DWQA Questions › Tag: Quercetin PowderFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesA viewer asks: “Creator has advised using the Advanced Mitochondrial Formula as a recommended supplement. As has been raised before, however, this is costly and difficult to obtain in the UK. To what extent would the following suppliers and powder-form ingredients be safe and cost-effective in providing a readily-available substitute for UK residents which has similar efficacy to the Advanced Bionutritionals formula when mixed to the same dosages as shown by the channel in an online webinar: Niacinamide: The Ordinary 100% Niacinamide Powder 20g; Magnesium Malate: (eBay) Apex Magnesium Malate Powder Pure £8; Curcumin extract: (eBay) 5greens 180 mg powder £20; Black Pepper extract: oilsandherbs.co.uk Organic Trikatu Powder £6.99; Quercetin Dihydrate: oxfordvitality.co.uk Quercetin Powder £6.99; Acetyl L-Carnitine: Redwells via Amazon 100g powder £9.95; Coenzyme Q10 (ubiquinol): Ubiquinol Acetate (CoQ10) customizedblends.com £39.75; R-Alpha Lipoic acid: Redwells via Amazon 50g powder £17.50; D-Ribose: Bulk via Amazon 500g powder £17.49; Trans Resveratrol (Polygonum Cuspidatum Extract): Bulk via Amazon powder 50g £33.43; Pyrroloquinoline Quinone Disodium Salt (PQQ): Healthshop23 via Etsy 50g powder £39.95?” What can we tell him? Are all of these acceptable substitutes?ClosedNicola asked 3 months ago • Healing Modalities86 views0 answers0 votes