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Flavay® scores the highest both as and antioxidant
and as a free radical scavenger.
This is precisely the free radical
scavenging effect that Dr. Masquelier
described in U.S. Patent 4,698,360.
Independent Comparative Analysis of Flavay®
to Grape Seed and
Pine Bark Extracts
Flavay® is the authentic, standardized and isolated, singular polyphenol
complex defined, patented and perfected by Dr. Jack Masquelier; proven
safe and effective by numerous human studies and used worldwide since
1950.
Dr. Masquelier's 1948 French Patent described a method to extract the
active principles in Flavay® from the bark of the pinus Maritima.
His 1970 French Patent described an even more efficient extraction method
of the active principles from the seeds of the vitis vinifera grapes.
On October 6, 1987 Dr. Masquelier was awarded U.S. Patent No. 4,698,360
to describe the proanthocyanidins in Flavay® for use as a powerful
antioxidant, "which has a radical scavenger effect."
However, consumers need to know that the marketplace is full of imitations,
various “extracts” and derivative forms of Dr. Masquelier’s
scientifically proven and patented complex. Unfortunately, many have used
Dr. Masquelier’s name and research in unauthorized ways to promote
a myriad of derivations. In fact, the other "leading brand"
pine bark extract, compared to Flavay® below, is an offshoot derived
from Dr. Masquelier's authentic work and products. But, independent comparative
testing demonstrates that the initial qualifying research conducted on
the authentic products may not be automatically transferred to other commercial
products. As demonstrated below, Flavay® remains unsurpassed when
compared to other leading brands.
Independent Lab Report Results and Conclusions
A highly qualified independent U.S. Laboratory performed five analytical
methods to put in qualitative perspective the differences between Flavay®
(extracted from grape seeds and pine bark) and ten "grape seed extracts"
currently on the market. Later, a new study was performed to include the
leading pine bark extract (sample #14). Below are the results of these
studies.
Electrochemical
Antioxidant Activity (ECA) Test:
The below ECA chromatograms represent a comparison of the pine
bark materials in Flavay® vs. the other leading brand pine bark
product. Test conditions and amounts of samples were identical. Results
are displayed on the same scale. Both samples exhibit comparable positions
in the peaks, confirming that both samples originate from similar source
plant materials.
However, note below, the other leading brand pine bark has significantly
lower amounts of antioxidant compounds per unit weight. The rest of the
sample is likely to be non-antioxidant inert material.
The similar fingerprints indicate that the samples originate from a similar
source plant materials, but use different extraction protocols. Flavay®
scores the highest—demonstrating its superior free radical scavenging
effect.
Antioxidant Capacity (ACAP) Test:
The below ACAP-Trolox test was performed in addition to the ECA test to
establish a more balanced and certain assessment. For the most reliable
impression of the antioxidant capacity of the products, two reproducible
and controllable tests were used to evaluate the antioxidant character
of the samples. The fluorescein-derivative antioxidant comparison with
Trolox shows that the tested leading brand pine bark-based extract (#14)
has little more than half the antioxidant capacity (55%) of the pine bark
materials in Flavay® (#6).
Relative values of 10 grape seed samples
compared to Flavay®; and another leading pine bark-based product.
Highest
Values Reached = 100% (1) |
| Samples |
Antioxidant
Capacity
(ACAP) Trolox Equivalent |
Electrochemical
Antioxidant Activity
(ECA) Antioxidant "Versatility" |
| 1 |
grape
seed extract |
3% |
22% |
| 2 |
grape
seed extract |
66% |
2% |
| 3 |
grape
seed extract |
55% |
22% |
| 4 |
grape
seed extract |
34% |
41% |
| 5 |
Flavay®
(grape seed material) |
100% |
89% |
| 6 |
Flavay®
(pine bark material) |
100% |
76% |
| 7 |
Flavay®
(grape seed material) |
93% |
100% |
| 8 |
grape
seed extract |
24% |
15% |
| 9 |
grape
seed extract |
21% |
2% |
| 10 |
grape
seed extract |
76% |
74% |
| 11 |
grape
seed extract |
14% |
6% |
| 12 |
grape
seed extract |
76% |
33% |
| 13 |
grape
seed extract |
69% |
5% |
| 14 |
pine
bark extract |
55% |
23% |
SCIENTIFIC YARDSTICKS: ElectroChemical Activity (ECA)
represents the versatility and capacity of a substance to "communicate"
with another molecule by means of exchanging electrons. Antioxidant Capacity
(ACAP) is measured by testing the material's capacity to neutralize the
peroxyl radical. The measurement is expressed in equivalents of a substance
called "Trolox," a soluble analogue of vitamin E. The other
leading pine bark extract (sample #14) is only 30% as electrochemically
active (ECA) as Flavay® pine bark material. The pine bark-based
sample #14 is only 23-26% as electrochemically active as Flavay®
grape seed material. The ACAP-Trolox test indicates that the pine bark-based
sample #14 has only 55% of the antioxidant capacity of Flavay® pine
bark material.
It's important to point out
that sample #13 is aggressively marketed as a branded "OPC"
material. However, by means of Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC) tests,
no OPCs could be detected in the product. Furthermore, sample #13 scores
very low in electrochemical antioxidant capacity.
These tests demonstrate that Flavay® scores
the highest as an antioxidant and free radical scavenger
in both the ECA and the ACAP tests. This is precisely the free radical
scavenging effect that Dr. Masquelier invented and claimed in U.S. Patent
4,698,360.
Quality and Purity Test
When dissolved in water or other specific test-liquids, the limpidity
(clearness, transparency) of the solutions provides a simple and good,
easy to check indicator of quality and purity. Insolubles are an indicator
of low quality and/or production problems.
Percentages
of INSOLUBLES
Low quality "OPC" materials only
partially dissolve,
indicating lack of quality and purity. |
|
| Quantity of sample |
pine bark
sample #14 |
Flavay®
pine bark |
|
| 2% in methanol |
0% |
0% |
| 1% in propanol-2 |
32.6% |
0% |
| 1% in ethanol |
2.7% |
0% |
|
Thus, Flavay® contains no insolubles. Each batch of Flavay®
materials, from pinus Maritima and vitis vinifera, is
tested by mixing a sample with methanol, propanol-2 and ethanol, to check
for insolubles in as broad range as possible. As you can see from the
chart above, pine bark sample #14 shows high amounts of insolubles. Probably
due to it's different extraction process, pine bark sample #14 fails to
measure up to the quality and purity of Flavay®, which remains perfectly
soluble and limpid.
All of this confirms that the leading pine bark-based
product is in the mediocre grape seed extract category—both for
poor antioxidant performance and lack of purity.
Authentic vs. "Borrowed" Science
Consumers need to know that the marketplace is full of imitations, offshoots
and derivatives of scientifically proven and patented natural products.
Those who are looking for a product that will produce the proven results
and not just the "claimed" or "implied" results, want
the authentic product that was used in the actual scientific research.
This is especially important when you buy a product in the "grape
seed extract" and "pine bark extract" product category.
It is practically impossible for retailers and consumers to distinguish
inferior products from quality ones. As shown above, an independent test
found that no active OPCs could be detected in one leading American brand
of grape seed extract, even though it's labeled and aggressively marketed
as a branded OPC product. All of this proves that consumers cannot be
assured of the quality, bioavailability and safety of the product.
| Flavay® is the name you can trust for the precisely
defined active polyphenol complex patented and perfected by the inventor,
Dr. Jack Masquelier, validated by the French Ministry of Health and
documented by a library of research consisting of many patents and
hundreds of scientific papers, articles, doctorate theses, lectures
and presentations. For quality, consistency, bioavailablity and safety,
consumers may rely upon Flavay®. |
 Flavay®
is precisely the same powerful antioxidant used by Dr. Jack
Masquelier in the actual experiments by which he established
and patented the radical scavenger effect. |
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