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Subject: Sebaceous Adenitis

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Scott User is Offline
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05/25/2004 8:46 PM
It seems our 9 year old Akita has Sebaceous Adenitis, an auto-immune inflammatory condition that destroys the oil glands. There is no cure, and she may lose all of her hair :cry: Treatment is typically EFA supplementation and oil baths but I am unsure that at her age she will tolerate the 2-3 hours it takes to give her an oil bath properly. So thinking that an oil bath might simply be treating the symptoms rather than the underlying cause, I'm hopeful changing her diet and the fishoil will do some good, essentially suppressing the over-active immune response to begin with and allowing her oil glands to function normally. She is now on a bison/salmon/rice/oatmeal dogfood which we add an EFA+Zinc supplement to. For the past week or so she's been getting 2 capsules of OmegaRx daily. She doesn't seem as "down", but not much improvement in the coat yet. I will introduce the 3rd capsule tonight and will do 3x daily for the next week and see what happens. Given the origin of the breed, I am thinking that her omega-3 requirements may be higher than other dogs, so I'm not too concerned yet with the lack of noticeable results.
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05/27/2004 2:05 AM
I'm sorry to hear about your dog. My boxer, whom I posted about eariler, died less than a week after I started him on fish oil so I never got to see what benefits it might have provided nor expirament with the dosage. When I get a new dog, though, I'm going to do things differently- no more of the packaged commercial crap that probably cumulated in the health problems he experienced in the last year of his life. I want to try the zone thing, but to be honest I'm not sure if it's possible to coherce a dog to eat fuits and vegetable so I'm kind of at a loss as to what to do about the carb component. I was thinking about using fructose, but that might not be quite so low GI without the fiber. You just use low-GI grains I gather? I was a bit trepeditious about grains because if I figure if humans aren't designed for them then they can't be much better for dogs... plus that's what most commercial foods contain anyway, i.e. rice. So I'm not sure what to do
Scott User is Offline
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05/27/2004 6:03 PM
[quote:5e04c1fea5="BrianG"]I'm sorry to hear about your dog. My boxer, whom I posted about eariler, died less than a week after I started him on fish oil so I never got to see what benefits it might have provided nor expirament with the dosage. [/quote:5e04c1fea5] Thanks Brian--and my condolensces to you as well. :( [quote:5e04c1fea5] I want to try the zone thing, but to be honest I'm not sure if it's possible to coherce a dog to eat fuits and vegetable so I'm kind of at a loss as to what to do about the carb component. I was thinking about using fructose, but that might not be quite so low GI without the fiber. You just use low-GI grains I gather? I was a bit trepeditious about grains because if I figure if humans aren't designed for them then they can't be much better for dogs... plus that's what most commercial foods contain anyway, i.e. rice. So I'm not sure what to do[/quote:5e04c1fea5] I've struggled with the above also. The new food she is on is still a dry food, but I am hoping the Zone friendly ingredients (salmon,bison,oatmeal/blueberries) will be of benefit. The only thing is the rice, but apparently its a decent grain for those with allergies. If this food doesn't seem to work (not really sure if the p/c ratio is between .5-1.0 ), I may switch to real food and give her canned salmon and rice or maybe blend up some veggies to mix in with the protein (ie chopped spinach, etc.)
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05/28/2004 2:37 PM
[quote:3d3b68f054="Scott"][quote:3d3b68f054="BrianG"]I'm sorry to hear about your dog. My boxer, whom I posted about eariler, died less than a week after I started him on fish oil so I never got to see what benefits it might have provided nor expirament with the dosage. [/quote:3d3b68f054] Thanks Brian--and my condolensces to you as well. :( [quote:3d3b68f054] I want to try the zone thing, but to be honest I'm not sure if it's possible to coherce a dog to eat fuits and vegetable so I'm kind of at a loss as to what to do about the carb component. I was thinking about using fructose, but that might not be quite so low GI without the fiber. You just use low-GI grains I gather? I was a bit trepeditious about grains because if I figure if humans aren't designed for them then they can't be much better for dogs... plus that's what most commercial foods contain anyway, i.e. rice. So I'm not sure what to do[/quote:3d3b68f054] I've struggled with the above also. The new food she is on is still a dry food, but I am hoping the Zone friendly ingredients (salmon,bison,oatmeal/blueberries) will be of benefit. The only thing is the rice, but apparently its a decent grain for those with allergies. If this food doesn't seem to work (not really sure if the p/c ratio is between .5-1.0 ), I may switch to real food and give her canned salmon and rice or maybe blend up some veggies to mix in with the protein (ie chopped spinach, etc.)[/quote:3d3b68f054] Hello, There is a dog food that Dr. Sears endorses. The link---> [url]http://www.healthypetnet.com/products/food/dog/zone.asp?realname=[/url] WM
TopBoffin User is Offline
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05/29/2004 12:00 AM
Sorry I cant help with the past but for the future, with a brand new dog :) if it helps, this is what I have been feeding my dogs on and they are now nearly 17 yrs old, & have never had any medication and have never been over weight. VEGS One large celery stick ( use all of it including some of the tops too) 2lbs carrotts or pumpkin ( minus the skin as they sick it up again) any leafy veg - bok choy etc broccoli or cauliflower, including the stalks, and a few leaves capsicum (I think you call them bell peppers ?) I cook all this up together and then freeze half. this lasts about a week they LOVE red capsicums raw and mango is their absolute favourite, and will eat celery raw if it is sweet, apples also, some times I just add some of these raw chopped into the above - good for thier teeth. also yogurt x 2 weekly, anything that I eat they can eat!! ( except milk which is best given when it is soured, good for using up the sour milk) CARB I now use oats most of the time but used to feed them on rice, which our vets say is good for dogs, and pasta until I started Zoning last year PROTEIN Lean raw pets mince (we have roo meat here but i guess it is like your bison) which I then cook VERY lightly still keep some red in it chicken wings marrow bones ( not so many now that they are old they cant handle it) I then use 1/3 of each of the above per meal with a heavier serve of the protein FAT I have always given them oils and fat from the meat -heaps of it( ie saturated fat) but have cut that back since Zoning, now I use Olive oil, Omega 3 fish oil, & peanut butter SUNDAY TREAT Tin of cats food sardines! they LOVE it. but I think your idea of the salmon is better, in fact I should start giving them this twice a week See my other post "Dogs in the zone" for what Dr Sears recommends as the proportions for P/C You may like to check out another post in Pets where a member was talking about feeding her dog grated raw vegs. ( sorry cant remember which one it was) Just reading over this and my reactions are Wow, they have eaten everything and anything ( not to mention the dead birds) even got into a packet of coco pops once, you should have seen the kitchen floor - Hum!! not so good Hope that helps cheers Top
Scott User is Offline
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09/16/2004 12:51 AM
[quote:be578ba9ee="Scott"]It seems our 9 year old Akita has Sebaceous Adenitis, an auto-immune inflammatory condition that destroys the oil glands. There is no cure, and she may lose all of her hair :cry: Treatment is typically EFA supplementation and oil baths but I am unsure that at her age she will tolerate the 2-3 hours it takes to give her an oil bath properly. So thinking that an oil bath might simply be treating the symptoms rather than the underlying cause, I'm hopeful changing her diet and the fishoil will do some good, essentially suppressing the over-active immune response to begin with and allowing her oil glands to function normally. She is now on a bison/salmon/rice/oatmeal dogfood which we add an EFA+Zinc supplement to. For the past week or so she's been getting 2 capsules of OmegaRx daily. She doesn't seem as "down", but not much improvement in the coat yet. I will introduce the 3rd capsule tonight and will do 3x daily for the next week and see what happens. Given the origin of the breed, I am thinking that her omega-3 requirements may be higher than other dogs, so I'm not too concerned yet with the lack of noticeable results.[/quote:be578ba9ee] Thanks for the helpful post, Top. An update: Her condition steadily worsened on this regiment (2-3/capsules PGFO per day, EFA supplement, new food). She started eating her paws raw. The back of her neck was virtually bare. She stank. The skin specialist brought in to see Niki felt that her thyroid levels were low enough to warrant trying a hypothyroid med before resorting to skin biopsies to confirm SA. So in addition to the 2/caps day she was started on soloxine 2x/day. I also upped the FO to 4, and still no change. Needless to say I was confused by the lack of results with the PGFO. I then decided to read the EFA label. [i:be578ba9ee󤡀mg[/i:be578ba9ee] of linloleic acid :shock: I felt so stupid for not picking this up earlier. The omega-6 content of the EFA was completely negating the benefit of omega-3s. At the level of omega-6, I was going to need a lot more omega-3 to prevent arachidonic acid build-up and see any benefit. I immediately stopped the EFA supplement altogether and kept her at 4 capsules. Within a week the hair on her paws grew back. Within a month her coat was coming back. I hope to discontinue the Soloxine to get a better read on cause/effect on her condition, but I don't want to change what's working before winter. I'll then have her thyroid checked, go off the soloxine, and see what changes. Bottome line: reducing the omega-6 significantly enhanced the benefit of the omega-3 supplementation and her condition has improved remarkably.
Cowlover2 User is Offline
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09/16/2004 6:09 AM
Hi Scott, Interesting story! My dane has been having some trouble (long story), and I've had him on 2 caps SYW PGFO per day. I have seen some improvement in the skin, but it could be attributed to a recent diet change.............after reading your posts, I think I will up his dose to 4 caps a day and see what happens. [quote:6b15dde2b7]I also upped the FO to 4, and still no change. [/quote:6b15dde2b7] How long did you wait before you determined this? Thanks!
Scott User is Offline
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09/17/2004 1:24 PM
[quote:6dba630bea="Cowlover2"] [quote:6dba630bea]I also upped the FO to 4, and still no change. [/quote:6dba630bea] How long did you wait before you determined this? Thanks![/quote:6dba630bea] That's a good question. To be honest, I don't remember, but the fact that her condition was worsening--and got better when I cut out the EFA--led me to the conclusions I did. Of course, I can't rule out the effects of the soloxine either, which is why I'll will taper that down and see what happens after the winter months. I do notice that when I miss a few dosages of n-3, her coat condition starts deteriorating.
Fatboyslim User is Offline
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09/17/2004 3:23 PM
I'm starting to feel like Nitschke said - "If the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem begins to look like a nail" After the experience I had with my dog, a gorgeous golden retriever, and his coat, I would recommend, besides the fo, to add a teaspoon of coconut oil(my hammer). I started giving him some becuz he always licked it off my skin when I put it on. In 2 weeks, the change in his coat was stunning. His energy went way up, and he quit that daggone scratching all the time!! Scott, my guess, but your money. If missing fo 1 or 2 times causes his coat to start to deteriorate, he probably needs more. Or...the hammer...coconut oil will increase the uptake of fo, along with other vits, such as E. What's the word, synergistic? Hope he keeps getting better!!!! Bob
Scott User is Offline
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09/17/2004 10:02 PM
[quote:8d7d1f35a8="Fatboyslim"] If missing fo 1 or 2 times causes his coat to start to deteriorate, he probably needs more. Or...the hammer...coconut oil will increase the uptake of fo, along with other vits, such as E. What's the word, synergistic? [/quote:8d7d1f35a8] We are thinking alike, Bob. Just ordered some--though not from the coconutoil.com site. I got a bit of a problem with inflammatory writing that refers to well-meaning human beings as [i:8d7d1f35a8]dolts.[/i:8d7d1f35a8] But that's just me. :wink:
Cowlover2 User is Offline
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09/18/2004 7:00 AM
Hey Scott, My dog has suffered for the past 6 months with frequent vomiting, and soft stools. Our vet has worked with us all the way, but after 2 exploratory laparotomies, diagnostic ultrasound, numerous tests including blood, urine, feces, and with the last surgery, tissue samples, they are still coming up empty. Their diagnosis is an unusually closely placed pancreas overproducing enzymes that are keeping the GI tract under constant inflammation. We have been controlling this somewhat through medication, but the dog still has trouble keeping weight on, and had crappy skin. We started him 4 weeks ago on a premium hypoallergenic diet, along with 1-2 caps of PGFO, and after a week he looked better. I upped him to 2 caps a day. After reading your posts, and talking to my vet, it occurred to me that if his GI tract is inflamed, then high dose PGFO should help. SO....we upped him the other day to 4 caps PGFO, and will see what happens. 1. Since he is getting 4 caps PGFO like me, does he also need extra Vit. E, like we do? 2. Because the PGFO is being used as therapy rather than prevention/maintenance, should I increase it more, as is recommended for people? FBS wrote: [quote:15a03da415]I'm starting to feel like Nitschke said - "If the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem begins to look like a nail" [/quote:15a03da415] LMAO.............yes, too true!! Lisa
Fatboyslim User is Offline
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09/19/2004 4:02 AM
Heck, Scott, I went down to my local grocery store that has a health foods section and got a 14 oz. jar for $5. It's organic and expeller extracted. Meaning no chemicals used, I hope. It melts at 76 degrees, so I'm thinking it's just fine. If it had been "treated" I'm guessing it wouldn't melt at the correct temp. Just a thought, if you want to get a few days jump on your ordering stuff coming in. Not everyone is as prompt as you!! :wink: Bob
Scott User is Offline
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05/05/2005 4:06 PM
[quote:d6631c0718="Cowlover2"]it occurred to me that if his GI tract is inflamed, then high dose PGFO should help. SO....we upped him the other day to 4 caps PGFO, and will see what happens. [/quote:d6631c0718] Hey Lisa-- Can you give an update? The winter was tough on our Akita. Her condition deteriorated, she was put on antiobiotics because her skin became quite infected. That seemed to help, but the meds ripped her bowels up. The antibiotics cleaned up her skin though, so with the weather warming up I'll see how the 4/day works in maintaining her skin/coat. It leaves me wondering if I should have increased her dose when it got colder.
Scott User is Offline
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07/28/2005 3:59 PM
Apparently things were much worse than we realized....we had to put Niki to sleep over the weekend :cry: She was fine when we left in the morning on Saturday, but when we returned around noon she could barely walk, her breathing was rapid. We took her in, temp and heart rate were in normal range, but the vet could barely hear her heart on one side, prompting x-rays. The results showed extensive abnormal tissue growth throughout her chest cavity around her heart, lungs and spine....
Sue K User is Offline
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07/28/2005 4:18 PM
[color=darkred:e8b1799e91]Hi, Sorry to hear about Niki. My best to you and your family.[/color:e8b1799e91]

sue

Lost 100 lbs 14 yrs ago, off BP meds, thanks to the Zone diet and Zone fish oil!


To view my before/after pics and meal photos scroll over this picture and click when the link appears.

Zone Dinner Party (link)
Scott User is Offline
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07/28/2005 10:20 PM
Thanks Sue.
chaton User is Offline
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07/29/2005 5:19 PM
Sorry to hear about this too, best wishes for you and family. Christine
Scott User is Offline
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08/03/2005 3:12 AM
Thanks Christine.
theladyluvslace User is Offline
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08/07/2005 1:11 AM
[color=green:50184111d9]Scott- I just finished reading through all of the posts for this thread and was eagerly awaiting good news about Nikki...I'm sorry for your loss. We lost a dog to heart failure not long ago and I know how tramatic it can be. thelady...[/color:50184111d9]
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Dr. Barry Sears, PhD.Dr. Barry Sears is a leading authority on the dietary control of hormonal response. A former research scientist at the Boston University School of Medicine and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dr. Sears has dedicated his research efforts over the past 30 years to the study of lipids. He holds 13 U.S. Patents in the areas of intravenous drug delivery systems and hormonal regulation for the treatment of cardiovascular disease.

A turning point in his research occurred in 1982. That year, the Nobel Prize in Medicine was awarded for discoveries of the role that specialized hormones, known as eicosanoids, play in the development of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, auto-immune diseases, and cancer. Since eicosanoids are only generated from dietary fat, Dr. Sears reasoned that one could apply intravenous drug delivery principles to nutrition in order to control these exceptionally powerful hormonal responses with laser-like precision. In essence, his approach treats food as if it were a drug.

This area of his research led to various patents in the area of hormonal control by essentially using food as an oral drug delivery system to modulate eicosanoids especially for cardiovascular, diabetic, and neurological patients.

The impact of Dr. Sears’ revolutionary work in the dietary control of hormonal response began with the publication of his landmark book, The Zone. Since its publication in June 1995, The Zone has sold more than 2,000,000 hardcover copies, and became a #1 best seller on the New York Times book list. In addition, The Zone has been translated into 22 languages indicating a worldwide response to Dr. Sears’ research. His second book, Mastering the Zone, published in 1997, also became a New York Times bestseller with hardcover sales in excess of 500,000 copies to date. His third book, Zone Perfect Meals in Minutes, published in 1997, quickly became one of the best-selling cookbooks of 1997 and an another New York Times bestseller. The Anti-Aging Zone was published in 1999 and provides the molecular insights into how the Zone Diet can reverse the aging process. The Omega Rx Zone, published in 2002, explores the molecular foundation of chronic disease and how high-dose fish oil can dramatically reverse it. His latest book The Anti-Inflammation Zone discusses how to combat silent inflammation in order to reduce the risk of cancer, heart disease, diabetes, dementia, and many other inflammatory conditions—and how to reverse these conditions if they are already present. To date more than 5 million hardcover copies of his Zone books have been sold in the United States.

His research has elevated food from more than simply a source of calories to being recognized as an exceptionally powerful drug. Because of his revolutionary research, Dr. Sears has been a frequent guest on many national programs such as 20/20, Today, Good Morning America, CBS Morning News, CNN, and MSNBC.

Dr. Sears continues his ongoing research as President of Zone Labs, a biotechnology company in Danvers, MA as well as the President of the non-profit Inflammation Research Foundation in Marblehead, MA. In addition to continuing research on the hormonal effects of food, Dr. Sears has expanded his research in developing innovative dietary approaches to treating cancer and neurological conditions, as well as his on-going work in treating cardiovascular diease and type 2 diabetes.

I have been taking the Fish Oil for over 3 years now. I am 44 playing hockey and working out. The Fish oil helps with the pain that I get from playing hockey. It greatly enhances my performance on the ice and while working out. I have noticed a big difference in my energy, attentiveness and memory. If I miss a day for whatever reason, I notice a huge difference and it feels like something is missing. Anyway that is my short little story and it comes from the heart.

– Carter B.

 

I am a nutritionist and Ph.D. doctor of health and nutrition. For Dr. Sears to figure out balancing fat, carbs and protein, is really beyond brilliant. It is a milestone in diet history. I go over people's diet/emotional journals. Mostly all the time, we discover that the fatigue, irritability, unstable emotions were due to the imbalance in their diet. Using the Zone to balance them out, helps control weight, roller coaster emotions and gives them energy. Dr. Sears is so right when he says food is medicine. He has figured out the most powerful drug combination going, called The Zone.
Best and healthy wishes,

– Elaine W., Ph.D., N.C., M.A.

 

I have a very exhausting job as a flight attendant. I read the "Omega Rx Zone" about 4 years ago and started taking the fish oil. I am 47 and have been flying for 22 years. I am very active, I run and lift weights. But combining lack of regular sleep, a physically demanding job, and irregular eating patterns this job takes a toll on the body. Since taking the fish oil, I have noticed that I do not get exhausted. I get tired, but not exhausted. I stopped taking it for a couple of months and then started taking another company's fish oil. I started getting exhausted again. I came back to Zone Labs and will continue with the fish oil for the rest of my life. I believe in the product and it makes a huge difference in my life. It makes a difference with my running as well. I also bring the bars and shakes with me on the road. It is almost impossible to eat the way I should at work. I haven't found the right secret. At least I have my Zone fish oil, bars, and shakes.

– Kathryn S.

 

I have been in the Zone, for about 1 month now. I wanted to share with you how wonderful I think this program is. I have been a personal trainer for almost 10 years and actively compete in numerous athletic activities. The Zone program has helped me to achieve a better awareness of my nutritional needs and the results I have seen are amazing! I have lost nearly 13 lbs since I have been in the Zone. I feel more mentally alert, more focused at work, have greater intensity during my training, have made significant strength gains, and just feel better over all. With that said, I would like to thank you for helping me in my quest for "super-health"!
Thank you!

– Rob Y.

 

I read 'The Zone' and as exactly as I could followed the advice for diet. I noted weight loss progress. Over six months, I lost 33 pounds. One year has passed since then. I have maintained the new weight, guided always by Zone concepts. The Zone is powerful - I have found it fantastic and I am very grateful to Dr Sears.

– Lyn S.

 

Before I stumbled across the Zone I was weighing close to two hundred pounds and I was depressed. I used to be a gymnast as a young man. I would think, "look at me now," when I looked in a mirror. The day I found 'The Zone' book, I was intrigued and as I read it the science made sense and so, I began to follow the "treatment". I began to lose weight and I was feeling way more energetic. I am forty two years old, I am very active and my weight is down to 162 lbs, 38 pounds lost on the Zone. I cycle, walk, jog, swim and I can now perform some of the more simple gymnastic skills I did twenty years ago...I literally feel like I have turned back the clock.
Thank you!

– Jack J.

 

I have been on the Zone diet for 7 years. I did not go on the diet to lose weight necessarily; but fairly quickly I lost 25 pounds, going from 190 to 165; from a 36-inch waist to a 32-inch waist. I primarily did the Zone to live healthier. My health is excellent now. I just turned 62 years old. My Zone is my eating lifestyle now; I seldom stray; and I do not miss anything. It is The Good Life.

– Curtis Y.

 

My wife's doctor told her to read "Enter the Zone" and to do the diet, so I told her I would do it with her. After only one week on the plan we went on a strenuous hike (the first of the year), and when we stopped at our favorite coffee shop on the way home I was able to get out of the car and stand upright and walk into the place without pain or stiffness. The Zone had eliminated all the inflammation that had always forced me to stumble all humped over into the coffee shop any time we skied or hiked all day.
Thank you, Doctor Sears.

– Larry C.

 

I used to have a lot of knee pain when I walked or ran. I have been taking Omega Rx for almost a year now, and rarely have any pain. I believe it is the anti-inflammation action of the oil. I feel smarter as well. Thanks for developing such a superior oil!

– Joe W.

 

Prior to following the Zone Diet, my body fat was around 15% and my weight around 153 pounds. No matter what I did, my weight and body fat did not change much. I regularly cycled 20-30 hours per week logging well over 400 miles. That had little impact on body fat or weight. Diet also seemed to have little impact on body fat or weight. Within a couple of months of following the zone diet, my weight dropped rather quickly to 142 pounds and body fat to about 8%. I still regularly cycle up to 20 hours per week (during the summer). I have also started strength training. I eat about 16 blocks per day. I take 3.6 grams of fish oil per day, along with Vitamin E, Alpha Lipoic Acid, CoQ10, and B & C vitamins. I also take GLA, which in my opinion, has significantly reduced fatigue and improved recovery times after exercise.

– Jeremy S.

All polyphenols have antioxidant properties than can be measured by their Oxygen Radical Absorption Capacity (ORAC), but not all polyphenols have anti-inflammatory properties. The polyphenols in Dr. Sears’ Zone Polyphenol Plus have been carefully chosen to have both.

Polyphenols are the phytochemicals that not only give fruits and vegetables their color, but also help regulate inflammation. In addition, polyphenols also activate the key enzyme (AMP kinase) that helps restore cellular ATP levels. Polyphenols also help regulate the activation of inducible inflammatory proteins (such as COX-2 and inflammatory cytokines).

There are more than 4,000 known polyphenols, and the richest sources are fruits and vegetables. In general, the more color a fruit or vegetable has, the richer the polyphenol content.

Why OmegaRx From Zone Labs?

Certified Purity and Proven Potency

Zone Labs’ Ultra Refined Omega-3 Concentrates are three times fresher and contain less than 1/10th the mercury than what is allowed by the Norwegian Medicinal Standard and European Pharmacopoeia Standard

Zone Labs adheres to the International Fish Oil Standard (IFOS), an independent third party validated laboratory quality standard that is more rigid than any other global standard for purity.

  • No company in the worlds runs more tests with IFOS than Zone Labs
  • Zone Labs receives a 5 out of 5 star IFOS rating for every batch it tests
Standard IFOS Standard for a 5-Star Ranking Council for Responsible Nutrition European Pharmacopeia Norwegian Medicinal Standards
Peroxide < 3.75 meg/kg 5 meg/kg 10 meg/kg 10 meg/kg
Totox Levels < 20 meg/kg 26 meg/kg NA NA
Lead < 10 ppb 10 ppb 100 ppb 100 ppb
Mercury < 10 ppb 10 ppb 100 ppb 100 ppb
Dioxans and Furans < 1 ppt 2 ppt 2 ppt 2 ppt
PCBs < 45 ppb 90 ppb NA NA

 

 

 

 

 

"IFOS – THE TOP GLOBAL PURITY STANDARD FOR OMEGA-3 FROM FISH"

Zone Labs products show no detectable lead or mercury when tested down to 10ppb, which is 10 times below the Norwegian Medicinal Standard and European Pharmacopoeia Standard limits.

Zone Labs products are three times fresher than the minimum allowed by the Norwegian Medicinal Standard and European Pharmacopoeia Standards (based on average peroxide values).

 

Zone Labs starts with only wild, small fish from pristine Chilean waters and ends with proprietary validation and testing processes to achieve an IFOS certified 5 star rating.

8-Step Manufacturing Process - Quality Assured

Testing to specification all raw materials, bulk products, packaging material and finished products – always using stringent internal standards and in-process testing.

  1. Extraction of fish oil
  2. Winterization – remove limited amounts of saturated fats
  3. Absorption – remove heavy metals
  4. Preliminary Molecular Distillation – refining “touch up” to reduce contaminants
  5. Oil conversion to ethyl esters
  6. Ethyl ester thermal fractionation – remove additional saturated fats
  7. True Molecular Distillation – final refining to remove pcb’s and long-chain monoenes
  8. Rigid Processes – proprietary validation, inspection and encapsulation methods. Independent lab verification of IFOS requirements and certified 5 star rating

 

Clean Sources

No farmed fish. No large fish. Pristine waters.

Zone Labs starts with wild sardines & anchovies fished from cold, pristine waters off of South America where there are less environmental impurities.

 

A recommended serving of Zone Labs Ultra-Refined Concentrates delivers 8 times more omega-3’s than a typical retail fish oil supplement.

Most fish oil supplements have 30% or less of the healthy omega-3s EPA and DHA, with the remaining 70% of the capsule containing unbeneficial, lesser refined fatty acids that contribute to their bad taste and gastric side effects.

 

Getting a clinically valid dose of omega-3’s is easy with Zone Labs’ Ultra-Refined Omega-3 Concentrates.

Typical Retail Dose = 300mg omega-3

Standard Zone Dose = 2400mg omega-3

 

A serving of canned tuna has 12 times less omega-3’s than
Zone Labs Ultra-Refined Omega-3 Concentrates

Commonly consumed fish and shellfish in the United States

Mercury Source: Food and Drug Administration, FDA 1900-2004, “National Marine Fisheries Service Survey of Trace Elements in the Fishery Resource". Omega-3 Level Source: American Heart Association Website.

  Mercury level
in parts per million (ppm)
Omega-3 fatty acids
(milligrams per 3-oz. serving)
Zone Omega-3 Products < 0.01 2400 (standard 4 capsule serving
Salmon (fresh, frozen) 0.014 1200
Flounder or sole 0.050 480
Pollock 0.041 450
Crab 0.060 400
Scallops 0.050 290
Shrimp ND* 290
Catfish 0.050 270
Clams ND* 250
Cod 0.095 210
Canned Tuna (light) 0.120 200
* ND: Mercury concentration below detection limit.

 

OmegaRx®

Zone Labs’ leading product. OmegaRx delivers all of the benefits of Zone Labs’ ultra-refined omega-3 concentrates.

Advantages

  • Delivers clinically proven health benefits from the omega-3 fatty acids EPA and DHA*
  • Promotes a healthy heart, healthy brain, healthy immune system, healthy circulatory system, healthy joints, healthy moods, healthy triglyceride levels and a healthy pregnancy*
  • Combats silent inflammation

 

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.

These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.

 

 

 

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