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Neptune Wellness Solutions Inc NEPTF

Neptune Wellness Solutions Inc. is a consumer-packaged goods company that is primarily focused on health and wellness products. The Company focuses on developing a portfolio of consumer products that align with the market trends for natural, sustainable, plant-based, and purpose-driven lifestyle brands. Its products are available in more than 29,000 retail locations and include organic food and beverage brands, such as Sprout Organics, Nosh, and Nurturme, as well as nutraceuticals brands like Biodroga and Forest Remedies. Its main brand units are nutraceuticals and organic foods and beverages. The Company sells its nutraceutical products mainly in bulk soft gels or liquids to multiple distributors and customers, who commercialize these products under their private label. The Company, through its Sprout subsidiary, sells its organic foods and beverages products to mass retailers, grocery stores and other retail outlets, as well as online through e-commerce sites and its own Website.


OTCPK:NEPTF - Post by User

Post by jcjohn36on Sep 04, 2008 6:14pm
431 Views
Post# 15432407

great boost for Neptune

great boost for Neptune

Fish oil appears to help against heart failure By MARIA CHENG, AP MedicalWriter - Sun Aug 31, 8:47 AM PDT

Provided by: Associated Press
60% of users found this article helpful.

MUNICH, Germany - Fish oil supplements may work slightly better than a popular cholesterol-reducing drug to help patients with chronic heart failure, according to new research released Sunday.

Chronic heart failure is a condition that occurs when the heart becomes enlarged and cannot pump blood efficiently around the body.

With few effective options for heart failure patients, the findings could give patients a potential new treatment and could change the dietary recommendations for them, said Dr. Jose Gonzalez Juanatey, a spokesman for the European Society of Cardiology, who was not connected to the research.

"This reinforces the idea that treating patients with heart failure takes more than just drugs," Juanatey said.

The study findings were published online in the medical journalThe Lancet on Sunday. They were simultaneously announced at a meeting of the European Society of Cardiology in Munich.

"With a lot of these patients, you have no other choice," said Dr. Helmut Gohlke, a cardiologist at the Heart Centre in Bad Krozingen, Germany. "They've tried other treatments and are at the end of the road."

Italian researchers gave nearly 3,500 patients a daily omega-3 pill, a prescription-formulation pill derived from fish oils, produced by Norway's Pronova BioPharma.

But doctors said people should get the same benefits from taking cheaper options like fish oil supplements — or just eating more oily fish like salmon.

Roughly the same number of patients were given placebo pills. Patients were followed for an average of four years.

In the group of patients taking the fish oil pills, 1,981 died of heart failure or were admitted to the hospital with the problem. In the patients on placebo pills, 2,053 died or were admitted to the hospital for heart failure.

In a parallel study, the same team of Italian doctors gave 2,285 patients the drug rosuvastatin, also known as Crestor, and gave placebo pills to 2,289 people. Patients were then tracked for about four years. The doctors found little difference in heart failure rates between the two groups.

Comparing the results from both studies, the researchers concluded that fish oil is slightly more effective than the drug because the oil performed better against a placebo than did Crestor.

"It's a small benefit, but we should always be emphasizing to patients what they can do in terms of diet that might help," said Dr. Richard Bonow, chief of cardiology at Northwestern University Hospital in Chicago and past president of the American Heart Association.

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