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ASTAXANTHIN

What is ASTAXANTHIN ?

Astaxanthin is a red pigment occurring naturally in a wide variety of living organisms. Although the word astaxanthin may not be commonly encountered in everyday speech, the pigment itself is found in many human foods, and you are quite likely to be consuming it in your diet already. Most crustaceans, including shrimp, crawfish, crabs and lobster, are tinted red by accumulated astaxanthin. The coloration of fish is often due to astaxanthin; the pink flesh of a healthy wild salmon is a conspicuous example. In commercial fish and crustacean farms, astaxanthin is commonly added to feeds in order to make up for the lack of a natural dietary source of the pigment (Torrissen et al. 1989). Not only does astaxanthin provide for pigmentation in these farmed animals, it also has been found to be essential for their proper growth and survival (Torrissen and Christiansen 1995).

Astaxanthin is one of a group of natural pigments known as carotenoids. In nature, carotenoids are produced principally by plants and their microscopic relatives, the microalgae. Animals cannot synthesize carotenoids de novo, thus ultimately they must obtain these pigments from the plants and algae that support their food chains (Britton et al. 1995). Commercial production of astaxanthin from the microalga Haematococcus pluvialis is a growing business worldwide, primarily due to the rapid growth of this microorganism and its high astaxanthin content. Other commercial ventures for natural astaxanthin production utilize fermentation of the pink yeast Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous or extraction of the pigment from by-products of crustacea such as the Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba). In addition to production from natural sources, astaxanthin may be chemically synthesized, and synthetic astaxanthin is the major form currently being used in fish feeds (McCoy 1999).

What is the BENEFITS ?

a)  Increases strength and endurance.
b)  Alleviates symptoms in patients with H. pylori (pre-ulcer indigestion).
c)  Protects cells and mitochondrial membranes from oxidative damage,
      thus protecting the cell from oxidative damage.`
d)  Boosts immune system by increasing the number of antibody-   
     producing cells.
e)  Prevents the initiation of cancer cells in the tongue, oral cavity, large
     bowel, bladder, uterus, and breast.
f)   Inhibits lipid peroxidation that causes plaque formation, thus reducing
     risk of cardiovascular disease.
g)  Alleviates stress and may assist in neurodegenerative conditions
     such as AMD, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ALS.
h)  Protects the eyes and skin from UV A and B damage by quenching
     singlet and triplet oxygen.
I)   Reduces the number of new and abnormal cells in the liver.

 

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