SKU: 85458667520

NutraBio | Omega-3 | 150 Softgels

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Description

NutraBio | Omega-3 | 150 Softgels600mg EPA+DHA from 2,000mg purified fish oil NutraBio Omega 3 Fish Oil is a no nonsense daily supplement focused on steady use, clean ingredients, and straight talk on the key omega 3s: EPA and DHA. Each 2 softgel serving gives you 2,000 mg purified fish oil with 360 mg EPA and 240 mg DHA, totaling 600 mg of those combined. It's built for everyday wellness, not as a high powered specialty oil. The goal here is simple: deliver consistent marine omega

600mg EPA+DHA from 2,000mg purified fish oil

NutraBio Omega-3 Fish Oil is a no-nonsense daily supplement focused on steady use, clean ingredients, and straight talk on the key omega-3s: EPA and DHA. Each 2-softgel serving gives you 2,000 mg purified fish oil with 360 mg EPA and 240 mg DHA, totaling 600 mg of those combined. It's built for everyday wellness, not as a high-powered specialty oil. The goal here is simple: deliver consistent marine omega-3s in easy softgels to back your heart, brain, joints, and recovery when you take it every day.

EPA handles the inflammation side. It gets into your cell membranes and tweaks things to help balance inflammation better. In real life, that's huge if you're pushing workouts, dealing with soreness, or not eating much fatty fish. The 360 mg dose is a good daily start, but it's not the massive grams you'd see in studies for dropping triglycerides or hardcore inflammation control. Keep that in mind: this supports your everyday omega-3 levels, not prescription-level stuff.

DHA is the builder. It's packed in your brain and eye cells, where it keeps things flexible and signaling smooth. That's why it's linked to brain and vision support. With 240 mg per serving, it's a solid add if your meals skip cold-water fish. You won't feel DHA kick in like a pre-workout buzz—it's about steady use over time, not instant vibes.

The synergy between EPA and DHA is the point. EPA leans more toward inflammatory balance and ca

NutraBio Omega-3 by NutraBio contains 2000mg Purified Fish Oil, a clinical dose for health and performance.

Key Highlights

  • 2,000 mg purified fish oil in each 2-softgel serving keeps it straightforward and easy to get. Lots of fish oils hype the front label but skimp on real omega-3 punch, so this clarity is a win.
  • 360 mg EPA tackles inflammation management. It slips into cell membranes and helps your body handle inflammation smarter, which is key for athletes grinding through tough sessions.
  • 240 mg DHA backs the building blocks of omega-3s. It's big in your brain and eyes, so it's great for keeping cognition and vision on point with regular use.
  • 600 mg total EPA+DHA puts this in the everyday wellness zone, not the super-concentrated clinical league. That's a real plus: it's practical for daily grinding, but don't mix it up with those heavy-hitter formulas.
  • Straight-up EPA and DHA numbers let you see what's really in it. Total oil amount is cool, but the active omega-3s are what count for true strength.
  • Softgels make it simple to stick with compared to liquids. Omega-3s shine with regular use over time, not just here and there.
  • The 360:240 EPA to DHA ratio gives a balanced vibe for general use. It's not all-in on high-EPA for moods or lipids, or high-DHA for niche stuff, making it a solid everyday pick.
  • This slots right into your performance or health stack. No clashes with stims, sleep helpers, creatine, or protein—easy to run all year.

NutraBio Omega-3 by NutraBio contains 2000mg Purified Fish Oil, a clinical dose for health and performance.

Who Is This For?

  • Lifters in high-volume phases wanting better recovery without more stims. The EPA and DHA help plug diet holes and fit a consistent recovery setup.
  • Strength folks low on fatty fish but needing daily omega-3s for heart and joints. Gives clear 360 mg EPA and 240 mg DHA in simple softgels.
  • Busy types training around work, needing wellness support for body toughness and brain edge. DHA aids cell structure, EPA balances inflammation—smart base add.
  • Folks stacking basics like creatine, protein, vitamin D, and omega-3s. This one's easy, familiar, and daily without gym timing.
  • Older active peeps eyeing longevity and heart care alongside workouts. Moderate strength makes it practical for everyday long-term use.
  • Rec athletes in joint-heavy stuff like running, CrossFit, martial arts, or sports. Not clinical-dose, but EPA/DHA back a diet fighting wear and tear.

How to Use

Take 2 softgels daily with a meal, not empty, to cut down on burps or tummy stuff. Food makes it easier for lots of people. Use it every day, not just workouts, since omega-3s build with regular hits. If you're sensitive, ease in with 1 softgel and food for a few days, then go full. Softgels mean no mixing or shakers. Pairs great with creatine, protein, multi, vitamin D, and joint supps—it's your fatty acid foundation. Don't think it's a stand-in for high-dose clinical omega-3s if you're after serious trig control or doc-prescribed levels. Keep it cool and dry, bottle shut. Run it steady, no cycles, for the real payoff from ongoing use.

What to Expect

First 0-10 minutes: Swallow 2 softgels with food and feel zilch right away—that's standard for fish oil. Next 10-60 minutes: Digestion's the only short game, and food helps dodge burps or reflux if that's you. Days 1-7: Don't expect big shifts; EPA and DHA build into cells with steady use. Weeks 2-4: Consistent folks start filling that omega-3 hole, especially without much fish in the diet. Long-term, it's about stacking benefits, not one big feel. You notice it in the routine's stability, not a sudden wow.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much EPA and DHA are in NutraBio Omega-3 Fish Oil per serving?

Each 2-softgel serving provides 360 mg EPA and 240 mg DHA, for 600 mg combined EPA+DHA. It also delivers 2,000 mg purified fish oil total.

Is 600 mg of combined EPA and DHA a strong fish oil dose?

It is a solid daily wellness dose, but it is not a high-potency therapeutic fish oil. This formula is best viewed as foundational omega-3 support rather than a multi-gram clinical lipid-management protocol.

What is the best time of day to take this fish oil?

Take it with a meal, ideally at the same time each day for consistency. Food generally improves tolerance and reduces the chance of fish-oil burps or reflux.

Can I take NutraBio Omega-3 Fish Oil on non-training days?

Yes. In fact, you should take it daily, because omega-3 benefits come from consistent intake over time rather than workout-day timing.

Will I feel this product right away?

No, and that is normal. Fish oil works in the background by improving omega-3 intake and supporting cell membrane composition over time, so the benefits are cumulative rather than immediate.

Can I stack this with creatine, protein, or a multivitamin?

Yes. This product stacks very well with foundational supplements like creatine monohydrate, whey protein, vitamin D, and a multivitamin because it fills a different nutritional role and does not interfere with their timing.

Is this product good for joint support?

It can support a joint-friendly recovery environment because EPA contributes to inflammatory balance. That said, it is a general wellness fish oil, not a dedicated high-dose joint therapy product.

Does this fish oil disclose the important actives?

Yes, it clearly lists total purified fish oil plus EPA and DHA amounts, which are the key actives most buyers should evaluate first. However, the provided data does not confirm molecular form, oxidation testing, or sourcing specifics.

Can this replace eating fatty fish?

It helps cover the omega-3 gap if you do not eat fish regularly, but it should be viewed as a supplement to a good diet, not a perfect replacement for whole-food seafood intake.

Who should be careful with fish oil supplementation?

Anyone with a fish allergy, anyone taking blood-thinning medication, and anyone preparing for surgery should speak with a healthcare professional before using fish oil regularly.

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Gary Moreau, Author
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Marx had the proletariat, Mao had the farmers, America has the owners of financial capital
Format: Kindle
What makes Jonathan Levy’s book so informative is that it is truly a parallel history of its politics and its economics. And only by viewing these two intertwined paths side by side can you truly understand the myth of the American free market. America’s politics and its economics have never, since the country’s founding, been separated. The state has been an integral part of everything economic to an extent that would make the most rabid socialist gasp in horror. The only difference is that while the Marxist state stood side by side with the proletariat, and Mao built the number two economy in the world on the support of farmers, America built its economic marvel on the backs of, and for the benefit of, the owners of financial capital. That’s not all bad, mind you. It takes workers, farmers, and the owners of capital to build a modern economy. The tension comes when there is a lack of balance between the importance the state attaches to each. And there can be little surprise that America’s politicians have put the owners of financial capital at the top of their list of priorities. Politicians, after all, can do nothing without power, and power comes via the electoral process, a process that is today fueled by obscene amounts of money. And who has all that money? The American economic narrative is a misleading tale of meritocracy and free markets. The Horatio Alger-based myth is that you are only limited by your skills and your ambition. And like most enduring myths there is a thread of truth to it. Many successful people truly deserve what they have achieved. But does anyone really possess $150 billion of personal merit? Can we statistically accept that the wealthiest nation in the world is also one of the most financially unequal without seeing a pattern of bias? Perhaps the most selectively quoted book in history is Adam Smith’s “Wealth of Nations”, published, strangely enough, in 1776. Often credited with being the father of capitalism, Smith argued that markets free of excessive regulation would be more efficient than markets that were overly regulated, although Smith “made no categorical separation between the political and the economic, or state and market.” Smith did, however, warn against the socially destructive power of monopolies, which unregulated markets will not protect against, and he correctly predicted that the excessive division of labor would lead to a degree of labor and wealth inequity that would destroy society. At the time when US Steel, General Electric, and General Motors, among many others, were the power behind America’s global economic hegemony, most Americans earned a living through wages. And those wages were made possible by long term fixed investments that created jobs. They were generally big bets that took a long time to earn a return but that aligned with the jobs-first priorities of most companies. (Employees first, communities second, shareholders a distant third.) And while not every employee enjoyed the same salary, the differences between the top earners and the average earners was a fraction of what it is today. That era, of course, is long over. The current economy is geared toward the creation of wealth through the short-term investment in assets that will appreciate rapidly and are highly liquid. At the moment that is the stock market and synthetic financial tools pedaled by hedge funds, banks, and the like. The problem is that the wage market encompassed much of America. The asset appreciation market encompasses only a tiny sliver of the richest among us. There is spillover, of course. The lawyers, analysts, consultants, bankers, and sales people who serve the asset appreciation market are doing quite well. But the man or woman who has less education and who might have made a decent living in a steel mill or car assembly plant, has lost out. And despite what the politicians will tell you, the gap is getting wider. (I spent a career in corporate industry, have a college degree in economics, have been a CEO, and have served on four public company boards. I know enough to know that Levy knows what he’s talking about.) The second important point to come out of all this is that economics is not really a “science” as most people think of that term. There is a shared jargon and there are commonly accepted principles. The very idea that there is an economy that is distinct from all other aspects of human existence, including the state, however, is a relatively recent concept. The weakness of the distinction, in fact, is clearly demonstrated by the remarkable reality of just how diverse the history of the American economy is. The sun doesn’t always rise in the east in the world of economics. In each of the economic eras Levy describes it is stunning how few people actually formulated the thinking that defined them. I will join some of the other reviewers in suggesting that the author could have spent more time explaining some of the jargon inevitably found in a treatise on economics. The layman obviously wasn’t his target audience but the book, I believe, could have read more smoothly and been much, much shorter. (The editor and publisher have to take some of the blame for this.) Even if you have to slog your way through the more tedious sections on global capital flows and such, however, you’ll get something from the book even if you’ve never set foot in an economics classroom. If you get no more than the fact that the free market is a myth and that most long term capital that actually creates jobs and income for the average American is actually provided by you, the taxpayer, not the Wall Street capitalist, you will better understand why there is so much division in our country right now. We don’t have a democratic economy. The young wonders of Silicon Valley would have nothing if it wasn’t for your tax dollars and your pension plan, if you’re still lucky enough to have one. We can do better. We have to. The economic inequity we have now is simply not sustainable.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2022
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Jose Calderon
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Good value for the money.
Format: Hardcover
Book in excellent condition, delivered promptly.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2025
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Jared Dean
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Great read.
Format: Paperback
Gives a great perspective of how technology has developed and shaped the economy.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2024
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james hammill
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
How Capitalism Shaped America
Format: Hardcover
Very impressive analysis. Unfortunately the author ended his analysis in 2010. Wish he had offered some thoughts on what should be done as opposed to what is being done in this age of economic chaos.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2021
J
J. Miller
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 3
Some good footnotes to other histories
Format: Audiobook
This book is impressive in two key ways: first it re-surfaces recurring elements in the political/economic intersect over time (the on-again off-again use of "the gold standard," the company invasion into the intimate life of the laborer) and second it gets into the gory details of policies and logistics that shaped or limited major historical events (like the availability and movement of gold going into WWII). That said, it's pretty massive for providing just those two things. It comes up weaker from Nixon on to today which undermines its contemporary relevance: it stamps everything from 1980 on as "chaos" and tries to back away slowly. It spends some time on the change in stock ownership of the 1980s (prefer Ho's Liquidated or Nace's Gangs of America; the pivot from pensions to 401ks is lost, Supermoney is not mentioned), spends time on Enron (see also McLean's The Smartest Guys in the Room) but seems to mostly ignore terror and catastrophe (consider Klein's The Shock Doctrine), spends time on the 2008 meltdown (prefer Lewis's The Big Short and Foroohar's Makers & Takers) but comes up short of Occupy Wall Street, VC-fueled gig economy corporations and cryptocurrencies. I'm suspecting that the "Chaos" isn't so much chaos but rather "Distributed Tactical Illegibility" (to borrow from Scott's Seeing Like a State): where the control of information can be used to cultivate socioeconomic advantage, then powerful people within a state will maintain their privilege through obfuscating the information they're using to create and maintain that advantage -- this is why insider trading is illegal as an abuse of power and trust *but also legal for members of the US legislature*. It's also a bit weak (at least in Audible form) of noting which bits of economic history would be echoed or reversed over time; tracing the evolution of a social construct through a twisting maze of legal decisions to current incomprehensibility does have this effect. I did find its larger position interesting, if perhaps a bit lost in the larger prose, that capitalism is about pricing the future into the present and it's gone off the proverbial rails because informational ubiquity compounds short-termism to collapse the future into the present in both public and private enterprise. Or, to put it another way, money can't escape the gravity of our economic expectation for near-horizon growth to invest in a future that our larger society wants and might reasonably expect and while legislators need to govern for the long term they're only elected for the short term and judged by people's everyday-experiences of the social-economy.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2021

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