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Liquid CoQ10

Liquid · 5 Ml · 24 servings · $1.04/serving

51 / 100Average

Best for

Score Breakdown

Formulation
68
Safety
75
Final score
51/100

Ingredients (6)

Coenzyme Q10

100%

Dose

100 mg

Target

100–300 mg

Form

Vitamin B-6

28%

Dose

7 mg

Target

25–100 mg

Form

Premium

Pantothenic Acid

10%

Dose

5 mg

Target

50–500 mg

Form

Vitamin B12

40%

Dose

100 mcg

Target

250–5000 mcg

Form

Budget

D-Ribose

0%

Dose

0.0 g

Target

5–15 g

Form

Other Ingredients (14)

Rice ProteinFiller

Rice-based ingredients carry risk of inorganic arsenic contamination (FDA and Consumer Reports have documented elevated arsenic in rice products). Used as a cheap filler. Incomplete amino acid profile adds no meaningful protein benefit at excipient doses.

MaltodextrinBinder

Spikes blood sugar faster than table sugar (glycemic index 85–105). Research links it to gut bacteria changes that may promote intestinal inflammation (Nickerson et al. 2015). Used as a cheap filler — adds nothing beneficial.

XylitolSweetener

A FODMAP sugar alcohol that can cause GI distress (bloating, gas, diarrhea) at moderate doses (>10-20g/day), though supplement amounts are typically small. Extremely toxic to dogs — households with pets should store securely.

Natural FlavorsFlavor

Broad regulatory category of flavor constituents derived from natural sources. Composition is proprietary and not disclosed — 'Natural Flavors' can include several hundred different compounds depending on the target flavor profile, including hexane-extracted constituents and proprietary carrier solvents. 'Natural' is a regulatory definition (21 CFR §101.22), not a safety guarantee.

Potassium SorbatePreservative

Natural preservative derived from sorbic acid

Rice Bran OilCarrier

An oil pressed from rice bran, used as a carrier and emollient

Citric AcidAcidulant

Natural acid derived from citrus fruits

Guar GumThickener

Natural thickener derived from guar beans

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Sources & Scoring

Nutrient data (RDA, UL, and safety thresholds) sourced from: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and National Academies Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI).

This is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making changes to your supplement routine.

The score analyzes what's on the label: ingredient doses vs. clinical ranges, chemical forms, evidence levels, and known interactions. It does not verify label accuracy or test for contaminants — for that, look for third-party certifications like USP or NSF.