- Dietary supplement with Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids
- May promote healthier vascular system
- Derived from a variety of select fish
- Less than 1mg of cholesterol per tablet
- Please read all label information on delivery
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good but cheaper in larger bottles,
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
The lemon flavor means no fishy-tasting burps! The other brand I tried ended up in the trash - this is the way to take omega-3. but the larger bottles of 150 softjels are more economical.
Now whether they work at reducing triglycerides, I don't know, yet - but will find out in a few weeks.
5.0 out of 5 stars
great product price and packaging,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Natrol Omega-3 Purified Fish Oil 1000mg, 90 Softgels (Pack of 4) (Health and Beauty)
***
this four pack of 90 softgels each was ordered on 7-13-11 and arrived on 7-20, well packaged in a cardboard box and padded with airbags. shipping was free and the price $17.10. unscrupulous companies will offer for sale products that are short-dated. not so here: expiration on all four bottles is february 2014-2 years and 7 months away. another issue is ingredients because, despite the fact that one is purchasing an item to enhance, maintain or restore health, many manufacturers of such things are not really concerned about your health but simply about taking your money. and will often include questionable and/or harmful additives. the website description lacks full disclosure about ingredients. the label on the bottle, however, shows the following 'other ingredients': gelatin/glycerin/water/mixed natural tocopherols(i. e. vitamin e)/natural lemon oil. nothing to cause concern. i certainly recommend that you do research on additives and read labels on all products carefully so as to increase the chance that you know as precisely as possible what you are purchasing. many items contain additives which you would be wise to avoid. point in question: a current trend is that more and more items are listing as an ingredient 'natural flavor' or 'natural flavoring'. sounds innocuous enough whereas in fact the term is often one of many euphemisms for 'msg/free glutamic acid/hydrolyzed soy protein/monosodium glutamate'-something one is well advised not to apply to the body or ingest. anyway, back to the natrol omega-3 fish oil. i was concerned that the lemon oil, added to mask the fishy taste, might prove unpleasant. but it didn't. nice it is to find a therapeutic that contains all the right stuff at an acceptable price. ***
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