procyanidins vs polyphenols

Discussion in 'Your Living Room' started by Santa, Sep 8, 2014.

  1. Santa

    Santa Member

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    Whats the difference? I noticed one of vitacost pycnogenol states it has procyanidins and their Pine Bark, which looks like a Great Price, states it has polyphenols.
     
  2. John of Ohio

    John of Ohio Active Member

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    May 17, 2014
    Procyanidins are an important therapuetic componant of Pycnogenol:

    "A patented extract of maritime pine bark called Pycnogenol bears 65-75 percent procyanidins (procyanidins).[6] Thus a 100 mg serving would contain 65 to 75 mg of procyanidins."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procyanidin

    The presence of this in the VitaCost product indicates componant parity with Pycnogenol. It is also found in many foods.

    --John of Ohio
     
  3. Santa

    Santa Member

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    Do you think their Pine Bark, which looks like a Great Price, states it has polyphenols, is just as good? It doesn't say it has procyanidins.
     
  4. John of Ohio

    John of Ohio Active Member

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    No way to know if the VitaCost pine bark product is "just as good" as commercial "Pycnogenol." But since it's extracted from maritime pine bark, it should be theraputically equivalent. If I had MM symptoms (I don't, because of my regimen), I'd give the VitaCost product a try. A number of reviewers of VitaCost pine bark users claim to have used both Pycnogenol and the VitaCost product, with equivalent results.

    --John of Ohio
     
  5. Santa

    Santa Member

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    Thank you for your expertise
     

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