It's time to go straight to the source! Upgrade your vitamins and your health with PuraPlant 21™. This plant-based multivitamin is packed with 21 synthetic-free, natural vitamins and minerals sourced from whole foods, meticulously chosen by nutritional experts to bridge nutritional gaps and help you maximize your well-being.
What’s Inside?
Each capsule of PuraPlant 21™ is a powerhouse of premium whole-food nutrients:
Vitamins D2 and D3: Support normal bone and immune health.
B Vitamins: Boost your energy levels.
Biotin: Enhance your hair and skin.
Lutein: Promote normal eye health.
Omega 3 DHA: Sustain brain health with plant-based, algae-derived DHA.
Why Choose PuraPlant 21™?
Fortify your body with an optimal blend of bioactive vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants sourced from broccoli, spinach, shiitake and maitake mushrooms, kale, cranberries, sweet potatoes, and more. PuraPlant 21™
Balanced Blend: Bioactive vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants.
Rich Micronutrients: More nutrients than consuming fruits and vegetables alone.
Organic Sources: Extracted from organic fruits and veggies.
Tailored Dosages: Integrates with clinically validated systems for optimal health benefits.
Feel the Difference!
Imagine how amazing you’ll feel nourishing your body with whole food nutrients instead of processed, synthetic sources.
Advanced Technology
Using cutting-edge micro-encapsulation technology, PuraPlant 21™ preserves vitamer diversity for slow nutrient release and easier digestion. It ensures perfect daily values without unnecessary excess, unlocking a whole new spectrum of benefits you can’t get from a lab.
Upgrade your health with PuraPlant 21™ and experience the power of pure, plant-based nutrition!
While you might think of a vitamin like vitamin C as a single molecule, every vitamin is actually a family of related molecules that share a common function in the body. The members of a vitamin family are called vitamers (pronounced vīt-ə-mərs).
Vitamins and Vitamers
There are 14 essential vitamins that your body needs to function as it should — vitamins A, C, D, E, and K; the B vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, B9, and B12); and choline (1). Each vitamin consists of several related forms known as vitamers. Some vitamins have only a few vitamers, while other vitamins have many. Every vitamer in a vitamin family has the same core functions but also has its own unique features and benefits.
Vitamers within a vitamin family can differ from each other in a variety of ways. Some forms of a vitamin might be more bioavailable than others or might follow slightly different pathways during metabolism, leading to subtly different health benefits.
For example, nicotinic acid and nicotinamide are two vitamers of vitamin B3. Both forms of vitamin B3 have the same essential functions in the body: helping to release energy from food, acting as a coenzyme in cellular metabolism, serving as an antioxidant, and contributing to the normal process of copying and maintaining DNA in cells (2).
Although they both share the same core functions of vitamin B3, these two vitamers also have subtly different properties. Nicotinic acid offers unique benefits for heart health but also has the potential to cause an uncomfortable niacin flush reaction in sensitive people. Nicotinamide, on the other hand, doesn’t cause a niacin flush reaction (2).
Vitamers in Natural Foods
Natural foods provide vitamins as a diverse array of vitamers. A varied diet that includes many different fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and lean proteins delivers nutrients in their naturally occurring forms, including the full spectrum of vitamers. Getting a greater diversity of vitamers helps ensure you receive the benefits of the different forms of each vitamin.
When vitamins are added to foods, they are generally added as only a single, purified vitamer. While this approach has its own benefits, it can substantially reduce the diversity of nutrients in a typical diet.
For instance, vitamin E is commonly added to foods as vitamin E acetate (alpha-tocopherol acetate). This vitamer of vitamin E is very stable and effective at protecting foods from rancidity. While most fortified foods supply only one form of vitamin E, there are at least eight naturally occurring vitamers of vitamin E divided into two main groups — tocopherols and tocotrienols (3).
These naturally occurring vitamers offer a variety of benefits. Alpha-tocopherol is the most active form of vitamin E in the body, while the tocotrienols offer the most potent antioxidant benefits. All eight naturally occurring vitamers of vitamin E can be found in various plant-based foods (3).
In nature, vitamins exist as families of related vitamers. Each vitamer in a vitamin family shares the same essential functions in the body but also has unique properties of its own. The variety of vitamers that occur naturally in fruits, vegetables, and other whole foods provide a diverse array of nutritional benefits.
References
Powered by GoDaddy Website Builder