Descrição do Produto:
O Jarrow Formulas QH-Absorb é um suplemento alimentar de Ubiquinol, com 200 mg por cápsula. Cada frasco contém 60 cápsulas, o que garante um suprimento para 60 dias. O Ubiquinol é uma forma ativa de Coenzima Q10 (Co-Q10), que é encontrada em tecidos ricos em energia, como o coração. Este suplemento ajuda a promover a saúde mitocondrial, a produção de energia celular e a função cardiovascular saudável(1).
Os suplementos de Ubiquinol da Jarrow Formulas são entregues por meio de prolipossomas, o que garante uma melhor absorção pelo organismo. Além disso, eles são testados quanto a não serem geneticamente modificados (IGEN non-GMO) e são livres de glúten, não contendo nenhum dos principais alérgenos.
Recomenda-se que adultos tomem uma cápsula por dia, junto com uma refeição, ou conforme orientação de um profissional de saúde qualificado. É importante ressaltar que este produto não foi avaliado pela Food and Drug Administration e não se destina a diagnosticar, tratar, curar ou prevenir qualquer doença(1).
Conheça 5 Motivos Recomendados pela Vitaminer Shop para Comprar:
- 1. Saúde Cardiovascular: O Ubiquinol é conhecido por promover a função cardiovascular saudável, ajudando a manter o coração em bom funcionamento.
- 2. Energia Celular: A Coenzima Q10 é essencial para a produção de energia nas células, o que pode ajudar a combater a fadiga e aumentar os níveis de energia.
- 3. Saúde Mitocondrial: O Ubiquinol ajuda a manter a saúde das mitocôndrias, as “usinas de energia” das células, contribuindo para o bom funcionamento do organismo.
- 4. Absorção Aprimorada: O Jarrow Formulas QH-Absorb utiliza a tecnologia de prolipossomas para garantir uma melhor absorção do Ubiquinol pelo organismo.
- 5. Qualidade Garantida: Os suplementos de Ubiquinol da Jarrow Formulas são testados quanto a não serem geneticamente modificados e são livres de glúten e principais alérgenos.
– Sugestão de Uso:
Recomenda-se tomar uma cápsula de Jarrow Formulas QH-Absorb por dia, junto com uma refeição, ou conforme orientação de um profissional de saúde qualificado. É importante seguir as instruções de uso e não exceder a dose recomendada. Consulte um médico antes de iniciar o uso deste suplemento, especialmente se estiver grávida, amamentando ou tiver alguma condição médica pré-existente.
Disclaimer: (1)Estas declarações não foram avaliadas pela Food and Drug Administration; este produto não se destina a diagnosticar, tratar, curar ou prevenir qualquer doença.
M Cox –
I always want to know exactly how big supplements are before I buy them sight unseen. So I put photos of a typical 500 mg acetaminophen tablet on one side (the white tablet) and an ordinary 325 full sized round aspirin on the other side. The Jarrow 200 mg dark gel capsule is in the middle with a ruler in the background. They are not entirely small, but they are somewhat soft and reasonable to swallow. I just cannot swallow large pills. And the other thing I like to see is the label on the back side of the bottle. They never show it and they never show the size of the pills or capsules in the advertising. They will show anything and talk about everything except this. So this is my main contribution. See the photos below.
I’ve been taking Co-Enzyme Q10 for decades, possibly for well over 25 years. First I’ll say this is a very good supplement and I will always continue to take it. But do not be lulled into thinking it will cure everything about your heart, especially as you get older. In recent years, I started taking the QH version. It’s difficult to ever know if the long term benefits are working for you or not. I’ve had several fairly serious atrial fibrillation events starting just before my 50th birthday. Except neither my uninformed doctors nor I knew what it was. I was in atrial fibrillation for more than a week – could have easily died of a blood clot that is quite common during even short duration atrial fibrillation.
That was my first encounter with atrial fibrillation and I still didn’t know what it was for another 15 years. I kept thinking it was anxiety attacks and so did my ignorant doctors. I wore heart monitors for a full month and of course, nothing ever happened. I went through very extensive treadmill tests complete with real time ultrasound. Then that cardiologist said I was in great condition. And I added, for my age? He stopped me saying – for any age. So I left his office with all that fancy equipment thinking I was in superb condition. Of course, I still continued to take my Co-Enzyme Q10 faithfully for another 20 years – yet these events kept happening at random, even five to ten years apart. Of course, they became more frequent as my heart aged – even with Q10.
Finally, a big one happened that almost scared me to death – literally. I thought my chest was going to explode, thankfully it stopped after about 5 minutes. I recorded 166 beats per minute and that was as it was slowing down, but that wasn’t the worst of it. The heart beat intensity was explosively strong. A few months later I had a sustained event that didn’t go away and I managed to drive to the cardiologist’s office. Just two days earlier, this new cardiologist had run me through an impressive barrage of tests and pronounced me super healthy. Next day, I was in the hospital with atrial fibrillation that didn’t want to stop. A horrible hospital I might add. Only took them 5 long hours to start doing anything – not even an aspirin. So I eventually had heart ablation surgery in an excellent hospital, Methodist Hospital where former President George Bush goes, and that really helped – for quite a while.
Only now, after 23 years and countless doctors, I’m beginning to know what’s causing it. But not before my primary care doctor nearly killed me with the wrong prescription. I had a bunch of blood tests and I noticed that my TSH has always been zero for at least 5 or more years. It is the hormone from your pituitary master gland to your thyroid gland that controls the amount of thyroid hormones produces. So my doctor prescribed some thyroid stimulant medication. Still the TSH was zero. So he increased the dose. Next thing I knew was my wife was racing me to the hospital. My oximeter was showing as many as 4 skipped beats in a row and I really felt like this was it. She drove right past that horrible hospital at 100 mph, no exaggeration. I made it to a good hospital and within literally 2 minutes I was in a hospital bed being actively tested by cardiologists. No registration or insurance cards at all. I was there for two days and about to have risky procedure to stop and restart my heart when it finally went back to normal. Then a Cardiac catheterization procedure showed my heart’s arteries are in superb condition – zero plaque.
Then I saw a trend over the next few months of having tachycardia events weekly ever since the middle of March. Then I personally connected the dots. Thyroid medicine. My primary care doctor went the opposite direction of what he should have done. Decrease thyroid, not increase it. A TSH level of zero means the thyroid is already producing too much hormones. Too long out of medical school it appears. Now quite by accident, I myself told him I wanted a MRI of my neck and upper chest and there it was – a small tumor on my left thyroid gland. I have to be my own doctor. I use Dr. Google to learn so much. I just got it biopsied two days ago. Results in a week. It’s an 85% chance it is benign. But with my luck… My mother had a goiter removed. And she had atrial fibrillation, except she never called it that. Only long after she died did I realize what it really was.
My cardiologist was horrified and said he was going to call my primary care doctor to educate him. He said that thyroid medication is very likely what put me in the hospital and literally could have killed me or I could have had a massive stroke. I had taken that medicine about one month before he increased it to a higher dose. It is absorbed slowly, but surely. Then bam – in a race against time to a good hospital.
I’m still taking this QH-Absorption 200 mg gel capsules. I think I need it more than ever now. Maybe when I get my thyroid medications and know what this 15 mm thing on my left thyroid gland is, maybe I’ll stop having so any atrial fibrillation events. The strange thing is all my other thyroid levels were right in the middle of normal. My blood tests are always normal. After ablation surgery, only that major event in the hospital has happened and that was from a bad thyroid prescription. The others have been nuisance level events with heart beats in the high eighties or low nineties and a small dose Atenolol pill begins to slow it down within ten minutes typically. Now with medication to lower my thyroid level, perhaps I can finally feel some benefit from these Jarrow Formulas QH-Absorb, High Absorption/Enhanced Stability, 200 mg, 60 Softgels. I take them at night.
Sorry for the long tangentially related story, but maybe somebody out there will read it and benefit from my bad experience. Hearts are tricky gadgets and so many different things can cause them to do odd things. My heart’s blood vessels are remarkably clean – no plaque at all. I grew up on a cattle ranch. I have no idea how many calves I’ve eaten, but a lot in my 73 years. I took Lipitor for years, but then learned of its shady past – built upon a hoax with manipulated data. I stopped taking it immediately.
It’s the size of LDL that matters. The small balls of LDL are the dangerous ones. The big LDL just bounces off. Doctors never test for this. By the way, my total cholesterol is very near the low end of normal including triglycerides. And my diet is just awful – the complete opposite of what you’d expect from my blood tests. Cholesterol has nothing to do with atrial fibrillation. It is often inherited. My mother in my case. She lived to 86 and died from nursing home neglect. I am anxious to get my thyroid hormones lowered so my TSH will be above zero.
And then I hope these Jarrow Formulas QH-Absorb, 200 mg Softgels will help keep me going a couple more decades.
FLchick –
Good quality product if it gets delivered. I have had both good and bad luck with shipping.
phillip harris –
Coenzyme Q10 Deficiency Symptoms
Coenzyme Q10 Deficiency Symptoms
By Olga Norstrom Jun 17, 2015
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is a vitamin-like enzyme found in mitochondria, the power plants of cells. CoQ10’s primary role is to help mitochondria harvest energy-producing adenosine triphosphate (ATP) from the foods we eat. More that 75 percent of the body’s energy is produced this way, so when CoQ10 levels are low, ATP production drops and energy levels dip.
Physical and Mental Fatigue
CoQ10 is vital to the production of energy in the body. A deficiency can cause extreme physical fatigue. People with low levels of this enzyme may feel tired upon waking, or exhausted after just a few minutes of walking. Low CoQ10 levels can also cause mental fatigue. Symptoms include difficulty concentrating and memory lapses. People will also experience mood changes such a loss of enthusiasm, mild to moderate depression, irritability and a decreased ability to handle stress, according Dr. Jacob Teitelbaum, medical director of the Fibromyalgia and Fatigue Centers.
Chronic Pain
Low ATP production is linked to increased pain. People deficient in CoQ10 often experience frequent headaches, migraines, jaw pain, or muscle and joint aches. There is also an increased risk of developing fibromyalgia, a chronic condition marked by widespread pain and extreme sensitivity to touch.
Weak Immune System
A weak immune system is also associated with low levels of CoQ10. People with this deficiency are more susceptible to cold and flu viruses, and they often suffer with chronic gum infections, says Dr. Teitelbaum. Without sufficient energy, the body cannot produce sufficient protective antibodies and defenders like the T-cells and macrophages cannot carry out their germ-fighting functions properly, he adds.
Increased Risk of Heart Disease and Obesity
Low levels of CoQ10 causes inflammation that leads to high blood pressure and high cholesterol, raising the risk heart disease, according to research published in the December 2009 issue of “Pharmacology and Therapeutics.” A CoQ10 deficiency also reduces energy in cardiac cells, increasing the risk of heart failure.
Some studies have found that CoQ10 levels are 52 percent lower in obese people, leading some researchers to believe that low levels are a factor in weight gain and difficulty shedding excess pounds.
Neurological Disorders
Low levels of CoQ10 are also linked with a number of neuromuscular and neurodegenerative disorders, including myalgic encephalomyelitis, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Richard –
I have taken this supplement on the advice of many physicians. It is a heart healthy supplement.
M Cox –
This is a very good q 10 I have had no side effects at all it help my heart to work better I can feel the difference.
N1ven –
Needed to find quality ubiquinol and this is it! Great quality and only one pill a day at 200mgs.
Mike Holsomback –
Use this product it’s great.
Dont irder in summer if it’s going to sit outside at all. It melts.
Thomas Smith –
Ok – I reviewed last year, so consider this an update. I’m a 69 yr old athlete with congenital challenges. My longevity doctor uses frequent scans and blood tests including micronutrient profiles from Quest, SpectraCell Laboratories and Cleveland HeartLab. I generally only use Jarrow Formulas and Pure Encapsulations because they have been proven in my body to work. However, after great lab results, I’ve been known to buy cheaper brands (only one at a time so I can see results) and have seen the labs collapse.
Case in point… I tried Qunol Ultra Co-Q10 from CVS because of 32% off coupon and advertising. BIG MISTAKE… took 400mg (2 pills twice a day) and my next test (6 months ago) showed me to be deficient levels of 46% (% by wt.) Co-Q10 – yikes! I Immediately went back to Jarrow QH-absorb 200mg 2x/day and my latest test 2 weeks ago was back up to 106%.
Don’t cheap out on your Co-Q10. Jarrow is worth the money (I’m talking about their QH-absorb, not their cheaper Co-Q10).
NOTE: for proper absorption, don’t take within 3 hours of metformin. Don’t risk your health on the cheap stuff.