Red Yeast Rice w/CoQ10
Capsules · 60 capsules
- Adults seeking red yeast rice to support healthy cholesterol metabolism
- Individuals using red yeast rice who want CoQ10 to support cellular energy
- Those maintaining cardiovascular wellness with a combined red yeast rice formula
- Energy — 82% of verified reviews
About Progressive Labs - Red Yeast Rice w/CoQ10
Progressive Labs Red Yeast Rice with CoQ10 combines traditionally fermented red yeast rice with coenzyme Q10 to support healthy cholesterol levels already within normal range and overall cardiovascular function. This pairing addresses a practical concern: red yeast rice may deplete endogenous CoQ10, making the inclusion of CoQ10 in the same formula a meaningful formulation choice.
Why It's Worth Considering: Co-formulating CoQ10 alongside red yeast rice reflects a clinically informed approach, offering convenience and supporting cellular energy production in cardiac tissue simultaneously.
Why Gabriel Recommends This
How to Take
Who Benefits
Best For
- Adults seeking red yeast rice to support healthy cholesterol metabolism
- Individuals using red yeast rice who want CoQ10 to support cellular energy
- Those maintaining cardiovascular wellness with a combined red yeast rice formula
- Adults looking to support CoQ10 levels alongside red yeast rice supplementation
Cautions
- Taking blood thinners (may reduce warfarin effectiveness)
- Chemotherapy (theoretical antioxidant interference — consult oncologist)
- Blood pressure medications (may enhance hypotensive effect)
What to Expect
Compare CoQ10 Forms
| Feature | Ubiquinol (reduced) | Ubiquinone (oxidized) | With PQQ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bioavailability | 3-8x higher absorption | Standard (baseline) | Ubiquinol + PQQ synergy |
| Best For | Over 40, statin users | Budget, under 40 | Mitochondrial biogenesis |
| Form | Active (ready to use) | Must be converted by body | Dual mechanism |
| Evidence | Strong (preferred) | Strong (well-studied) | Emerging (promising) |
Frequently Taken Together
Frequently Asked Questions
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Ubiquinol is the reduced (active) form of CoQ10 — your body can use it directly. Ubiquinone is the oxidized form that must be converted to ubiquinol before use. After age 40, this conversion becomes less efficient, making ubiquinol the preferred form. Ubiquinol has 3-8x higher bioavailability than ubiquinone.
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Yes — strongly recommended. Statins block the mevalonate pathway which produces both cholesterol AND CoQ10. Statin use can reduce CoQ10 levels by 40%, contributing to muscle pain, fatigue, and weakness. Most cardiologists now recommend CoQ10 supplementation alongside statin therapy. 100-200mg ubiquinol daily is standard.
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For general health: 100mg ubiquinol daily. For statin users: 100-200mg. For heart failure or cardiovascular support: 200-300mg. For migraines: 300-400mg. Always take with a fat-containing meal for best absorption — CoQ10 is fat-soluble.
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Meta-analyses show CoQ10 can reduce systolic blood pressure by 3-5 mmHg and diastolic by 1-3 mmHg over 4-12 weeks at doses of 100-300mg/day. It's not a replacement for blood pressure medication but a useful adjunct. If you're on BP meds, monitor for additive hypotensive effects.
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Take with your largest meal containing fat — CoQ10 is fat-soluble and absorption improves dramatically with dietary fat. Morning or afternoon is preferred, as CoQ10 supports energy production and may cause mild alertness. Avoid taking late at night.
Real Reviews. Real Sources.
Compatibility Guide
Works Well With
Take Separately From
No significant interactions identified. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Research Behind This
Practitioner Insights
Who This Is For
✓ Great For
⚠ Important Notes
† These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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