Summary of Benefits

Summary of Benefits

Vitamin A

May Help Support Healthy Vision, Immunity and Organ Function*

Vitamin A is a fat-soluble vitamin that is naturally present in many foods. Vitamin A is important for normal vision, the immune system, and reproduction. Vitamin A also helps the heart, lungs, kidneys, and other organs work properly.*
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Vitamin B1

May Help Support Healthy Energy, Gut, and Cell Function*

Thiamin (also called Vitamin B1) helps turn the food you eat into the energy you need. Thiamin is important for the growth, development, and function of the cells in your body. You can develop Thiamin (B1) deficiency if you don’t get enough thiamin in the foods you eat or if your body eliminates too much or absorbs too little thiamin. Thiamin deficiency can cause loss of weight and appetite, confusion, memory loss, muscle weakness, and heart problems.*
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Vitamin B6

May Help Support Healthy Metabolism and Immune Function*

Vitamin B6 is a vitamin that is naturally present in many foods. The body needs vitamin B6 for more than 100 enzyme reactions involved in metabolism. Vitamin B6 is also involved in brain development during pregnancy and infancy as well as immune function.*
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Vitamin B12

May Help Support Healthy Energy Levels, Nerve and Blood Cell Function*

Vitamin B12 is a nutrient that helps keep the body’s nerve and blood cells healthy and helps make DNA, the genetic material in all cells. Vitamin B12 also helps prevent a type of anemia called megaloblastic anemia that makes people tired and weak.*
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Biotin

May Help Support Healthy Hair, Skin, Nails and Energy Levels*

Biotin is a B-vitamin found in many foods. Biotin helps turn the carbohydrates, fats, and proteins in the food you eat into the energy you need. Biotin deficiency can cause thinning hair, skin infections, brittle nails, and nervous system disorders.*
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Boron

May Help Support Healthy Bone Strength and Mental Alertness*

Boron is a mineral found in many foods. Scientists aren’t certain what role boron has in the body, but some studies suggest that people who consume low amounts of boron might have more trouble staying mentally alert and focused. Getting low amounts of boron might also lower bone strength.*
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Vitamin C

May Help Support Healthy Vision, Skin, and Immune Function. (Antioxidant)*

Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid, is a water-soluble nutrient found in some foods. In the body, it acts as an antioxidant, helping to protect cells from the damage caused by free radicals. Free radicals are compounds formed when our bodies convert the food we eat into energy. People are also exposed to free radicals in the environment from cigarette smoke, air pollution, and ultraviolet light from the sun.*

The body also needs vitamin C to make collagen, a protein required to help wounds heal. In addition, vitamin C improves the absorption of iron from plant-based foods and helps the immune system work properly to protect the body from disease.*
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Calcium

May Help Support Healthy Bones, Teeth, Muscle, Hormone and Nerve Function*

Calcium is a mineral found in many foods. The body needs calcium to maintain strong bones and to carry out many important functions. Almost all calcium is stored in bones and teeth, where it supports their structure and hardness.*

The body also needs calcium for muscles to move and for nerves to carry messages between the brain and every body part. In addition, calcium is used to help blood vessels move blood throughout the body and to help release hormones and enzymes that affect almost every function in the human body.*
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Chasteberry

May Help Ease Symptoms of Premenstrual Syndrome*

In the past, Chasteberry extracts were used to treat a variety of gynecological disorders and skin conditions. Today, Chasteberry is promoted as a dietary supplement for symptoms of premenstrual syndrome, breast pain associated with the menstrual cycle, infertility, and other conditions.*
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Collagen

Helps Support Healthy Skin, Joint, Tendon, and Bone Function*

A body protein, collagen includes the amino acids proline and glycine, which help maintain and repair your skin, tendons, bones and joints. As we age, collagen production slows and by the time we reach menopause, we can be losing up to a third of our collagen. This leads to a loss of skin elasticity which can cause dry skin and wrinkles, as well as a decrease in tendon, bone, joint and heart health.*

Studies have shown that age-dependent reduction in collagen synthesis can be reversed by oral administration of specific bioactive collagen peptides. These oligopeptides are obtained by enzymatic hydrolysis of natural collagen. After ingestion, they are further metabolized to bioactive di- and tri-peptides in the gastrointestinal tract, which are then released into the bloodstream and accumulated in the skin to form the collagen biomatrix.*
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Copper

May Help Support Healthy Immune Function, Energy, and Brain Development*

Copper is a mineral that you need to stay healthy. Your body uses copper to carry out many important functions, including making energy, connective tissues, and blood vessels. Copper also helps maintain the nervous and immune systems, and activates genes. Your body also needs copper for brain development.*
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CoQ10

Supports Healthy Skin, Mitochondria and Energy Function (Antioxidant)*

Your skin is the largest organ in your body, and it’s widely exposed to damaging agents that contribute to aging. These agents can be internal or external. Some internal damaging factors include cellular damage and hormonal imbalances. External factors include environmental agents, such as UV rays.*

Coenzyme Q10 is made naturally by the human body. Coenzyme Q10 helps cells to produce energy, and it acts as an antioxidant. Coenzyme Q10 has shown an ability to stimulate the immune system.*
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Vitamin D3

May Help Support Healthy Bone, Muscle, Gut, Immunity and Nerve Function (Anti-Inflammatory)*

Vitamin D is a nutrient found in some foods that is needed for health and to maintain strong bones. It does so by helping the body absorb calcium (one of bone’s main building blocks) from food and supplements. People who get too little Vitamin D may develop soft, thin, and brittle bones, a condition known as rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults.*

Vitamin D is important to the body in many other ways as well. Muscles need it to move, for example, nerves need it to carry messages between the brain and every body part, and the immune system needs Vitamin D to fight off invading bacteria and viruses. Together with calcium, Vitamin D also helps protect older adults from osteoporosis. Vitamin D is found in cells throughout the body.*
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Vitamin E

May Help Support Healthy Immunity and Cell Function (Antioxidant + Anti-Inflammatory)*

Vitamin E is a fat-soluble nutrient found in many foods. In the body, it acts as an antioxidant, helping to protect cells from the damage caused by free radicals. Free radicals are compounds formed when our bodies convert the food we eat into energy. People are also exposed to free radicals in the environment from cigarette smoke, air pollution, and ultraviolet light from the sun.*

The body also needs vitamin E to boost its immune system so that it can fight off invading bacteria and viruses. It helps to widen blood vessels and keep blood from clotting within them. In addition, cells use vitamin E to interact with each other and to carry out many important functions.*
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Folic Acid

May Help Support Healthy DNA, Genetic Material and Cell Function*

Folate is a B-vitamin that is naturally present in many foods. Your body needs folate to make DNA and other genetic material. Your body also needs folate for your cells to divide. A form of folate, called folic acid, is used in fortified foods and most dietary supplements.*
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FOS

May Help Support Healthy Blood Sugar and Gut Function (Prebiotic)*

Fructooligosaccharides (FOS) are oligosaccharides that occur naturally in plants. They are composed of linear chains of fructose units, linked by beta (2-1) bonds. The number of fructose units ranges from 2 to 60 and often terminate in a glucose unit. Dietary FOS are not hydrolyzed by small intestinal glycosidases and reach the cecum structurally unchanged. There, they are metabolized by the intestinal microflora to form short-chain carboxylic acids, L -lactate, CO(2), hydrogen and other metabolites.*

FOS have a number of interesting properties, including a low sweetness intensity; they are also calorie free, non-cariogenic and are considered as soluble dietary fibre. Furthermore, FOS have important beneficial physiological effects such as low carcinogenicity, a prebiotic effect, improved mineral absorption and decreased levels of serum cholesterol, triacylglycerols and phospholipids.*

Complex FOS are considered prebiotics. Not to be confused with probiotics, a prebiotic helps feed the good bacteria in the intestine.*
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Iron

May Help Support Healthy Blood Cell, Gut, Muscle and (Certain) Hormone Function*

Iron is a mineral that the body needs for growth and development. Your body uses iron to make hemoglobin, a protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to all parts of the body, and myoglobin, a protein that provides oxygen to muscles. Your body also needs iron to make some hormones.*
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Vitamin K

May Help Support Healthy Bone and Blood Function (Anti-Inflammatory)*

Vitamin K is a nutrient that the body needs to stay healthy. It’s important for blood clotting and healthy bones and also has other functions in the body. Severe vitamin K deficiency can cause bruising and bleeding problems because the blood will take longer to clot. Vitamin K deficiency might reduce bone strength and increase the risk of getting osteoporosis because the body needs vitamin K for healthy bones.*
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Magnesium

May Help Support Healthy Muscle, Nerve, Blood Pressure, Gut, Bone and DNA Function*

Magnesium is a nutrient that the body needs to stay healthy. Magnesium is important for many processes in the body, including regulating muscle and nerve function, blood sugar levels, and blood pressure and making protein, bone, and DNA.*
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MSM

May Help Support Healthy Joint, Skin and Muscle Function (Anti-Inflammatory + Antioxidant)*

Methylsulfonylmethane (MSM) has become a popular dietary supplement used for a variety of purposes, including its most common use as an anti-inflammatory agent. It has been well-investigated in animal models, as well as in human clinical trials and experiments. A variety of health-specific outcome measures are improved with MSM supplementation, including inflammation, joint/muscle pain, oxidative stress, and antioxidant capacity. People use MSM for osteoarthritis, pain, swelling, skin aging , and many other conditions.*

Early research shows that taking MSM might help to reduce face wrinkles and make skin appear smoother. Some research shows that taking MSM daily beginning 10 days before a running exercise can help reduce muscle damage. MSM might supply sulfur to make other chemicals in the body.*
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Potassium

May Help Support Healthy Bone, Kidney, Muscle and Nerve Function*

Potassium is a mineral found in many foods. Your body needs potassium for almost everything it does, including proper kidney and heart function, muscle contraction, and nerve transmission.*
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PQQ

May Help Support Healthy Metabolism, Mitochondria and Neurologic Functions*

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is widespread in adults and children. Early exposure to maternal obesity or Western-style diet (WD) increases steatosis and oxidative stress in fetal liver and is associated with lifetime disease risk in the offspring. Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) is a natural antioxidant found in soil, enriched in human breast milk, and essential for development in mammals.*

Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) influences energy-related metabolism and neurologic functions in animals. The mechanism of action involves interactions with cell signaling pathways and mitochondrial function.*
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Selenium

May Help Support Healthy Immunity, Gut, and Cognitive Function (Antioxidant)*

Selenium is a nutrient that the body needs to stay healthy. Selenium is important for reproduction, thyroid gland function, DNA production, and protecting the body from damage caused by free radicals and from infection.*
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Zinc

May Help Support Healthy Immunity, Cell, Gut, and Eye Function (Antioxidant + Anti-Inflammatory)*

Zinc is a nutrient that people need to stay healthy. Zinc is found in cells throughout the body. It helps the immune system fight off invading bacteria and viruses. The body also needs zinc to make proteins and DNA, the genetic material in all cells. During pregnancy, infancy, and childhood, the body needs zinc to grow and develop properly. Zinc also helps wounds heal and is important for proper senses of taste and smell.*
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