A favorable trend
has emerged whereby researchers today are measuring blood
levels of ingested nutrients to ascertain how much are really
absorbed into the human body.
Peter Langsjoen, MD, is considered the world's foremost expert
in the use of CoQ10 to treat cardiac disease. He
conducts his research and clinical practice in Tyler, Texas.
When the ubiquinol form of CoQ10
was introduced last year, Dr. Langsjoen and his associates
were curious to investigate whether it could reverse the
course of advanced congestive heart failure. Along with his
pioneering father, Dr. Langsjoen had observed that patients
with advanced heart failure often failed to achieve adequate
blood (plasma) levels, even when high doses of conventional
CoQ10 were used.7
Dr. Langsjoen found that in
response to the administration of 900 mg of conventional
ubiquinone CoQ10, advanced heart failure patients only
increased their total CoQ10 levels to less than 2 mcg/mL of
blood. Congestive heart failure patients with CoQ10 blood
levels as low as this respond poorly, with very little
improvement in ejection fraction (a test that measures the
heart’s pumping capacity).8
In healthy people, the ingestion
of 900 mg of conventional (ubiquinone) CoQ10 is expected to
raise total blood levels to around 3 mcg/mL. Dr. Langsjoen
postulated that the reason ubiquinone fails to significantly
increase CoQ10 blood levels in critically ill patients is the
impaired absorption caused from the intestinal and liver edema
they so often suffer.
Comparing CoQ10 Blood Levels
In order to ascertain the
effects of ubiquinol, Dr. Langsjoen identified patients with
advanced congestive heart failure who had been taking 450
mg/day of ubiquinone, but whose mean total plasma CoQ10 blood
level was only 1.4 mcg/mL. All of these patients were then
changed to 450 mg/day of ubiquinol.
The results showed that
ubiquinol increased mean plasma CoQ10 levels up to 4.1 mcg/mL
(or 2.92-fold greater than ubiquinone).8
A review of previous studies indicates that significant
clinical benefit in heart failure patients requires a plasma
CoQ10 level of around 4 mcg/mL.9-11
In severe heart failure patients, the only way these higher
levels can be obtained appears to be with ubiquinol—not
conventional ubiquinone CoQ10 supplements.
Comparing Improvements in
Cardiac Function
The ejection fraction test
assesses the heart’s pumping capacity by measuring how much
blood is pumped after each beat compared with the amount of
blood remaining in the heart. Healthy people have an ejection
fraction of 50-75%, while those with congestive heart failure
often have values below 20-30%.12
In the study conducted by Dr.
Langsjoen, the ejection fraction improved from 24% up to 45%
in ubiquinol-treated patients who had follow-up
echocardiograms. This represented a recovery of up to 88% in
this critical measurement of cardiac output. The higher blood
levels of CoQ10 and the improved ejection fractions were
accompanied by a remarkable clinical improvement in these
heart failure patients.8
Based on the findings from this
study, Dr. Langsjoen’s group concluded:
“It is our preliminary
observation that ubiquinol has dramatically improved
absorption in patients with severe heart failure and that the
improvement in plasma CoQ10 levels is strongly correlated with
both clinical improvement and improvement in measurement of
left ventricular function.”8
Why Congestive Heart Failure
Deaths are Increasing
Congestive heart failure
currently strikes five million Americans.13
Most victims are over 65, an age when cardiac muscle CoQ10
levels are sharply depleted (by as much as 72%) compared with
youth.14
Each year, about one million
Americans are hospitalized because of congestive heart failure
and nearly 53,000 die directly from it.15
A predicted increase in heart failure mortality can be
attributed to several factors, including obesity-diabetes,
more people surviving heart attacks (with heart muscle
damage), and an aging population. As one can see from the
chart on the next page, normal aging causes a severe depletion
of CoQ10 in tissues throughout the body,14,16,17
which helps explain why older people suffer more congestive
heart failure.
An even more insidious reason
why more cardiac patients are dying from congestive heart
failure is the prescribing of statin drugs without sufficient
CoQ10 intake. Since statin drugs deplete CoQ1018
synthesis in the body, one can easily see why congestive heart
failure deaths are skyrocketing in those being aggressively
treated by mainstream cardiologists.
Those at high risk for heart
disease (such as diabetics) and those who have survived a
heart attack often need to be prescribed a statin drug to
reduce additional coronary artery occlusion. These statin drug
users also need to supplement with an adequate amount of CoQ10
to protect against the cardiac cell energy depletion that is
the underlying cause of congestive heart failure.
Multiple Advantages of Ubiquinol
Over Ubiquinone
Last year, we provided what we
thought was irrefutable evidence of the multiple advantages of
the ubiquinol form of CoQ10. Compared with conventional
ubiquinone CoQ10, ubiquinol was shown to absorb into the
bloodstream up to eight times better,20-22 reduce fatigue 90%
more effectively,28
and slow aging in middle-aged mice 40% better.19
Some commercial supplement
companies, however, told their customers that all they had to
do was take more ubiquinone to obtain the same benefits of
ubiquinol. Commercial companies had a self-serving reason for
sticking with ubiquinone—their profit margins on it were
significantly higher.
We at the Life Extension
Foundation take a different view. Keeping our members in a
youthful state of longevity is the most efficient way of
maintaining the revenue stream we need to fund our scientific
research projects. We had no problem reducing our margins to
provide members with the clearly superior ubiquinol form of
CoQ10.
Dr. Langsjoen’s remarkable
findings that high-dose ubiquinone was ineffective for
advanced heart failure patients, whereas ubiquinol reversed
the course of the disease, provide the most conclusive
evidence to date of the superiority of ubiquinol CoQ10.
Fascinating History of CoQ10
In this issue of Life Extension
magazine, we publish an insider’s look at the 50-year history
of CoQ10 that describes the initial skepticism and the
subsequent discoveries made by scientists who fastidiously
persevered against the conventional dogma of the day (see page
57). You’ll be amazed as to how much painstaking
cardiovascular research went into providing us with the wealth
of CoQ10 data we now have today.
We also publish in this issue,
an update on new studies showing the combination of CoQ10 (and
other nutrients) with conventional therapies improves
treatment outcomes in advanced breast cancer and melanoma
cases (see page 44). Based on the research that exists to
date, you may be as startled as I am that oncologists are
failing to tell certain cancer patients to take high-dose
CoQ10.
Help Combat Today’s Leading
Cause of Death
It is so regrettable that the
major cause of death in the Western world is medical
ignorance. There are five million Americans suffering from
congestive heart failure today, and most of them don’t take
any CoQ10. Those that do mostly take the antiquated ubiquinone
form that provides very little benefit in advanced cases.
The Life Extension Foundation
compiles and publishes avant-garde scientific information and
first disseminates it to members. We then provide it to the
world (via the Internet) at no charge. If more cardiologists
paid attention to what we published last year about ubiquinol,
a significant percentage of those who died from congestive
heart failure in 2007 could still be alive.
Every time you purchase a
product from us, you contribute directly to aggressive
life-extension research that could save enormous numbers of
human lives.
For 20 consecutive years,
members have taken advantage of the annual Super Sale to stock
up on a large supply of advanced natural products at reduced
prices. During this annual winter event, every Life Extension
product is discounted to enable members to enjoy huge savings
on our top-of-the-line supplements.
This year’s Super Sale ends on
January 31, 2008. I encourage members to check their personal
supplies and stock up during this one-time-a-year price
reduction.
For longer life,

William Faloon
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