-important DHA and EPA, with 480mg and 720mg respectively in each serving. Lastly, it means using the purified triglyceride form, rather than the more common ethyl esters.* In total, this is not just another fish oil product – it is the fish oil product. SCIENTIFIC BREAKDOWN Nitrogen Barrier Production Oil derived from marine animals – commonly referred to as “fish oils” – are widely consumed for the high amounts of polyunsaturated fatty acids (such as DHA and EPA) that they contain and the potential health benefits that these fatty acids confer. Unfortunately, polyunsaturated fatty acids are notoriously unstable: they are composed of double-bonds between carbon atoms, a chemical structure that is notoriously susceptible to oxidation. (Oxidation is the process of producing oxygen species as a consequence of a compound’s exposure to oxygen.) For fish oil, oxidation has a number of deleterious effects – principally, the production of hydroperoxides (the first step in oxidation) and secondary oxygen products not only produce the rancid, “fish” smell typically associated with lower quality fish oil products; but perhaps more importantly, in breaking the double bond structure of the fish oil, these oxygen species degrade the integrity of the product and thus reduce their potential health benefits. The oxidation degradation is unfortunately widespread. One study found that 50% of 171 fish oil supplements in Canada exceeded the limits for at least one measure of oxidation, and 39% exceeded the international voluntary safety recommendations for total oxidation (TOTOX value).” Another study found that approximately 29% of fish oil supplements in the United States similarly exceeded recommended values. Luckily, research has shown that reducing the exposure of fish oils to oxygen and environmental factors (humidity and temperature fluctuations) during the production process can significantly mitigate oxidation. One of the most effective ways to reduce oxygen exposure is to blanket the oil, as soon as its processed and produced, in an inert gas such as argon or nitrogen – thereby preventing the fish oil from coming into contact with oxygen at all. While exact values will vary by product, research has shown that both primary oxidation (the production of hydroperoxides, measured in peroxide value, PV) and secondary oxidation (measured in TOTOX (total oxidation value) and a-nsidine values) are vastly reduced through a nitrogen blanket or barrier. In sum, producing fish oils under a nitrogen blanket or barrier not only reduces the rancid smell typically associated with fish oil products; but vastly extends their shelf life and integrity. TRIGLYCERIDES VS ETHYL ESTER FORMS We have established that how fish oils are produced may impact their viability as a dietary supplement. But the production process is not the only salient factor in fish oil efficacy and viability – the form that a fish oil takes is paramount, as well. Specifically, the differences between triglycerides and ethyl esters may be formative in how fish oils are absorbed and confer their potential health benefits. First, a little primer on what triglycerides and ethyl esters are. Triglycerides are a molecular form common to almost all plant and animal species: a glycerol backbone with three fatty acids (in the case of fish oils, EPA and DHA) attached to them. For example, the “stuff” of human adipose (fat) tissue is triglycerides. Ethyl Esters, on the other hand, lack a glycerol backbone – they are a single fatty acid molecule attached to an ethanol molecule. Unlike triglycerides, ethyl esters are not a natural molecular form and formed solely through chemical synthesis. While the difference between triglycerides and ethyl esters as applied to fish oil may seem academic, it in fact has profound implications for the absorption and bioavailability of these oils. In very condensed form, the issue is twofold: how the fish oil is taken up into the bloodstream (absorption) and how it is made available to cells once that has occurred (bioavailability). In both contexts, there is evidence that triglycerides are superior to the ethyl ester form. For bioavailability, the issue is how the small intestine breaks down each form of fish oil. As a natural product, our bodies are intrinsically capable of breaking down triglycerides via bile salts and pancreatic lipase. Once ingested, pancreatic lipase and bile salts are released, and in the small intestine, the triglyceride is broken down into so-called emulsion droplets – which can then easily be broken up, detaching the two fatty acid molecules from the glycerol backbone. Not so with ethyl esters. Not only is pancreatic lipase (by some estimates) 50% less effective in breaking down ethyl esters; but once digested, ethyl esters must be converted into triglycerides through the liberated fatty acids attaching to a glycerol molecule. Essentially, your body must reverse the entire metabolism of ethyl esters, then go through the normal triglyceride metabolism. The biochemical differences between triglycerides and ethyl esters have been demonstrated in trials examining bioavailability and absorption efficiency. One study found that, when ingested in triglyceride form, EPA and DHA levels were 340% and 271%, respectively, as compared to the ethyl ester form. Additional research has found a 25% increase in plasma EPA and DHA levels over a six month period; that ethyl esters are “poorly absorbed” by man; and that triglyceride form fish oils suffer less oxidation (on shelf) than the ethyl ester form.
Price: 24.95 USD
Location: Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania
End Time: 2024-08-12T19:45:46.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Main Purpose: Health of the Heart and Brain
Expiration Date: 12/2024
Ingredients: omega Fish Oil, EPA, DHA
Product: OMEGA
Dosage: 2 Softgels per serving
Flavor: Lemon
California Prop 65 Warning: N/A
When to Take: Take 2 Daily, Before Meal
Active Ingredients: Fish Oil
Brand: Core Nutritionals
Department: Unisex
Type: All-in-One Product
Formulation: Softgel
Number of Pills: 120 Softgels
Features: purified triglyceride form
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Item Weight: 8 oz or more