- 300mg
- Pantethine
microcrystalline cellulose, ascorbyl palmitate. Capsule: (hypromellose, glycerin and purified water), silicon dioxide and sodium stearyl fumarate.
Format
Veggie Caps
90 Vcaps
Dosage
Take three capsules daily with/without food, or as directed by a qualified health care practitioner.
Important Information
Contains no wheat, gluten, nuts, peanuts, sesame seeds, sulphites, mustard, soy, dairy, eggs, fish, shellfish or any animal byproduct. Consult a health care practitioner prior to use if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or if you are taking anticoagulant/antiplatelet drugs as they may increase the risk of bleeding. This product contains corn, do not use if you have a corn allergy.
- Supports healthy lipoprotein balance
- Helpful for regulating adrenal function
- Assits liver detoxification
- Idea for those concerned with cholesterol regulation
- Corn Free Formula
Related Videos
No Related VideosArticles by a naturopathic doctor.
AOR Canada is the innovative formulators of Canada’s best-selling antioxidant support, AOR Advanced B Complex and AOR Tri-B12. They are also known for their top bone health supplements, Ortho Adapt and Bone Basics. You can also SHOP AOR's Nattokinase, and trusted Curcumin Ultra, Curcumin Active and Curcumin95 inflammation support at National Nutrition.ca. AOR are leaders in natural health with innovative product development.
Pantethine is not to be confused with simple calcium pantothenate/pantothenic acid (vitamin B5). Rather, the making of Pantethine is the very reason the body needs B5 in the first place. That is, pantothenic acid's whole purpose in the body is to serve as a raw material for the synthesis of Pantethine, which is the "business end" of the critical Coenzyme A (CoA). The real "work" done by CoA is accomplished by Pantethine as CoA's active site. CoA, in turn, is used by the body in a wide variety of functions, including regulating cholesterol synthesis. Thus, optimal Pantethine levels are a key factor in maintaining optimal blood lipid balance.
The key factor determining the body's Pantethine levels is the conversion of pantothenic acid to Pantethine. Because making Pantethine takes up a lot of the body's resources, the body's Pantethine-making machinery is strictly controlled by negative feedback loops designed to prevent the body from taking up too many of its resources in making this compound. These feedback loops work like thermostats, turning the Pantethine-making machinery on when levels of its metabolite are low, and turning it off when levels are considered to be adequate.The problem: not everyone's Pantethine "thermostats" are set high enough to ensure optimal health - in particular, to support healthy cholesterol balance. This is often the result of a Scrooge-like "thriftiness" about investing the energy needed to run the CoA-making machinery, which goes back far into our evolutionary past. For our Paleolithic ancestors, keeping cholesterol in healthy balance was a much lower priority than breeding, keeping up a body fat layer for lean times, and avoiding predators. But it can also be at once the cause and the result of the metabolic disturbances associated with insulin resistance, the process through which the body's cells stop responding to the hormonal command to take up blood sugar, leading to "Syndrome X" and non-insulin-dependent ("type-2") diabetes. In such people, taking more pantothenic acid does not lead to the body making more Pantethine, just as buying more fuel for a furnace will not lead to more heat production as long as the thermostat is stuck on a low setting.
You can overcome the problems associated with the low thermostat setting in a home by installing space heaters in cold rooms, thereby bypassing the thermostat setting. Likewise, you can make up for a Pantethine-making "deficiency" by supplementing with Pantethine itself, directly correcting for any internal unbalance. Restoring optimal Pantethine levels can have a wide-ranging positive impact on your health.
Lipoprotein Balance
The use of Pantethine to support healthy levels of blood lipids and lipoproteins - such as total cholesterol, triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein (LDL - the "bad" cholesterol), and high-density lipoprotein (HDL - the "good" cholesterol) - is backed by nearly two decades of controlled clinical trials. These scientific studies show that supplementing the diet with Pantethine supports healthy lipoprotein balance. The clear evidence, demonstrated in people with a wide variety of cholesterol concerns, is that Pantethine supplements support the healthy functioning of the body's cholesterol-making equipment, and thus proper levels of total cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL, and HDL. On the other hand, pantothenic acid does not have these cholesterol-balancing effects.
Adrenal Function
The adrenal glands require CoA for the synthesis of the powerful hormones through which the body adapts to stress. Stress can therefore seriously deplete the body of vitamin B5, and supplemental pantothenic acid can help correct for this stress-induced deficiency. However, Pantethine provides much more powerful support for adrenal function than does pantothenic acid, more quickly restoring adrenal hormone production and normal biochemical function in the adrenal glands.
Liver Detoxification
The body uses two families of enzymes to transform toxins into less hazardous substances which it can more easily excrete through the kidneys or the bile. The first family - the Phase I enzymes - "priming" the toxic molecule so that it can be more easily acted upon by the second family: the Phase II enzymes. Phase II enzymes do the real work of detoxification, binding the "primed" toxin to a "conjugating" molecule which renders it less reactive and more easily dissolved.
One important subfamily of the Phase II enzyme family is the group that conjugates "primed" toxins using acetyl groups - a process which requires CoA. Toxins which are neutralized using these CoA-dependent reactions include aliphatic amines, aromatic amines such as sulfonamide drugs, and hydrazine. On the other hand, some toxic molecules - notably ethanol - are themselves rendered harmless by metabolizing them into acetyl groups, which are then taken up by CoA for use in other detoxification reactions or for use in the mitochondrial "power plants."
It is therefore not surprising that Pantethine supplements, by boosting CoA levels, support the detoxification of a variety of noxious molecules and protect the liver from many damaging chemicals. For instance, Pantethine supplementation reduces the formation of the toxic alcohol byproduct acetaldehyde in healthy humans administered alcohol. Likewise, laboratory animals administered the liver toxin carbon tetrachloride suffer less fatty liver degeneration, have more normal liver enzyme levels, and suffer less free radical damage to their cellular membranes - with the protection exceeding that provided by large doses of pantothenic acid. Pantethine has also been shown to protect animals' livers from the damaging effects of diets corrupted with peroxidized fats, reducing the overactivation of liver enzymes and improving the animals' chances of survival.
Preliminary studies in humans also suggest that Pantethine may provide considerable support in fatty liver and hepatitis A.
Know How Much You're Getting
It's important to note that these effects are achieved at dosages of at least 600 milligrams per day of active Pantethine ion. Most trials, in fact, have used 900 milligrams, although persons choosing to take more than one lipid-balancing nutrient may find that they get good results at the lower dose. But health-conscious persons should be careful in selecting a Pantethine product, making sure that they know what they're getting. While Pantethine is still uncommon on the shelves of North American health food stores, some companies are selling it, and many Pantethine products contain far too little Pantethine to be effective.
Further, some products are confusingly labeled, making it difficult for consumers to tell how much active Pantethine ion is really in them. Some products, for instance, contain Pantethine which has been "cut" with pantothenic acid. Some people who are concerned about their health, and have heard about Pantethine, are not familiar with the difference between it and pantothenic acid, and may confuse the two.
The labels on some other products provide the amount of Pantethine complex on the label, rather than the amount of active Pantethine ion: this is essentially the same difference as exists between the amount of calcium compound and the elemental calcium content in calcium supplements. This again can lead consumers to believe that there is much more true Pantethine in the product than there really is. Look for a label which clearly indicates both how much Pantethine complex, and how much Pantethine ion, the product contains. Some products use a complex which contains as little as 20% active Pantethine ion. Thus, a product labeled "300 mg Pantethine (20%)" actually delivers just 60 mg of "elemental" Pantethine! Be sure that you know what you're buying.
- Reviews
- POST A NEW REVIEW