6 – 8 hours after ingestion: Q10 peaks in the venous blood
Dr. William Judy of the SIBR Research Institute explains that the Q10 enters the blood in the form of ubiquinol. The reason that the Q10 takes
6 – 8 hours to reach its peak concentration in the blood is that the flow of the lymph is relatively slow.
24 hours after ingestion: a second smaller Q10 peak appears
Approximately 24 hours after ingestion, a second smaller peak concentration of Q10 appears. It is thought that the second peak in the blood Q10 concentration graph is caused by the uptake of some of the Q10 from the blood into the liver and, then, by the subsequent secretion back into the blood.
33 hours after ingestion: elimination half-life of Q10
Somewhere between 30 and 35 hours is the typical elimination half-life of the ingested Coenzyme Q10.
7 – 10 days after ingestion: 90% steady-state Q10 concentration
After approximately 7 – 10 days of ubiquinone Q10 supplementation, a 90% level of the steady-state Coenzyme Q10 concentration in the blood will be reached. After 10 – 14 days, steady-state levels will be seen in blood plasma. There will be, of course, considerable variation from individual to individual and from group to group.