![]() My knees have never been happier since my surgery. I had some of that, too, but I kept taking it and the problem went away. Another person I know stopped taking Move Free because his hands felt stiff from it. I run in as far as I want so long as I wear good shoes (again super cushioned are best). I can hike without the super cushioned shoes so long as I don't stop taking my Move Free for too long. Since I have been taking this particular Move Free (haven't tried the other types) and wearing super cushioned shoes, I have had a solid knee. Sometimes it would be fine and then I would twist the wrong way or run down stairs or do something it did not like and I would then have weeks or months of pain. I had torn the cartilage on the end of my femur and I had to have surgery to repair it. I tore up a knee at work over 20 years ago. And it was only one relatively small study so the results are not conclusive as to whether or not this will have any actual improvement to joint or knee pain.I had knee problems for many years. The catch is the study was only 15 days long. ![]() There were some early studies which suggested that it could be useful, but these have since been disproven by many more studies.Ĭalcium Fructoborate - This one is a bit of a gray area, there is one particularly favorable study. ![]() Hyaluronic acid is proven to be effective for joint pain when it's injected to the site directly, it doesn't really matter about the dosage seeing as it's completely ineffective. It's not completely ineffective, but as far as joint health supplements go there are worse ingredients, they're just not the best either. Dosages have to be at 1500mg or higher, which Move Free Advanced gets right.Ĭhondroitin like glucosamine is one of the building blocks of cartilage, but it has shown be less effective than it's counterpart. Glucosamine has been shown to be effective for joint pain specifically but, researchers haven't seen any improvements to joint health or inflammation. Glucosamine is the backbone of Move Free Advanced and is recommended by the Arthritis foundation, the other ingredients aren't great. Move Free isn't terrible, it's price is a large part why it doesn't make our list of the best joint supplements when there are much better options at its price point. However, if you were going to ditch one of these three, it would be the glucosamine, meaning we can't really recommend using it as a go to, unless you've already tried the other types of supplements. If you didn't mind taking 6 pills a day the ideal combination would probably be an omega supplement, a glucosamine supplement and a combo pill that contains all the smaller dosed ingredients like Physio Flex Pro. That all said due to the size of a required dose of glucosamine a lot of other joint health products don't include it. So, unfortunately Move Free Advanced, the one thing in their range that is effective costs about 6 times what it should do. The chondroitin is fine, but it can normally be bought as a combination supplement with glucosamine supplements for again about $10/monthly supply. Hyaluronic acid only works if it's injected into the site, and the calcium frutcoborate doesn't really do a lot. The other ingredients such as Hyaluronic acid don't really work. Move Free Advanced is the one that does actually have some decent backing, but the problem is that it relies almost entirely on glucosamine HCL as the functional ingredient, which should cost you about $10 for a monthly supply not the $60 that Move Free Advanced does. Move free have quite a few products out there, and one of them is ok, but horribly overpriced, and the rest are total and complete disasters of supplements with largely debunked ingredients that we're surprised are still on the market today.
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