Tyler, how long did it take for the 4 capsules a day of krill oil to noticeably lighten your irises?
Tyler wrote:
"My understanding is that the Mercola krill oil product is cold-extracted, and is reasonably high-quality."
http://www.rawpaleoforum.com/off-topic/krill-oil/msg19848/#msg19848Mercola apparently currently uses an Aker Biomarine krill oil product. Aker reportedly cooks the krill and then extracts the oil with ethanol. The only version of krill oil that reportedly is not cooked and doesn't use ethanol, acetone, or hexane solvent is Cyvex's KriaXanthin, which is sold under the NSI and Meridian brands at Vitacost and Amazon.com, respectively. KriaXanthin also happens to be the cheapest version of krill oil I've seen, which may be due to the fact that they don't process their krill oil as much. The limited processing also means it has very low concentrations of EPA and DHA versus other brands, but it's still cheaper per mg of EPA/DHA.
Mercola's brand is the most expensive I've seen, and I've noticed in general when looking at this products that he tends to charge more for them than other sellers, possibly because of a combination of his small volumes and because he can charge more for the Mercola name.
There's lots of info on krill oil at
http://www.healthyfellow.com/283/krill-oil-research/.
> NSI (Vitacost) KriaXanthin (source: Cyvex)
http://www.vitacost.com/NSI-KriaXanthin-Antarctic-Krill-Oil-with-Natural-Astaxanthin$9.99 for 60 softgels
$39.99 for 300 softgels
Per 2 Softgels:
1000 mg krill oil
Phospholipids ?
Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) 50 mg
Docosahexaenoic (DHA) 20 mg
Omega-6 fatty acids 20 mg
Astaxanthin (as astaxanthin esters) 1.5 mg
Ingredients: Antarctic krill oil (Euphasia pacifica), gelatin.
> Mercola Krill Oil (source: Aker Biomarine - their less concentrated form of krill oil)
http://krilloil.mercola.com/krill-oil.html$24.95 for 60 capliques
$62.97 for 180 capliques
Per 2 capsules:
1000 mg krill oil
Phospholipids 400 mg
Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) 90 mg
Docosahexaenoic (DHA) 50 mg
Omega-6 fatty acids 20 mg
Astaxanthin (as astaxanthin esters) 600 mcg
Ingredients: krill oil, fish gelatin capsule and silica.
> Source Naturals NKO Krill oil (source: Neptune Technologies & Bioresources)
http://www.sourcenaturals.com/products/GP1752/http://www.sourcenaturals.com/file_center/original/100200.pdfhttp://www.amazon.com/Source-Naturals-NKO-Softgels-softgels/dp/B000GFJK0U/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=hpc&qid=1282525936&sr=1-1$11.92 for 60 softgels
$34.33 for 120 softgels
Per 2 softgels (1000 mg)
Phospholipids 400 mg
Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) 150 mg †
Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) 90 mg †
Omega-6 fatty acids, total 15 mg †
Astaxanthin 1.5 mg
Ingredients: krill oil, gelatin, glycerin, and purified water.
> Cyvex and Enzymotec (Azantis) provide krill oil to Nutraceutical Sciences Institute (NSI). Cyvex makes KriaXanthin. They claim "We use no solvents in extracting the [KriaXanthin] oil…all processing is done on Antarctic fishing vessels."
http://www.cyvex.com/individual-ingredients/kriaxanthin-pure-and-natural-antarctic-krill-oil-astaxanthin. Sold at Vitacost.
NSI also sell SKO oil, which is Enzymotec's Azantis oil
"KriaXanthin Krill Oil appears to have [a little more than] half the Omega 3s of Neptune Krill Oil (and the other brands that use it). BUT, it is also less than half the price of those products, so double the dose and you are still more than ahead of the game price-wise.
SMELL: the stench when you open the bottle of KriaXanthin is awful"
http://www.amazon.com/Meridian-Naturals-Krill-Oil-Softgels/dp/B001TDL3OY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=hpc&qid=1282523299&sr=1-1KriaXanthin is apparently a lower-strength product than the other brands, possibly because it doesn't concentrate the oil with ethanol, acetone, or hexane
"It's produced with a unique, cold-vacuum-pressing process, without the presence of solvents, resulting in a superior-quality, highly stable oil."
https://ponsonbyhealth.myhsphere.biz/product_info.php?cPath=13&products_id=454Some sellers of KriaXanthin
Amazon.com: Meridian Naturals brand
http://www.amazon.com/Meridian-Naturals-Krill-Oil-Softgels/dp/B001TDL3OY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=hpc&qid=1282523299&sr=1-1Vitacost: NSI brand
http://www.vitacost.com/NSI-KriaXanthin-Antarctic-Krill-Oil-with-Natural-Astaxanthin-1000-mg-per-serving-300-Softgels/?pd_section=pr#ProductReviews> Aker Biomarine supplies Mercola with a weak version of their krill oil; they also have a stronger Superba version that Finnish authorities said is as strong as NKO; Aker cooks the krill and uses ethanol to extract the krill oil; May
26 2010
Aker Biomarine’s Krill Fisheries Receives Marine Stewardship Council Certification
http://www.aquapreneur.com/2010/05/26/aker-biomarines-krill-fisheries-receives-marine-stewardship-council-certification/“The Board notes that the production and manufacturing process of Superba oil presented by the applicant is substantially equivalent with that of the NKO oil’s. Mainly, the methods differ from each other only as regards the extraction of the oil, where Aker Biomarine uses extraction with ethanol from krill meal cooked and dried on the vessel, while NKO oil is extracted with acetone from frozen raw krill.
However the difference in the manufacturing process has no substantial impact on the composition of the end product, i.e. the oil, and both methods are acceptable as regards food safety.”
http://www.stockhouse.com/Bullboards/MessageDetail.aspx?s=NTB&t=LIST&m=27746653&l=0&pd=0&r=0> Neptune Technologies & Bioresources supplies its NKO brand to NOW, Source Naturals and others; Neptune had some shipping problems one summer due to fast growth and some of their retail customers dropped them as a result; Neptune uses acetone to extract the krill oil