Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 Judy- >Can anyone tell me if you are supposed to take vitamin E when you take >Cod Liver Oil? I don't see any vitamin E listed on my CLO and Dr. >Mercola says you need vitamin e along with the CLO. As it's a fat-soluble antioxidant, it would probably be a good idea, particularly if you're not taking high-vitamin CLO. The problem is that most vitamin E supplements out there are either pure alpha tocopherol or mostly alpha tocopherol with a piddling amount of mixed other tocopherols. What you really want is the whole family of tocopherols in proper balance, which means mostly gamma, not alpha, and ideally you'd also want a properly balanced mixture of tocotrienols. There are only a few well-balanced E-complex supplements out there that I know of. AOR's " Total E " has 65mg of d-alpha-tocopherol, 8mg of d-beta tocopherol, 210mg of d-gamma tocopherol, and 82mg of d-delta tocopherol, amounting to 365mg of tocopherols, and 15mg of d-alpha tocotrienol, 0.6mg of d-beta tocotrienol, 28mg of d-gamma tocotrienol, and 6.3mg of d-delta tocotrienol, amounting to 50mg of tocotrienols. It also contains 30mg of CoQ10 and olive oil, rosemary oil, ascorbyl palmitate and possibly beeswax as fillers and gelatin and carob for the softgel itself. The alpha tocopherol is partly from palm and the tocotrienols are entirely from palm, but unfortunately, the rest of the alpha tocopherol is from soy and the rest of the tocopherols are entirely from soy. It ain't cheap either, at $30 or so for a bottle of 60 softgels. Carotec's " The E " has 200IU (133.33mg) of alpha tocopherol, 6mg of beta tocopherol, 162mg of gamma tocopherol, and 65mg delta tocopherol, amounting to 366.33mg of tocopherols. AFAIK they're all in the d form too, though they're not explicitly listed as such, and I'm afraid they may be soy-derived, but Carotec's catalog insists there's no added soy oil, just other " beneficial plant compounds " such as squalene making up the rest of the distillate. At $33 (the non-member price) for a bottle of 180, it's a better deal than AOR's, but the ratios might not be as good. Carotec has a separate palm tocotrienol supplement which contains 39mg of d-alpha tocotrienol, 71.5mg of d-gamma tocotrienol, 16.25mg of d-delta tocotrienol, amounting to 126.75mg of tocotrienols, and 58IU of d-alpha tocopherol. I'm not sure why, but the catalog doesn't list any d-beta tocotrienol. Maybe it's an error; maybe the supplement just doesn't contain any. Unfortunately, the non-member price is painfully high, at $65 for a bottle of 60. A. C. Grace's " Unique E " contains 400IU (266.67mg) of d-alpha tocopherol, " at least " 300mg d-gamma tocopherol, and 132mg total of d-delta and d-beta tocopherols. I wish I knew how those latter two broke down, but it advertises that it's soy free and contains no other fillers, and at $32 for a bottle of 180 capsules at Vitamin Shoppe, it's probably the bargain of the bunch even though it might be high on the d-alpha fraction. AOR also sells a tocotrienol supplement called " Toco-3-Nol Max " (don't ask me why) which contains 38mg of d-Alpha-Tocotrienol, 1mg of d-Beta-Tocotrienol, 70mg of d-Gamma-Tocotrienol, and 16mg of d-Delta-Tocotrienol, amounting to 125mg of tocotrienols. Its fillers and softgel contents are pretty much the same as the other AOR supplement I listed. The tocotrienols are palm-derived and the supplement is soy-free, and at about $18 for a bottle of 60, this looks like the new tocotrienol deal of the century, beating the living hell out of Carotec's almost identical $65 version. In fact, based on that, I'd say that of the E complex supplements I know, my new recommendation would be to buy Unique E from Vitamin Shoppe or whomever has the best price and AOR's tocotrienol complex in order to get the whole tocopherol and tocotrienol E complex family. If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex supplements, please chime in, because I'd like to keep my recommendations as useful and up to date as possible! - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 >-----Original Message----- >From: >[mailto: ]On Behalf Of Idol >If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex supplements, please >chime in, because I'd like to keep my recommendations as useful and >up to date as possible! Palm oil. Jungle products. Mmmmm.... Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 Suze- > >If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex supplements, please > >chime in, because I'd like to keep my recommendations as useful and > >up to date as possible! > >Palm oil. > >Jungle products. Mmmmm.... That stuff was stunningly delicious, but do you have any idea what its vitamin E content is? I can't find any details on their site. Tropical Traditions has a chart <http://www.tropicaltraditions.com/red_palm_oil.htm> which indicates that (their?) palm oil has about 1150ppm mixed tocopherols and tocotrienols split roughly 55/45, so at a guess, 1g of palm oil contains something roughly like 0.64mg of mixed tocopherols and 0.52mg of mixed tocotrienols, each in who knows what proportions. I have no idea whether that accurately reflects Jungle's product, which seemed so extraordinarily different from TT's, but assuming it does, well, suffice it to say that it's not a very dense source at all. Of course we could debate how much E complex we actually need, but given that the brain is the densest concentration of unsaturated fats in the body, I'd rather err on the side of caution when it comes to fat-soluble antioxidants. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 , My Carlson's cod liver oil is showing 10 IU of d Alpha Tocopherol per teaspoon of Vitamin E, is that enough to prevent ranciditiy in my body? Or should I also buy some Unique E? Mercola says the Carlsons has the E in it, which is true, but is it enough? THanks, Juli --- Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > Judy- > > >Can anyone tell me if you are supposed to take > vitamin E when you take > >Cod Liver Oil? I don't see any vitamin E listed on > my CLO and Dr. > >Mercola says you need vitamin e along with the CLO. > > As it's a fat-soluble antioxidant, it would probably > be a good idea, > particularly if you're not taking high-vitamin CLO. > The problem is > that most vitamin E supplements out there are either > pure alpha > tocopherol or mostly alpha tocopherol with a > piddling amount of mixed > other tocopherols. What you really want is the > whole family of > tocopherols in proper balance, which means mostly > gamma, not alpha, > and ideally you'd also want a properly balanced > mixture of tocotrienols. > > There are only a few well-balanced E-complex > supplements out there > that I know of. > > AOR's " Total E " has 65mg of d-alpha-tocopherol, 8mg > of d-beta > tocopherol, 210mg of d-gamma tocopherol, and 82mg of > d-delta > tocopherol, amounting to 365mg of tocopherols, and > 15mg of d-alpha > tocotrienol, 0.6mg of d-beta tocotrienol, 28mg of > d-gamma > tocotrienol, and 6.3mg of d-delta tocotrienol, > amounting to 50mg of > tocotrienols. It also contains 30mg of CoQ10 and > olive oil, rosemary > oil, ascorbyl palmitate and possibly beeswax as > fillers and gelatin > and carob for the softgel itself. The alpha > tocopherol is partly > from palm and the tocotrienols are entirely from > palm, but > unfortunately, the rest of the alpha tocopherol is > from soy and the > rest of the tocopherols are entirely from soy. It > ain't cheap > either, at $30 or so for a bottle of 60 softgels. > > Carotec's " The E " has 200IU (133.33mg) of alpha > tocopherol, 6mg of > beta tocopherol, 162mg of gamma tocopherol, and 65mg > delta > tocopherol, amounting to 366.33mg of tocopherols. > AFAIK they're all > in the d form too, though they're not explicitly > listed as such, and > I'm afraid they may be soy-derived, but Carotec's > catalog insists > there's no added soy oil, just other " beneficial > plant compounds " > such as squalene making up the rest of the > distillate. At $33 (the > non-member price) for a bottle of 180, it's a better > deal than AOR's, > but the ratios might not be as good. > > Carotec has a separate palm tocotrienol supplement > which contains > 39mg of d-alpha tocotrienol, 71.5mg of d-gamma > tocotrienol, 16.25mg > of d-delta tocotrienol, amounting to 126.75mg of > tocotrienols, and > 58IU of d-alpha tocopherol. I'm not sure why, but > the catalog > doesn't list any d-beta tocotrienol. Maybe it's an > error; maybe the > supplement just doesn't contain any. Unfortunately, > the non-member > price is painfully high, at $65 for a bottle of 60. > > A. C. Grace's " Unique E " contains 400IU (266.67mg) > of d-alpha > tocopherol, " at least " 300mg d-gamma tocopherol, and > 132mg total of > d-delta and d-beta tocopherols. I wish I knew how > those latter two > broke down, but it advertises that it's soy free and > contains no > other fillers, and at $32 for a bottle of 180 > capsules at Vitamin > Shoppe, it's probably the bargain of the bunch even > though it might > be high on the d-alpha fraction. > > AOR also sells a tocotrienol supplement called > " Toco-3-Nol Max " > (don't ask me why) which contains 38mg of > d-Alpha-Tocotrienol, 1mg of > d-Beta-Tocotrienol, 70mg of d-Gamma-Tocotrienol, and > 16mg of > d-Delta-Tocotrienol, amounting to 125mg of > tocotrienols. Its fillers > and softgel contents are pretty much the same as the > other AOR > supplement I listed. The tocotrienols are > palm-derived and the > supplement is soy-free, and at about $18 for a > bottle of 60, this > looks like the new tocotrienol deal of the century, > beating the > living hell out of Carotec's almost identical $65 > version. > > In fact, based on that, I'd say that of the E > complex supplements I > know, my new recommendation would be to buy Unique E > from Vitamin > Shoppe or whomever has the best price and AOR's > tocotrienol complex > in order to get the whole tocopherol and tocotrienol > E complex family. > > If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex > supplements, please > chime in, because I'd like to keep my > recommendations as useful and > up to date as possible! > > > > - > > __________________________________ - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 http://mail. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 On 11/17/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > Suze- > > > >If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex supplements, please > > >chime in, because I'd like to keep my recommendations as useful and > > >up to date as possible! > > > >Palm oil. > > > >Jungle products. Mmmmm.... > > That stuff was stunningly delicious, but do you have any idea what > its vitamin E content is? , I think posted a breakdown of the vitamin E content of palm oil awhile back in a thread with Suze. You might onibasu it. -- " It is no crime to be ignorant of economics, which is, after all, a specialized discipline and one that most people consider to be a 'dismal science.' But it is totally irresponsible to have a loud and vociferous opinion on economic subjects while remaining in this state of ignorance. " -- Murray Rothbard Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 Not to diminish 's important information on vitamin E supplements, but CLO is unique in its ability to supply PUFAs and be ANTI-oxidative. So yes, you need sufficient E to provide protection for the PUFAs, but vitamin A is the big thing you need to support your glutathione peroxidase activity. In the presence of sufficient E, all PUFAs raise lipid peroxides, while CLO alone, as far as I've seen can *decrease* oxidative stress. They key factor there is the vitamin A. The vitamin E in the CLO is *not* meant to protect the PUFAs in your body! It's just meant to protect them in the jar. You need the E in the rest of your diet, but you certainly do not need extra E for the PUFAs in CLO any more than you need extra E for the PUFAs in butter, lard, and God forbid any vegetable oils. You need the whole network -- vitamins A, E, C, coenzyme Q10, selenium, etc. They do not work by themselves. The Vitamin E, for example, is worthless without the CoQ10, and the whole system basically fails without the selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase (which is vitamin A-dependent as well). If there is anything to single out it is certainly vitamin A and not vitamin E from what I've seen, but what is imporant is a diet rich in the whole antioxidant network. Chris -- Dioxins in Animal Foods: A Case For Vegetarianism? Find Out the Truth: http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 Speaking of Vitamin E supplementation, doesn't pumkin seed oil containt the whole E shabangabang? -- In , Masterjohn <chrismasterjohn@g...> wrote: > > Not to diminish 's important information on vitamin E supplements, > but CLO is unique in its ability to supply PUFAs and be > ANTI-oxidative. So yes, you need sufficient E to provide protection > for the PUFAs, but vitamin A is the big thing you need to support your > glutathione peroxidase activity. In the presence of sufficient E, all > PUFAs raise lipid peroxides, while CLO alone, as far as I've seen can > *decrease* oxidative stress. They key factor there is the vitamin A. > > The vitamin E in the CLO is *not* meant to protect the PUFAs in your > body! It's just meant to protect them in the jar. You need the E in > the rest of your diet, but you certainly do not need extra E for the > PUFAs in CLO any more than you need extra E for the PUFAs in butter, > lard, and God forbid any vegetable oils. > > You need the whole network -- vitamins A, E, C, coenzyme Q10, > selenium, etc. They do not work by themselves. The Vitamin E, for > example, is worthless without the CoQ10, and the whole system > basically fails without the selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase > (which is vitamin A-dependent as well). If there is anything to > single out it is certainly vitamin A and not vitamin E from what I've > seen, but what is imporant is a diet rich in the whole antioxidant > network. > > Chris > > -- > Dioxins in Animal Foods: > A Case For Vegetarianism? > Find Out the Truth: > http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 17, 2005 Report Share Posted November 17, 2005 - How about cold-pressed wheat germ oil? Isn't that an excellent source of natural Vit. E? In Eat Fat Lose Fat SF recommends the Now Nutrition brand. Theresa -- In , Idol <Idol@c...> wrote: > > Judy- > > >Can anyone tell me if you are supposed to take vitamin E when you take > >Cod Liver Oil? I don't see any vitamin E listed on my CLO and Dr. > >Mercola says you need vitamin e along with the CLO. > > As it's a fat-soluble antioxidant, it would probably be a good idea, > particularly if you're not taking high-vitamin CLO. The problem is > that most vitamin E supplements out there are either pure alpha > tocopherol or mostly alpha tocopherol with a piddling amount of mixed > other tocopherols. What you really want is the whole family of > tocopherols in proper balance, which means mostly gamma, not alpha, > and ideally you'd also want a properly balanced mixture of tocotrienols. > > There are only a few well-balanced E-complex supplements out there > that I know of. > > AOR's " Total E " has 65mg of d-alpha-tocopherol, 8mg of d-beta > tocopherol, 210mg of d-gamma tocopherol, and 82mg of d-delta > tocopherol, amounting to 365mg of tocopherols, and 15mg of d-alpha > tocotrienol, 0.6mg of d-beta tocotrienol, 28mg of d-gamma > tocotrienol, and 6.3mg of d-delta tocotrienol, amounting to 50mg of > tocotrienols. It also contains 30mg of CoQ10 and olive oil, rosemary > oil, ascorbyl palmitate and possibly beeswax as fillers and gelatin > and carob for the softgel itself. The alpha tocopherol is partly > from palm and the tocotrienols are entirely from palm, but > unfortunately, the rest of the alpha tocopherol is from soy and the > rest of the tocopherols are entirely from soy. It ain't cheap > either, at $30 or so for a bottle of 60 softgels. > > Carotec's " The E " has 200IU (133.33mg) of alpha tocopherol, 6mg of > beta tocopherol, 162mg of gamma tocopherol, and 65mg delta > tocopherol, amounting to 366.33mg of tocopherols. AFAIK they're all > in the d form too, though they're not explicitly listed as such, and > I'm afraid they may be soy-derived, but Carotec's catalog insists > there's no added soy oil, just other " beneficial plant compounds " > such as squalene making up the rest of the distillate. At $33 (the > non-member price) for a bottle of 180, it's a better deal than AOR's, > but the ratios might not be as good. > > Carotec has a separate palm tocotrienol supplement which contains > 39mg of d-alpha tocotrienol, 71.5mg of d-gamma tocotrienol, 16.25mg > of d-delta tocotrienol, amounting to 126.75mg of tocotrienols, and > 58IU of d-alpha tocopherol. I'm not sure why, but the catalog > doesn't list any d-beta tocotrienol. Maybe it's an error; maybe the > supplement just doesn't contain any. Unfortunately, the non- member > price is painfully high, at $65 for a bottle of 60. > > A. C. Grace's " Unique E " contains 400IU (266.67mg) of d-alpha > tocopherol, " at least " 300mg d-gamma tocopherol, and 132mg total of > d-delta and d-beta tocopherols. I wish I knew how those latter two > broke down, but it advertises that it's soy free and contains no > other fillers, and at $32 for a bottle of 180 capsules at Vitamin > Shoppe, it's probably the bargain of the bunch even though it might > be high on the d-alpha fraction. > > AOR also sells a tocotrienol supplement called " Toco-3-Nol Max " > (don't ask me why) which contains 38mg of d-Alpha-Tocotrienol, 1mg of > d-Beta-Tocotrienol, 70mg of d-Gamma-Tocotrienol, and 16mg of > d-Delta-Tocotrienol, amounting to 125mg of tocotrienols. Its fillers > and softgel contents are pretty much the same as the other AOR > supplement I listed. The tocotrienols are palm-derived and the > supplement is soy-free, and at about $18 for a bottle of 60, this > looks like the new tocotrienol deal of the century, beating the > living hell out of Carotec's almost identical $65 version. > > In fact, based on that, I'd say that of the E complex supplements I > know, my new recommendation would be to buy Unique E from Vitamin > Shoppe or whomever has the best price and AOR's tocotrienol complex > in order to get the whole tocopherol and tocotrienol E complex family. > > If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex supplements, please > chime in, because I'd like to keep my recommendations as useful and > up to date as possible! > > > > - > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 Thank you very much ! This helps alot. Judy --- In , Idol <Idol@c...> wrote: > > In fact, based on that, I'd say that of the E complex supplements I > know, my new recommendation would be to buy Unique E from Vitamin > Shoppe or whomever has the best price and AOR's tocotrienol complex > in order to get the whole tocopherol and tocotrienol E complex family. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 Juli- >My Carlson's cod liver oil is showing 10 IU of d >Alpha Tocopherol per teaspoon of Vitamin E, is that >enough to prevent ranciditiy in my body? As pointed out, the E is really just there to help keep it from going bad in the body. Vitamins A and D are much more involved in keeping the PUFAs in CLO from going rancid in the body. However, I'd really recommend using a high-vitamin CLO instead of Carlson's, and supplementary E complex can be very useful also. >Mercola says the >Carlsons has the E in it, which is true, but is it >enough? THanks, Juli The 10IU of alpha tocopherol in Carlson's is such a trivial amount it might as well not be there from the perspective of vitamin E supplementation. Also, as I've mentioned, you want more gamma tocopherol than alpha tocopherol, though I'm still not clear on the ideal ratio of gamma to alpha. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 Thanks , I am going to get the Unique E, Juli --- Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > Juli- > > >My Carlson's cod liver oil is showing 10 IU of d > >Alpha Tocopherol per teaspoon of Vitamin E, is that > >enough to prevent ranciditiy in my body? > > As pointed out, the E is really just there to > help keep it from > going bad in the body. Vitamins A and D are much > more involved in > keeping the PUFAs in CLO from going rancid in the > body. However, I'd > really recommend using a high-vitamin CLO instead of > Carlson's, and > supplementary E complex can be very useful also. > > >Mercola says the > >Carlsons has the E in it, which is true, but is it > >enough? THanks, Juli > > The 10IU of alpha tocopherol in Carlson's is such a > trivial amount it > might as well not be there from the perspective of > vitamin E > supplementation. Also, as I've mentioned, you want > more gamma > tocopherol than alpha tocopherol, though I'm still > not clear on the > ideal ratio of gamma to alpha. > > > > > - > > __________________________________ FareChase: Search multiple travel sites in one click. http://farechase. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 Chris- >Not to diminish 's important information on vitamin E supplements, >but CLO is unique in its ability to supply PUFAs and be >ANTI-oxidative. That's not equally true of low-vitamin and high-vitamin CLO, though, is it? Or is there a threshold and even low-vitamin (standard?) CLO is past it? >In the presence of sufficient E, all >PUFAs raise lipid peroxides, while CLO alone, as far as I've seen can >*decrease* oxidative stress. They key factor there is the vitamin A. Don't you mean in the absence of sufficient E? Deficiency certainly promotes increased peroxidation even though the literature is somewhat contradictory on the value of supplementation (I'm guessing because tests are almost exclusively run on synthetic alpha, probably mostly dl-alpha rather than d-alpha). Not that I wasn't unclear, though. I guess I implied that E complex should be taken with CLO particularly, when I really just got off on a whole vitamin E tangent. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 Theresa- >How about cold-pressed wheat germ oil? Isn't that an excellent >source of natural Vit. E? In Eat Fat Lose Fat SF recommends the Now >Nutrition brand. Sorry for the redundant post, but no, I'd never recommend wheat germ oil. Too much harmful PUFA. Maybe E _isolated_ from wheat germ oil, but not the oil itself. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 - >Speaking of Vitamin E supplementation, doesn't pumkin seed oil >containt the whole E shabangabang? Not sure off the top of my head, but the problem with high-PUFA oils as a source of vitamin E is that you're adding lots of PUFA to your diet in order to get some vitamin E, and the antioxidant activity of the E is already accounted for by the PUFA. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 On 11/18/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > Chris- > > >Not to diminish 's important information on vitamin E supplements, > >but CLO is unique in its ability to supply PUFAs and be > >ANTI-oxidative. > > That's not equally true of low-vitamin and high-vitamin CLO, though, > is it? Or is there a threshold and even low-vitamin (standard?) CLO > is past it? Since I assume there aren't any studies using high-vitamin, I would say there is a threhold and low-vitamin is past it. It appears to be due to the vitamin A, so the more vitamin A, the greater the protection against oxidation. > >In the presence of sufficient E, all > >PUFAs raise lipid peroxides, while CLO alone, as far as I've seen can > >*decrease* oxidative stress. They key factor there is the vitamin A. > > Don't you mean in the absence of sufficient E? No, I mean presence. Vitamin E supplementation does not stop the positive relationship between dietary PUFA and lipid peroxidation within the body. > Deficiency certainly > promotes increased peroxidation even though the literature is > somewhat contradictory on the value of supplementation (I'm guessing > because tests are almost exclusively run on synthetic alpha, probably > mostly dl-alpha rather than d-alpha). In the *absence* of vitamin E, even CLO will increase lipid peroxidation. But in the *presence* of adequate dietary E, only CLO to my knowledge does not increase, and can even decrease, lipid peroxidation, whereas all the others still increase lipid peroxidation. > Not that I wasn't unclear, though. I guess I implied that E complex > should be taken with CLO particularly, when I really just got off on > a whole vitamin E tangent. Ok, but not CLO any more than other PUFA oils, or animal fats that have substantial PUFA. If you take a tablespoon, you're getting, what? A few grams of PUFA? For most people they probably get quite a bit more, I'd think, PUFA from other fats, and most people don't take a tbsp of CLO. So maybe the E complex is *always* recommended, but I don't see the CLO as making a huge difference. Chris -- Dioxins in Animal Foods: A Case For Vegetarianism? Find Out the Truth: http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 > > >Speaking of Vitamin E supplementation, doesn't pumkin seed oil > >containt the whole E shabangabang? > > Not sure off the top of my head, but the problem with high-PUFA oils > as a source of vitamin E is that you're adding lots of PUFA to your > diet in order to get some vitamin E, and the antioxidant activity of > the E is already accounted for by the PUFA. > I don't understand what you mean by the last part of the last sentence. Can you explain further? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 On 11/18/05, crayfishfeed <crayfishfeed@...> wrote: > > > > > >Speaking of Vitamin E supplementation, doesn't pumkin seed oil > > >containt the whole E shabangabang? > > > > Not sure off the top of my head, but the problem with high-PUFA oils > > as a source of vitamin E is that you're adding lots of PUFA to your > > diet in order to get some vitamin E, and the antioxidant activity of > > the E is already accounted for by the PUFA. > > > I don't understand what you mean by the last part of the last > sentence. Can you explain further? Not , but since I've had said it and I'm here first... vitamin E is used to protect PUFA from oxidation. The more PUFA you intake, the more antioxidants you need. So the best source of vitamin E, all other variables being equal, is one that has a high vitamin E to PUFA ratio, rather than just being high in total vitamin E. Think of your PUFA as your costs and your vitamin E as your revenue -- with the same revenue, your profit is dependent on having lower costs. Or think of it as finding a job further away from home at which you make more money. Your pay is your vitamin E, but your traveling expenses are your PUFA. You're only making a higher net pay after you account for the increased money spent in gas, wear and tear in your car, public transportation, etc. Ultimately it is basically this: vitamin E is an antioxidant. PUFAs are pro-oxidant. Net antioxidant activity = antioxidants minus pro-oxidants. Chris -- Dioxins in Animal Foods: A Case For Vegetarianism? Find Out the Truth: http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2005 Report Share Posted November 20, 2005 Chris- > > >In the presence of sufficient E, all > > >PUFAs raise lipid peroxides, while CLO alone, as far as I've seen can > > >*decrease* oxidative stress. They key factor there is the vitamin A. > > > > Don't you mean in the absence of sufficient E? > >No, I mean presence. Vitamin E supplementation does not stop the >positive relationship between dietary PUFA and lipid peroxidation >within the body. It does affect it, though, so I think it would've been more clear to say " even in the presence of sufficient E " . I'd very much like to see research on the effect of balanced E complex on lipid peroxidation, though, as most (all?) research has been done on alpha tocopherol or on isolated other fractions. >If you take a tablespoon, you're getting, >what? A few grams of PUFA? For most people they probably get quite a >bit more, I'd think, PUFA from other fats, and most people don't take >a tbsp of CLO. What other fats are you thinking of? I mean, are we talking SADers or WAPers? >So maybe the E complex is *always* recommended, but I >don't see the CLO as making a huge difference. Perhaps, though I wouldn't expect most CLO consumers to be eating much in the way of unsaturated vegetable oil, and while animal foods do contain PUFA, it's not usually that much... - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 20, 2005 Report Share Posted November 20, 2005 >-----Original Message----- >From: >[mailto: ]On Behalf Of Idol > > >Suze- > >> >If anyone knows of any other balanced E complex supplements, please >> >chime in, because I'd like to keep my recommendations as useful and >> >up to date as possible! >> >>Palm oil. >> >>Jungle products. Mmmmm.... > >That stuff was stunningly delicious, but do you have any idea what >its vitamin E content is? I can't find any details on their >site. No, I don't unfortunately. But I bet it's higher than the *farmed* palm oil products. Tropical Traditions has a chart ><http://www.tropicaltraditions.com/red_palm_oil.htm> which indicates >that (their?) palm oil has about 1150ppm mixed tocopherols and >tocotrienols split roughly 55/45, so at a guess, 1g of palm oil >contains something roughly like 0.64mg of mixed tocopherols and >0.52mg of mixed tocotrienols, each in who knows what proportions. I >have no idea whether that accurately reflects Jungle's product, which >seemed so extraordinarily different from TT's, but assuming it does, >well, suffice it to say that it's not a very dense source at all. Wow is that all? I just did an experiment. If my scale is correct then there are about 5 grams of PO in a TBsp. that's 5.8 mgs mixed tocopherols and tocotrienols i 1 TBsp. of PO. That's seems like so little, are you sure your calculations are correct? Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 On 11/20/05, Suze Fisher <s.fisher22@...> wrote: > Tropical Traditions has a chart > ><http://www.tropicaltraditions.com/red_palm_oil.htm> which indicates > >that (their?) palm oil has about 1150ppm mixed tocopherols and > >tocotrienols split roughly 55/45, so at a guess, 1g of palm oil > >contains something roughly like 0.64mg of mixed tocopherols and > >0.52mg of mixed tocotrienols, each in who knows what proportions. I > >have no idea whether that accurately reflects Jungle's product, which > >seemed so extraordinarily different from TT's, but assuming it does, > >well, suffice it to say that it's not a very dense source at all. > > Wow is that all? I just did an experiment. If my scale is correct then there > are about 5 grams of PO in a TBsp. that's 5.8 mgs mixed tocopherols and > tocotrienols i 1 TBsp. of PO. That's seems like so little, are you sure your > calculations are correct? People who use parts-per notation should be tarred and feathered and exiled to antarctica. According to this Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concentration ....the parts-per notation refers to PARTICLES and thus is similar to molarity, and ***NOT*** MASS. So those calculations can't be made unless you've calculated the molar mass of vitamin E and the molar mass of each of the fatty acids, and if you want to be precise the carotenes and other components although those could be safely ignored. On the other hand, they also show some table that equates ppm to mg/kg!!! Again, people who even use it all should be exiled for this monstrous confusion. No wonder the SI has ruled it incompatiable with the SI system! (standard international units, mg, g, kg, etc...) Enig reports palm oil in real units, though I don't have the book on me. It's in the archives though... Chris -- Dioxins in Animal Foods: A Case For Vegetarianism? Find Out the Truth: http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 On 11/20/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > Chris- > > > > >In the presence of sufficient E, all > > > >PUFAs raise lipid peroxides, while CLO alone, as far as I've seen can > > > >*decrease* oxidative stress. They key factor there is the vitamin A. > > > > > > Don't you mean in the absence of sufficient E? > > > >No, I mean presence. Vitamin E supplementation does not stop the > >positive relationship between dietary PUFA and lipid peroxidation > >within the body. > > It does affect it, though, so I think it would've been more clear to > say " even in the presence of sufficient E " . You're right; that would be been more clear. > I'd very much like to see research on the effect of balanced E > complex on lipid peroxidation, though, as most (all?) research has > been done on alpha tocopherol or on isolated other fractions. Good point, but since different antioxidants play different roles in the cell, I doubt any one antioxidant can be effective without the others. For example without CoQ10 vitamin E just becomes a dangerous free radical itself. > What other fats are you thinking of? I mean, are we talking >SADers or WAPers? Well lard, for example, is about 10% PUFA, and organ meat fat is pretty high in PUFA I think, and something like brain is really high in PUFA. I think butter has a reasonable amount but I don't have _KYF_ on me right now. Egg yolks are something like 1/3 PUFA, IIRC. All really low compared to vegetable oils, but if you eat a lot of organ meats, egg yolks, certain animal fats, and your CLO consumption is on the moderate end, you're probably gettng a bit more from the other fats than from the CLO. CLO, after all, is only something like 1/3 PUFA, which I think is similar to egg yolks, isn't it? > >So maybe the E complex is *always* recommended, but I > >don't see the CLO as making a huge difference. > > Perhaps, though I wouldn't expect most CLO consumers to be eating > much in the way of unsaturated vegetable oil, and while animal foods > do contain PUFA, it's not usually that much... Not that much compared to vegetable oil, but by no means insignificant, and animal fats are consumed in much higher total quantities than CLO is. Besides, a lot of WAPers eat nuts and some grains, etc, even though some may not. Those add extra PUFA too. I'd say that eating most nuts would be much more likely to give a more substantial contribution to PUFA intake than CLO-- which most people don't take in quantities of 2 Tbsp like I am right now, but more like 1 or 2 tsp. Chris -- Dioxins in Animal Foods: A Case For Vegetarianism? Find Out the Truth: http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Ok, according to these figures I cited from Enig: http://onibasu.com/archives/nn/29409.html?highlight=palm%20oil%20%20chris .... it works out to 1.172 mg/kg so I guess the ppm was probably equivalent to ppm on the TT site. I still think it's ridiculous to use such ambiguous notation. Chris -- Dioxins in Animal Foods: A Case For Vegetarianism? Find Out the Truth: http://www.westonaprice.org/envtoxins/dioxins.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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