Home

antioxidantrischer

Antioxidantrischer is a neologistic term used to describe foods, supplements, or products that contain a higher amount of antioxidants compared with a defined reference, such as a baseline product, a control sample, or a standard food. As an adjective, it conveys a relative richness in antioxidant compounds rather than an absolute value.

Origin and usage: The word combines the concept of antioxidants with a German linguistic form that signals

Measurement and interpretation: In practice, an “antioxidantrischer” designation would rely on quantified metrics such as total

Limitations and considerations: Antioxidant capacity measured in vitro does not automatically translate into health benefits in

See also: Antioxidants, Antioxidant capacity, Nutritional labeling.

a
descriptive
attribute.
It
is
not
a
formal
technical
term
in
most
nutrition
dictionaries
and
is
more
commonly
found
in
marketing,
informal
writing,
or
some
academic
discussions
as
a
shorthand
for
“more
antioxidant-rich.”
Because
it
is
informal,
its
exact
meaning
can
vary
by
context.
antioxidant
capacity
(TAC)
measured
by
assays
like
ORAC,
FRAP,
or
ABTS/DPPH,
total
phenolic
content,
or
concentrations
of
specific
antioxidants
(vitamin
C,
vitamin
E,
carotenoids,
flavonoids).
Designating
a
product
as
antioxidantrischer
implies
a
higher
value
in
one
or
more
of
these
metrics
relative
to
a
chosen
reference,
which
should
be
specified.
humans
due
to
factors
like
bioavailability,
metabolism,
and
complex
physiological
processes.
Labels
using
antioxidantrischer
should
be
interpreted
with
caution
and,
where
possible,
accompanied
by
methodological
details
and
explicit
baselines.