Turn over any popular eye vitamin and read the label — all of it, including the "other ingredients" in the fine print.
What you'll find in most mainstream vision supplements isn't what you expect. Behind the marketing language about "eye health support" and "clinically studied ingredients" is often a long list of synthetic fillers, artificial binders, and industrial processing aids that have nothing to do with protecting your vision — and some that may actively work against your health.
Here's what the supplement industry doesn't want you to scrutinize:
The Ingredient Comparison
Typical Eye Supplement
What's really inside most brands
Synthetic Lutein Esters
Petroleum-derived, low bioavailability
Magnesium Stearate
Cheap flow agent / filler
Silicon Dioxide
Industrial anti-caking powder
Titanium Dioxide
Whitening agent — flagged for safety concerns
FD&C Blue #1
Artificial dye — no therapeutic value
Soybean Oil (GMO)
Cheap carrier oil
Carrageenan
Inflammatory thickening agent
Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil
Trans fat remnant
Polyethylene Glycol
Industrial solvent derivative
Corn Starch
Cheap filler with no eye benefit
OcyRevive™
Every ingredient. Nothing hidden.
Organic Parsley
Organic Spinach
Organic Broccoli
Organic Tomato
Bilberry Extract
Organic Carrot
Lutein (Marigold Flower)
Zeaxanthin
Organic Turmeric Root
Vegetable Capsule
No fillers. No synthetics. No artificial colors. That's it.
The Lutein Source Problem
Not all lutein is created equal. Many supplement brands use synthetic lutein esters — derived from petroleum-based chemical processes — because they're cheaper to manufacture.
OcyRevive uses only lutein extracted directly from marigold flowers (Tagetes erecta) — the same natural source that your body's digestive system recognizes and absorbs most efficiently. Free-form, naturally sourced lutein is the gold standard. And it's what's in every capsule of OcyRevive.
"If you can't grow it, pick it, or harvest it — it doesn't belong in your body."
That's the founding principle of OcyRevive. Every ingredient in our formula exists because of what it does for your eyes — not because it makes manufacturing cheaper, capsules whiter, or labels look longer.
Clean labels shouldn't be the exception in the supplement industry. But for now — they are. And knowing the difference could be the most important thing you do for your vision this year.
