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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Rank: Lightweight Experience: > 1 Year Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Midwest
Posts: 1,687
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Gender: | need help with cholesterol....total cholesterol is 247, and ldl is 165. i need to bring these down....one problem could be my "12 hour fast" before hand was only 9 hours long trigs are good and hdl's are good. i take 6 fish oil caps a day...oatmeal in the morning...all my carbs are either whole grain or from fruits and veg...except for waxy maize post workout. i pretty much eat...chicken, eggs, lean beef, bananas, oatmeal, variety of veg, olive oil, peanut butter, skim milk, whole grain pasta/bread and some almonds. so...sesame oil is a lot cheaper, and has a lot more stuff in it than the scivation. which one would be more gooder for me? |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Rank: Lightweight Experience: > 1 Year | I've been looking and trying to figure out how much sesamin is in sesame oil. I have some of the primaforce sesamin oil. I've done some more reading on it and people seem to be pretty happy with it. I only used it for a few days and then got tired of using it. Most of the studies I saw on it were not well done also. I think I'm going to start taking it again. I am going to get some kind of bottle with a dropper or spray. But I'm talking about for fat loss. So that was a fairly random diatribe. Have you considered red yeast rice? It's got a lot more research behind it and I think it will work better. A lot of people that come in to GNC can't take statin drugs or have bad sides, so they take red yeast rice and they say it works nearly as well (or equally well) as prescription drugs. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Moderator Rank: Light Heavyweight Experience: 7-10 Years | Go with bulk Sesamin (which is ALWAYS out of stock) or Primaforce Sesamin which is the cheapest. I'm waiting for more myself since I'm out. Phenominal addition to a healthy diet IMHO. Works great for fatloss when supersetted with forskolin or TTA. |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Rank: Lightweight Experience: > 1 Year | I don't know if anyone mentioned this, but the primaforce sesamin comes in a plastic bottle. Mine came with an oral syringe. It was a pain in the ass to try to measure everything out and not make a total mess, so I went to the pharmacy and bought a brown glass bottle with a built in 1ml dropper (75 cents). About 1/3 of the bottle of sesamin will fit in the glass bottle...it's 100x's easier than messing with that syringe. |
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Rank: Heavyweight Experience: 7-10 Years Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 5,280
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Gender: | Quote:
I saw something on sesamin in 14 sesame oils from Taiwan. I'm not a math guy by any means (ask a steroid guru for conversions ) but I'll try to round down the amounts to give an idea. The mean amount of lignans was around 11 mgs per gram of oil. Of those lignans around 80 percent was sesamin (some of the other lignans may be valuable too). Say one tablespoon of sesame oil is a serving. That's 14 grams total fat. Even if you were getting the average amount of sesamin in all the sesame oils 1 tablespoon should yield around 154 mgs of sesamin. The sesamin products are standardized to 500 mgs sesamin per serving. To get that from regular sesame oil you'd need a bit more than 3 tablespoons per serving. So about 45 grams of fat. And of course you WOULDN'T necessarily be getting that much sesamin at all. Maybe not even close. Not to say you couldn't derive some of the benefits of sesamin with reg oil. But if you want SESAMIN you want standardized, most likely. I'm always screwing up math by the way, but you would have to use a lot of sesame oil and never be sure of sesamin content, in any case. It seems a little weird though, becasue the bulk products give you 500 mgs sesamin per 1 gram of fat....Either my math is way wrong or those sesame oils they tested have very low lignan content. Further, looking at this, I am having a hard time seeing how they could possibly claim so much sesamin in these prodcuts: Research Paper Lignan contents in sesame seeds and products Ali A. Moazzami *, Stefanie L. Haese, Afaf Kamal-Eldin Department of Food Science, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Uppsala, Sweden email: Ali A. Moazzami (Ali.Moazzami@lmv.slu.se) *Correspondence to Ali A. Moazzami, Department of Food Science, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Box 7051, 750 07 Uppsala, Sweden. Phone: +46 18 672063, Fax: +46 18 672995 Keywords Sesame seed • sesame oil • lignan • sesamin • sesamolin • sesaminol • sesamolinol Abstract Sesame seed (Sesamum indicum L.) is a rich source of furofuran lignans with a wide range of potential biological activities. The major lignans in sesame seeds are the oil-soluble sesamin and sesamolin, as well as glucosides of sesaminol and sesamolinol that reside in the defatted sesame flour. Upon refining of sesame oil, acid-catalyzed transformation of sesamin to episesamin and of sesamolin to epimeric sesaminols takes place, making the profile of refined sesame oils different from that of virgin oils. In this study, the total lignan content of 14 sesame seeds ranged between 405 and 1178 mg/100 g and the total lignan content in 14 different products, including tahini, ranged between 11 and 763 mg/100 g. The content of sesamin and sesamolin in ten commercial virgin and roasted sesame oils was in the range of 444-1601 mg/100 g oil. In five refined sesame oils, sesamin ranged between 118 and 401 mg/100 g seed, episesamin between 12 and 206 mg/100 g seed, and the total contents of sesaminol epimers between 5 and 35 mg/100 g seed, and no sesamolin was found. Thus, there is a great variation in the types and amounts of lignans in sesame seeds, seed products and oils. This knowledge is important for nutritionists working on resolving the connection between diet and health. Since the consumption of sesame seed products is increasing steadily in Europe and USA, it is important to include sesame seed lignans in databases and studies pertinent to the nutritional significance of antioxidants and phytoestrogens. It is also important to differentiate between virgin, roasted and refined sesame oils. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I'm not seeing it. Someone needs to explain to me how they are producing an affordable oil with the content being half sesamin! Last edited by Eric3237; 07-20-2008 at 02:01 PM. | |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Moderator Rank: Heavyweight Experience: 7-10 Years Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 5,280
Country:
Gender: | Well flax seeds are a good example though. Flax is supposed to be the "richest" source of lignans. Yet I'm pretty sure it has nowhere NEAR the amounts in the sesamin products. I'm pretty sure that sesame doesn't have like a thousand times more lignan content than flax, lol as flax is supposed to be like 100 times greater in lignan content than most other plants.Just not getting it dudes. I saw a product...i think it's called limenlife or somethng like that which is a concentrated flax lignan thing supposed to be about 50 mgs of lignan for a 250 mg dose. So do the math. This is not an oil, it is supposed to be virtually fat free. Yet you'd need 4 doses of that to get the "lignanS" amount that these standardized sesame oils have of ONE lignan in ONE serving. In this book called Fatty Acids in Foods and Their Health Implications, I read this estimation of sesamin content in oils. The sesamin content in oilds from dehulled and coated seeds ranged from 5800 to 6490 mg/kg. Again, the math just ain't working. |
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