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frontpageRokket | Staff posted Yesterday 02:16 PM
frontpageRokket | Staff posted Yesterday 02:16 PM

120-Count Nature Made CoQ10 100mg Dietary Supplement Softgels

w/ Subscribe & Save

$14

$51

72% off
Amazon
13 Comments 4,888 Views
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Deal Details
Amazon has 120-Count Nature Made CoQ10 100mg Dietary Supplement for Heart Health Support Softgels for $21.61 - $6.48 when you 'clip' the 30% off coupon - $1.08 (5% off) when you check out with Subscribe & Save = $14.05. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on orders $35+.

Thanks Deal Hunter Rokket for sharing this deal

Note: You must be logged into your account. Coupons are typically one use per account. You have the flexibility to manage your Subscribe & Save subscription at any time after your order ships. View Subscribe & Save filler items and our current Subscribe & Save Frontpage deals to unlock up to an extra 15% savings when you have 5 or more items in your current monthly subscription.

Features:
  • Contains one 120 count bottle of Nature Made CoQ10 100 mg Softgels for a 120-day supply
  • These Coenzyme Q10 100mg supplements provide antioxidant support to help fight free radicals in the body and to protect cells from oxidative damage
  • Nature Made CoQ10 100mg softgels also provide support for heart health and healthy aging
  • These gluten free CoQ10 supplements have no artificial flavors, no preservatives, and no color added - CoQ10 is naturally orange in color

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff
  • About this Offer:
    • Our research indicates that this deal is $7.45 less (35% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $21.50 at the time of this posting.
  • Reviews:
  • Amazon Return Policy:
    • This item is non-returnable due to potential safety risk as an ingestible product, but if the item arrives damaged or defective, you may request a refund or replacement through Your Orders by providing an image of the item and its defects.
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by Rokket | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 120-Count Nature Made CoQ10 100mg Dietary Supplement for Heart Health Support Softgels for $21.61 - $6.48 when you 'clip' the 30% off coupon - $1.08 (5% off) when you check out with Subscribe & Save = $14.05. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on orders $35+.

Thanks Deal Hunter Rokket for sharing this deal

Note: You must be logged into your account. Coupons are typically one use per account. You have the flexibility to manage your Subscribe & Save subscription at any time after your order ships. View Subscribe & Save filler items and our current Subscribe & Save Frontpage deals to unlock up to an extra 15% savings when you have 5 or more items in your current monthly subscription.

Features:
  • Contains one 120 count bottle of Nature Made CoQ10 100 mg Softgels for a 120-day supply
  • These Coenzyme Q10 100mg supplements provide antioxidant support to help fight free radicals in the body and to protect cells from oxidative damage
  • Nature Made CoQ10 100mg softgels also provide support for heart health and healthy aging
  • These gluten free CoQ10 supplements have no artificial flavors, no preservatives, and no color added - CoQ10 is naturally orange in color

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff
  • About this Offer:
    • Our research indicates that this deal is $7.45 less (35% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $21.50 at the time of this posting.
  • Reviews:
  • Amazon Return Policy:
    • This item is non-returnable due to potential safety risk as an ingestible product, but if the item arrives damaged or defective, you may request a refund or replacement through Your Orders by providing an image of the item and its defects.
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by Rokket | Staff

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Top Comments

DavidL8545
329 Posts
38 Reputation
What's overstated or misleading in the quoted comment
"Ubiquinol is more effective and better absorbed." Evidence is mixed; in head-to-heads with optimized ubiquinone formulations, ubiquinone can match or exceed ubiquinol bioavailability. The review by Mantle & Dybring shows formulation (e.g., thermal crystal dispersion) can make ubiquinone more bioavailable than ubiquinol; many "ubiquinol wins" comparisons used non-optimized ubiquinone. Also, clinical efficacy data are stronger for ubiquinone in cardiovascular outcomes.
"If you're over 35–40, this is not very effective." There isn't strong clinical evidence that older adults cannot convert ubiquinone to ubiquinol. Studies in older men show both ubiquinone and ubiquinol supplementation raise plasma ubiquinol levels, with no statistically significant difference in some trials. Authoritative references also note ubiquinone is reduced to ubiquinol during/after absorption and constitutes ~95% of circulating CoQ10. A 2020 overview emphasizes conversion systems exist and challenges blanket claims that older people "need" ubiquinol.
Nuance you can use
Bioavailability varies widely by formulation; soft-gel capsules and technologies that disperse CoQ10 crystals or use appropriate lipids/encapsulation improve absorption regardless of form.
For specific scenarios (e.g., very high doses, certain malabsorption issues), some clinicians try ubiquinol; but for general use, especially for heart outcomes, ubiquinone has the stronger clinical trial track record.
Marketing from Kaneka/ubiquinol-branded sources asserts age-related conversion decline and superior absorption, but these are manufacturer claims and not definitive across independent trials. Independent reviews caution against these blanket assertions.
Bottom line for this Slickdeals product
Nature Made CoQ10 here is ubiquinone. It can still be effective, including in older adults, particularly if it's a good softgel formulation and taken with fat/food.
If you prefer ubiquinol or have tried ubiquinone without reaching target blood levels/symptom goals, switching to a reputable ubiquinol brand is reasonable—but it's not mandatory for everyone over 35–40, and the "not very effective" claim is not supported by robust evidence.

12 Comments

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Yesterday 04:52 PM
2 Posts
Joined Aug 2019
LovelySwallow485Yesterday 04:52 PM
2 Posts
what coupon? Not seeing one.
1
Yesterday 05:34 PM
11 Posts
Joined Aug 2018
MrZippoman1012Yesterday 05:34 PM
11 Posts
Quote from LovelySwallow485 :
what coupon? Not seeing one.
Did you hit subscride and save? 30% coup came up for me.
Yesterday 06:20 PM
1,736 Posts
Joined Mar 2011
kukblue1Yesterday 06:20 PM
1,736 Posts
OK Price I paid $17.34 for a different brand. Also I see no coupon on my end
Yesterday 07:48 PM
1,891 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
veeRobYesterday 07:48 PM
1,891 Posts
There's another brand on Amazon called Horbäach that has 120 count for $9.02.
Yesterday 08:45 PM
404 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
BobC8176Yesterday 08:45 PM
404 Posts
No coupon
Yesterday 09:14 PM
151 Posts
Joined Apr 2020
booiYesterday 09:14 PM
151 Posts
If you guys are serious about CoQ10 supplementation, the bioactive version called Ubiquinol is more effective and better absorbed. The process to make Ubiquinol is still patented so it more expensive but not overly so I've found. Costco sells Ubiquinol under the brand Qunol.
Yesterday 11:00 PM
875 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
z256joeyYesterday 11:00 PM
875 Posts
Quote from booi :
If you guys are serious about CoQ10 supplementation, the bioactive version called Ubiquinol is more effective and better absorbed. The process to make Ubiquinol is still patented so it more expensive but not overly so I've found. Costco sells Ubiquinol under the brand Qunol.

This. If you're over 35 your body will have a more difficult time converting this to ubiquinol. By the time you're 40 this is not very effective.

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Yesterday 11:08 PM
151 Posts
Joined Sep 2006
alconebayYesterday 11:08 PM
151 Posts
Quote from veeRob :
There's another brand on Amazon called Horbäach that has 120 count for $9.02.
It's 2 per serving (50mg each)
Today 12:40 AM
329 Posts
Joined Mar 2016
DavidL8545Today 12:40 AM
329 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank DavidL8545

Quote from z256joey :
This. If you're over 35 your body will have a more difficult time converting this to ubiquinol. By the time you're 40 this is not very effective.
What's overstated or misleading in the quoted comment
"Ubiquinol is more effective and better absorbed." Evidence is mixed; in head-to-heads with optimized ubiquinone formulations, ubiquinone can match or exceed ubiquinol bioavailability. The review by Mantle & Dybring shows formulation (e.g., thermal crystal dispersion) can make ubiquinone more bioavailable than ubiquinol; many "ubiquinol wins" comparisons used non-optimized ubiquinone. Also, clinical efficacy data are stronger for ubiquinone in cardiovascular outcomes.
"If you're over 35–40, this [ubiquinone] is not very effective." There isn't strong clinical evidence that older adults cannot convert ubiquinone to ubiquinol. Studies in older men show both ubiquinone and ubiquinol supplementation raise plasma ubiquinol levels, with no statistically significant difference in some trials. Authoritative references also note ubiquinone is reduced to ubiquinol during/after absorption and constitutes ~95% of circulating CoQ10. A 2020 overview emphasizes conversion systems exist and challenges blanket claims that older people "need" ubiquinol.
Nuance you can use
Bioavailability varies widely by formulation; soft-gel capsules and technologies that disperse CoQ10 crystals or use appropriate lipids/encapsulation improve absorption regardless of form.
For specific scenarios (e.g., very high doses, certain malabsorption issues), some clinicians try ubiquinol; but for general use, especially for heart outcomes, ubiquinone has the stronger clinical trial track record.
Marketing from Kaneka/ubiquinol-branded sources asserts age-related conversion decline and superior absorption, but these are manufacturer claims and not definitive across independent trials. Independent reviews caution against these blanket assertions.
Bottom line for this Slickdeals product
Nature Made CoQ10 here is ubiquinone. It can still be effective, including in older adults, particularly if it's a good softgel formulation and taken with fat/food.
If you prefer ubiquinol or have tried ubiquinone without reaching target blood levels/symptom goals, switching to a reputable ubiquinol brand is reasonable—but it's not mandatory for everyone over 35–40, and the "not very effective" claim is not supported by robust evidence.
2
Today 12:55 AM
875 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
z256joeyToday 12:55 AM
875 Posts
Quote from DavidL8545 :
What's overstated or misleading in the quoted comment
"Ubiquinol is more effective and better absorbed." Evidence is mixed; in head-to-heads with optimized ubiquinone formulations, ubiquinone can match or exceed ubiquinol bioavailability. The review by Mantle & Dybring shows formulation (e.g., thermal crystal dispersion) can make ubiquinone more bioavailable than ubiquinol; many "ubiquinol wins" comparisons used non-optimized ubiquinone. Also, clinical efficacy data are stronger for ubiquinone in cardiovascular outcomes.
"If you're over 35–40, this [ubiquinone] is not very effective." There isn't strong clinical evidence that older adults cannot convert ubiquinone to ubiquinol. Studies in older men show both ubiquinone and ubiquinol supplementation raise plasma ubiquinol levels, with no statistically significant difference in some trials. Authoritative references also note ubiquinone is reduced to ubiquinol during/after absorption and constitutes ~95% of circulating CoQ10. A 2020 overview emphasizes conversion systems exist and challenges blanket claims that older people "need" ubiquinol.
Nuance you can use
Bioavailability varies widely by formulation; soft-gel capsules and technologies that disperse CoQ10 crystals or use appropriate lipids/encapsulation improve absorption regardless of form.
For specific scenarios (e.g., very high doses, certain malabsorption issues), some clinicians try ubiquinol; but for general use, especially for heart outcomes, ubiquinone has the stronger clinical trial track record.
Marketing from Kaneka/ubiquinol-branded sources asserts age-related conversion decline and superior absorption, but these are manufacturer claims and not definitive across independent trials. Independent reviews caution against these blanket assertions.
Bottom line for this Slickdeals product
Nature Made CoQ10 here is ubiquinone. It can still be effective, including in older adults, particularly if it's a good softgel formulation and taken with fat/food.
If you prefer ubiquinol or have tried ubiquinone without reaching target blood levels/symptom goals, switching to a reputable ubiquinol brand is reasonable—but it's not mandatory for everyone over 35–40, and the "not very effective" claim is not supported by robust evidence.

Can you give me a source for your quotes? My post was based on the word of my cardiologist over a decade ago, and for all I know, he was being influenced by material from Kaneka, who definitely has a reason to skew the facts! They're making a ton of money off of ubiquinol.
I will say that at the time my ubiquinol levels were not where he wanted them when I was taking Co-Q10 gels and Ubiquinol got them where he wanted them to be. I take a pretty high statin dose and it was driving my ubiquinol levels down to almost nothing.
Today 03:47 AM
329 Posts
Joined Mar 2016
DavidL8545Today 03:47 AM
329 Posts
Quote from z256joey :
Can you give me a source for your quotes? My post was based on the word of my cardiologist over a decade ago, and for all I know, he was being influenced by material from Kaneka, who definitely has a reason to skew the facts! They're making a ton of money off of ubiquinol.
I will say that at the time my ubiquinol levels were not where he wanted them when I was taking Co-Q10 gels and Ubiquinol got them where he wanted them to be. I take a pretty high statin dose and it was driving my ubiquinol levels down to almost nothing.
Perplexity AI ...you can see citation & prompt for more academic/medical sources if you want https://www.perplexity.ai/search/...n0pEZhVQ#0
Today 04:40 AM
1,049 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
labudeToday 04:40 AM
1,049 Posts
i am taking ubiquinone that i bought from amazon.
For those taking statins, statins very often lower coq10 and cause muscle pain
so taking coq10 supplements is a good idea.

i'd like to try the ubiquinol but it's a lot more expensive.
(i also prefer to take vegetarian supplements and lots of them have bovine gelatin)

the cheapest brand that i found is dr fosters
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0DNYDR6VM
They are vegetarian and seem like a very good deal except for the fact
that they also have 45 mg of vitamin E. i'm pretty sure i get ample
vitamin E through diet and that i'd be better off not taking them in a supplement.

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