Niacin Supplements for Feed or Water - What do you use?

Which Do you use?

  • Injectable B Complex

    Votes: 2 9.5%
  • Brewers Yeast

    Votes: 6 28.6%
  • Nutritional Yeast

    Votes: 7 33.3%
  • Niacin Capsules or Tablets

    Votes: 2 9.5%
  • Other

    Votes: 5 23.8%
  • I don't use any extra niacin

    Votes: 3 14.3%

  • Total voters
    21
Inositol Hexanicotinate is a slow release synthetic form of niacin.

Then there is niacin.

Then there is a derivative of niacin called Niacinamide, which doesn't have the same effect as niacin but also doesn't burn your skin with high dosage so they call it flush free.
 
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I'd be quite skeptical out of any studies coming out of Wazzu...

And I don't think I've ever seen a flush free niacin that doesn't have Niacinamide. Honestly don't even know what that little articles talking about
Can you see this picture?
Screen Shot 2018-06-03 at 6.50.06 AM.png

Fush free is Niacinamide. Let me "call a friend"
 
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Basics:

Niacinamide (nicotinamide) is a form of vitamin B3(niacin) and is used to prevent and treat niacin deficiency (pellagra). Niacin deficiency can cause diarrhea, confusion (dementia), tongueredness/swelling, and peeling red skin. Niacinamide is often used instead of niacin because it causes fewer side effects (e.g., flushing). Unlike niacin, niacinamide does not help correct blood fat levels and cannot be substituted for niacin if you are being treated for a blood fat problem (e.g., high cholesterol).

It looks like they sell it under the actual name Niacinamide.

I should also know that I'm a believer of natural medicine and left the medical industry because it really just cause more harm than good (unfortunately I Alsosaw this first-hand to my family)..

So I think what we grasped from all this is that:

inositol hexanicotinate is a synthetic form of niacin

Niacinamide is a derivative of niacin that doesn't have some of the side effects.

Both are b3.

No one knows if poultry has any side effects from niacin/Niacinamide/ inositol Hexanicotinate.

But why take a derivative or synthetic product when you could take the real thing?
 
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Inositol Hexanicotinate it's pretty much a synthetic form of niacin created to fully release and not have a flush affect.

Niacin is not that expensive to need to go to a synthetic alternative
The way I read your above post is that you have never seen a flush free niacin product that doesn't contain "Niacinamide" and I showed you two products that do not contain it.

Also I am wondering if the niacinamide and nicotinamide are actually the same thing.
 
The way I read your above post is that you have never seen a flush free niacin product that doesn't contain "Niacinamide" and I showed you two products that do not contain it.

Also I am wondering if the niacinamide and nicotinamide are actually the same thing.

Based on the quote that you quoted I didn't say anything about Niacinamide. I said Inositol Hexanicotinate is a synthetic product.

At least niacinamide is nautral derivative Of niacin. That's what I'm trying to say.
 
And here Flush free is not niacinamide, it is INOSITOL NICOTINATE and INOSITOL HEXANICOTINATE
Screen Shot 2018-06-03 at 7.00.58 AM.png
Screen Shot 2018-06-03 at 6.57.06 AM.png
Screen Shot 2018-06-03 at 6.57.16 AM.png
 
I didn't say or meam that only flush free pills are niacinamide. I'm saying that niacinamide is a flush free form of niacin.

This is where the typing has major confusion as far as texting over talking.

Definitely didn't mean to say niacinamide is the only form of flush free niacin.
 
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