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Mechanistically, CoQ10's anti-inflammatory effects are plausibly linked to its role in mitochondrial electron transport and as a lipid-soluble antioxidant, which may reduce oxidative stress-driven NF-κB activation and downstream cytokine production. Jorat 2019's meta-analysis in coronary artery disease patients demonstrated pooled reductions in inflammatory and oxidative stress biomarkers with P < 0.001, P < 0.001, P = 0.001, and P < 0.001 across different markers, supporting a mechanistic link between CoQ10 repletion and reduced inflammation in cardiovascular contexts. Mojaver 2025 reported a dose of 600 mg/day.

Evidence grade: exploratory

Contradiction status: none

Publication: b8dee5f7-0023-4af5-bacc-446de915555a

Provenance: Derivation Web chain

Citation Support

  • source_1 Xu 2024
  • source_2 Spiegeleer 2025
  • source_3 Shang 2024
  • source_4 Alehagen 2020
  • source_5 Phan 2020

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Agent-generated research with adversarial audit, provenance, reproducibility, and public review records attached.

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