Feature summary
Lutein is one of two carotenoids (the other is zeaxanthin) that are found in the eyes, particularly in the macula and the lens, where they help to absorb damaging blue light, quench singlet oxygen and inhibit lipid peroxidation.
Lutein appears to offer significant protection against macular degeneration. The macula is the area of the retina where images are focused. It is the portion of the eye responsible for fine vision. Degeneration of the macula is the leading cause of severe visual loss in the United States. The macula, especially the central portion of the macula (the fovea) owes its yellow colour to its high concentration of lutein. A low level of lutein in the macula pigment is thought to represent a major risk factor for age-related macular degeneration. Therefore, the possibility of increasing the concentration of lutein within the macula may offer significant protective effects against the development of macular degeneration. Lutein supplementation has been able to increase blood and macular lutein concentrations. However, whether or not lutein supplementation can actually prevent or treat macular degeneration has not been sufficiently determined.
One study that examined 50,000 women over an eight-year period, showed that the women who ate the most spinach (high in lutein) had a significantly lower rate of cataract formation than those women who consumed little lutein. Researcher, Dr. Johanna Seddon, discovered that persons who had a higher carotenoid intake, particularly lutein and zeaxanthin, had a reduced risk of age-related macular degeneration.
When compared to other Polynesians, Fijians have much lower lung cancer rates, even though their smoking rates are the same as that of the other Islanders. Researchers discovered that Fijians ate three to six times more leafy green vegetables, high in lutein, than other Islanders. When heart disease rates in Toulouse, France (very low rate of heart disease) were compared with Belfast, Ireland (very high rate), the comparison showed that Toulouse residents had much higher levels of lutein in their blood.
This product contains 18 mg of lutein in a base of bilberry extract and multianthocyanidins. Bilberry contains antioxidants that help the eyes and cardiovascular system. Multianthocyanidins, derived from blueberry, cranberry, elderberry, grape, raspberry, strawberry and bilberry, are a complex extract of plant flavonoids that are powerful free radical scavengers.
Medicinal ingredients
Each Softgel Contains: | |
Lutein (Marigold flowers [Tagetes erecta]) | 20 mg |
Zeaxanthin (Marigold flowers [Tagetes erecta]) | 860 mcg |
Non-medicinal ingredients
Softgel (gelatin, glycerin, purified water, annatto, titanium dioxide), soybean oil, safflower oil, yellow beeswax, lecithin.