Top 7 Tips to Take Supplements Without Getting Taken
Author: Raymond Lee
Walk down the supplement aisle at most health food stores,
pharmacies and, increasingly, supermarkets, and it is almost impossible not to feel overwhelmed by the dozens –
sometimes hundreds – of brands and combinations.
Should you select a multivitamin/mineral combination or a dozen
bottles of single-nutrient supplements or a multi plus a few additional singles? Should you buy natural supplements
or synthetic? Regular or timed-release? A store brand or a national brand? Tablets or capsules? If so, how much
more? Energy formula? Stress formula? Women’s formula or men’s?
It is such a hassle, there are so many brands and so many
combinations. The choices are confusing, and few consumers know much about what they are buying. As a result, they
often spend much more than necessary for supplements that may not meet their needs. Fortunately, you can take
supplements without getting taken. Here is what I can advise.
1. Look For An Expiration Date
An expiration date is no guarantee of freshness, but it suggests that the packager
understands that vitamins have a finite shell life. Steer clear of supplements within six to nine months of their
expiration dates. They have probably been in the bottle for several years and may be past their prime.
2. Keep Supplements Away From
Children
This is especially true for iron, often taken to treat iron-deficiency anemia or iron
loss from heavy menstrual flow. Although - iron and supplements in general – are safe for most adults at the
optimal daily requirement, it takes only a few tablets of a high-potency iron supplement to kill a
child.
An estimated 5,000 children swallow toxic doses of iron supplements
every year; a few die. In the typical case, an adult carelessly leaves iron supplements on a bathroom or kitchen
counter. Don’t do this.
3. Don’t Get Taken In By Hype
Want more energy? Stress management? Sexual ecstasy? Longevity? Immune enhancement?
Freedom from illness? Some supplement labels promise their products can do everything except raise the dead – and
maybe that too, if you take enough.
Biochemically, vitamins and minerals play important roles in
virtually every body system and process. So yes, they are involved in energy production, stress reactions, sexual
enjoyment and everything else. But by themselves, supplements do not eliminate fatigue, alleviate stress or make
you a great lover.
Some supplements can help prevent and treat specific conditions,
but brands that claim to keep you young, beautiful, energetic, mellow and sexy offer more hype than
hope.
4. Think Food First
Supplements absolutely, positively do not replace food, and they cannot undo the
damage caused by a chronically poor diet. Before you buy supplements, fill your shopping cart with fresh fruits and
vegetables – and eat them. Buy organic produce if you like. But the data clearly show that any fresh fruits and
vegetables help prevent cancer. Get your five servings a day, and then take your supplements as extra added
wellness insurance.
5. Look For Beta-carotene Instead Of Vitamin
A
The body converts beta-carotene into vitamin A, so for all practical purposes, they
are the same thing. However, long-term use of vitamin A at doses above 50,000 international units a day may cause
problems. Beta-carotene is non-toxic even at high doses, so stick to that. Beware of labels that say vitamin A with
beta-carotene. If the label does not specify, you can’t be sure how much of each you are getting.
6. Supplement Your Insurance
Formula
Insurance formulas have breadth but possibly not enough depth for your personal
needs. If you have a family history of cancer or heart disease, you may want to take larger doses of antioxidants.
In addition, some minerals are simply too bulky to fit into a single pill.
The optimal daily requirement for calcium is 1,000 to 1,500
milligrams a day, but it is impossible to get that much from an insurance formula. Magnesium is also too bulky to
fit into a single pill. Women of childbearing age should take 400 micrograms of folic acid to reduce the risk of
neural tube birth defects, but insurance formulas may not provide that much.
7. Forget Brand Names
All vitamins are essentially the same. Only about a half-dozen drug companies, such
as Hoffman La Roche, actually make vitamins. They supply all the hundreds of companies that sell them. What you are
paying for is basically packaging and advertising. Personally, I buy the cheapest vitamins I can find. They are
just as good as the expensive brands.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/supplements-and-vitamins-articles/top-7-tips-to-take-supplements-without-getting-taken-321585.html
About the Author:
Raymond Lee is one of the foremost experts in the health and fitness industry and is the Founder of Bodyfixes
Group specializing in body health, muscle development and dieting. He is currently the author of the latest edition
of "Neck Exercises and Workouts." Visit http://www.bodyfixes.com for more information.
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