Mega Nutritional Supplements


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May 12, 2010

Why did the senate sneak into the "Financial Reform" bill provisions regulating vitamins and other supplements?

Financial Bill Attacks Your Vitamins

Now, the Alliance for Natural Health tells us these provisions might become law in the worst possible way. Unless you act, the financial "reform" bill could give new powers to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), including the power to regulate food supplements — perhaps regulate supplements right out of existence.

With these new powers, the FTC could impose costly red tape on small businesses before they can put their products to market.

For instance, it could force vitamin producers to undergo expensive trials to "prove" their claims are true.

Vitamins and other nutritional supplements would be treated as drugs, not as food. And that small-sounding change has huge implications. This change would . . .

* create huge increases in supplement costs, meaning that
* many vitamin manufacturers and distributors would be driven out of the market, reducing my dietary and health choices.

http://techdailydose.nationaljournal.com/2010/04/biz-groups-oppose-expanding-ft.php

Drug companies don’t like competition. Drugs are a lie, all they do is mask symptoms not make you healthy.

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May 5, 2010

Nutrition supplements for hair and nails?

I used to live in a humid place and my hair was really healthy and long. and recently i moved to a place that has really dry air so my hair started drying up and breaking. i noticed my nails are brittle too. so i want hair and nail supplements but i don’t know which brand to get. i went to the vitamin store and they had so many different kinds. My question is what brand do you think is the most trustworthy and has the best quality. Please list the price or where i can purchase it. If you have any tips or advice on growing hair that would be helpful too. Thanks for taking the time to answer my question :)

Phyto Phytophanere Dietary Supplement (expensive but ie one of the really good ones and high quality) about 50$ or less for a 2month supply from folica since it’s free shipping for over 50$
http://www.folica.com/Phyto_Phytophan_d3195.html

Nature’s Bounty Hair Skin Nails Tablets (you have to take about 3 capsules a day:( )
less than 10 dollars and here’s a review about it:
http://sharedreviews.com/health/vitamins-supplements/nature-s-bounty-hair-skin-nails-
tablets

http://www.walgreens.com/store/catalog/Food-and-Supplements/Hair,-Skin-and-Nails/ID=prod394671&navCount=0&navAction=push-product

in this you have to get only 1 tab a day
http://www.walgreens.com/store/catalog/Food-and-Supplements/Vitamins-for-the-Hair/ID=prod1177963&navCount=0&navAction=push-product
you can get it at walgreens

GNC WELLbeING® be-BEAUTIFUL™ Hair, Skin & Nails Formula

http://www.gnc.com/product/index.jsp?productId=3519046

ultra hair nourishGNC
http://www.gnc.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2133888

So far i’ll suggest that if you like non of these get a multivitamin like
GNC Women’s GNC Women’s Ultra Mega®
http://www.gnc.com/product/index.jsp?productId=3848052

i’m not sure if walmart has the GNC but as far as thew other it will have most of them.YOu can also try target.
If you have a specific question on hair care feel free to ask me because it’s difficult to give advise when you don’t know what the question or problem is.

^_^

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April 17, 2010

Do you believe that vegetarians/vegans or omnivores tend to take more vitamins and nutritional supplements?

I am primarily talking about those living in first-world and developed countries (those with access to vitamins and nutritional supplements), it’s kind of useless to point to an omnivorous African tribesman or a vegan Indian peasant.
If you wouldn’t mind, could you please state your diet and what sorts of vitamins and nutritional supplements you take?

For comparison’s sake, in retrospect.
I should probably do the same for me:

Omnivore my whole life, never taken any vitamins or nutritional supplements since I was a toddler. Anyone remember the Flintstones Vitamins?

Considering that some nutritional supplements (cod liver oil, glucosamine etc) aren’t vegan, I think it can be safely said that many omnivores take supplements. Vegans tend to be more aware of their health, and in that respect may be more likely to take supplements as they are more aware of what they could be deficient in. They could also be taken in by scare stories and think they have to take supplements to survive(!). On the other hand, they may be less likely to take a supplement because they are more aware of what foods they need to eat to remain healthy.

Also, the fact that a person takes a supplement does not necessarily mean they need that supplement, and likewise if a person takes no supplements that doesn’t mean they’re perfectly healthy and don’t need them.

I’ve been vegetarian since I was five, and vegan for the last ten years. I’m rarely ill and try to eat healthily. I don’t take any supplements on a regular basis, but I occasionally take iron with some vitamin C and B vitamins (including B12), since iron is important for most women irrespective of diet and vit C aids its absorption. I’ve occasionally taken a multinutrient in the past, more as a back up than because I thought I needed it.

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February 20, 2010

Can Vitamin Supplements Help Fight Rheumatoid Arthritis?

The question I would like to bring to your attention today is can vitamins help to fight Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA). I decided to do some studying on the subject and what I found was some interesting facts that helped me support this idea. Let me start out by telling you a little more about RA. More than a million people in the United States have RA. RA typically develops between the ages of 25 and 50. RA is a chronic inflammatory disease of the joints that affects an estimated 1.3 million Americans.

The disease occurs when the body’s immune system mistakenly attacks the thin membrane that lines the joints. The results can be joint damage, ongoing pain, inflammation, loss function and disability. The joints most commonly affected by RA are those of the hands, feet, wrists, knees, elbows, and ankles. In RA, the primary site of the attack is in the thin layer of tissue that is around the joints.

Studies have shown that those Americans with RA have vitamins deficiencies. The most common vitamin deficiencies in RA is folic acid, Vitamin C, Vitamin D, Vitamin B6, Vitamin B12, Vitamin E, Calcium, Magnesium, Zinc, and Selenium. Food of course is the preferred source for getting the vitamins and minerals. Vitamin Supplements will work in getting the vitamins and minerals that you don’t receive from food. I would like to discuss with you two particular vitamins that studies have shown to help fight RA.

Research has made a case that Vitamin D helps protect older women against RA. Recent Studies has also linked deficiencies of Vitamin D to other disorders such as certain cancers, heart disease, and diabetes. General population studies indicate that about one in three people are Vitamin D deficient especially during the winter months. The easiest way to make sure you are getting the proper amount of Vitamin D is through Vitamin Supplements.

Another Study used data from the Iowa’s Women Health Study, which followed almost 30,000 women, aged 55 to 69, for 11 years. Over the course of those 11 years, the women involved were questioned about their eating habits, their use of nutritional supplements and other health related issues.

During the test, 152 of the women developed RA. The investigators found that women whose diets were highest in Vitamin D had the lowest incidence of RA. Women who got less than 200 International Units (IU) of Vitamin D in their diets each day were 33% more likely to develop RA than women who got more. So how much is enough Vitamin D. The Food and Nutrition Board of the Institute of Medicine says that older women should consume 400 to 600 IU per day in order to have an adequate Vitamin D intake.

Vitamin C can also be linked to lowering RA risks. In another study, researchers looked at the link between fruit and vegetable and dietary antioxidant intake and the development of inflammatory arthritis and rheumatoid arthritis in a group of 23,000 men and women who entered a large cancer study in the U.K. between 1993 and 1997. As a part of that study, the participants kept track of what they ate in a weekly food diary.

Between 1993 and 2001, 73 people developed inflammatory arthritis affecting two or more painfully swollen joints for at least a month, and 40% of them met the criteria for having RA. Compared with those who did not develop the disease, researchers found that those with arthritis ate fewer fruits and vegetables. Specifically, people who ate the least amount of fruits and vegetables had double the risk of developing inflammatory arthritis.

The study also showed that people who got less than 40 mg of Vitamin C from fruits and vegetables had four times the risk of developing inflammatory arthritis. In the United States, the recommended dietary allowance for men is 90mg of Vitamin C a day and for women is 75mg. Now by taking a look at just those two certain vitamins, I find that vitamins do have added benefits in fighting RA. The vitamins do this by fighting the free radicals (unstable molecules that cause damage to cells) associated with the development of the disease.

Now to get the benefits of all vitamins, it would your best option to take a multi-vitamin. I would also like to say that the best multi-vitamin is a liquid vitamin instead of the standard capsule/pill. Not only will you get the full benefits of the vitamins but the liquid vitamin will work faster because it will absorb into your body quicker.
I know a 74 yr old lady that has been taking a liquid vitamin for the past 6 months and says that it has definitely helped to fight her RA. She takes 2 oz of this vitamin a day. This liquid vitamin has 410mg of Vitamin C per ounce, 1107 IU of Vitamin D3 per ounce and many more essential vitamins and minerals.

If you would like more information (testimonies/articles) then visit me at www.healthnutty.com. You can also contact me at www.john@nitemarketing.com

John McNett
http://www.articlesbase.com/medicine-articles/can-vitamin-supplements-help-fight-rheumatoid-arthritis-700828.html

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January 17, 2010

What’s the best way to make skin thicker and more elastic?

Feel free to suggest topical products, or vitamins and nutritional supplements.
I’m only 20…but my skin is very fair. It’s also very thin in some areas, for example I can see right through my skin to the blood vessels in my chest, breasts, some parts of my belly, and back of my legs. Also, my skin has already lost some of its elasticity in some areas. Because of all these factors, I’m worried that I will age faster than most women, so I want to start doing something now before it’s too late. I already have the beginnings of frown lines on my forehead.

Vitamin C taken internally and externally in a cream or serum plumps it up. use SPF with the cream because it makes you photosensitive. Loreal also makes a good line that you can buy in the drugstore for mature skin… but how old are you? It may be too heavy if you are young… L’oreal is usually the best drugstore brand as far as quality… In dept. stores try Natura Bisse or Lancome or Chanel depending on your skintype. Minerals from the dead sea help, too.

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