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Nov 29 2016 11:49pm
i never had taken them in the past before, but today it crossed my mind to buy a bottle of daily multivitamins. i bought some gnc mega men. Does anyone here take a daily multivitamin? Does it work, as in could you tell a difference? Or just a scam?
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Nov 30 2016 12:41am
daily
ˈdeɪli/Submit
adjective
done, produced, or occurring every day or every weekday.


multivitamin
mʌltiˈvɪtəmɪn/Submit
noun
a pill, tablet, etc. containing a variety of vitamins.


Cliffs: Yes


Boost energy, lose weight, beat stress, improve performance, and reduce wrinkles! Do these phrases sound familiar?

These are just a few of the promises found on the labels of vitamin and mineral supplements. But can vitamin and minerals really live up to these claims, or is it more hype than truth? Is there evidence that a vitamin or mineral supplement really can turn a bad diet into a healthy one, melt pounds away, or put the zip back in your step?

Experts say there is definitely a place for vitamin or mineral supplements in our diets, but their primary function is to fill in small nutrient gaps. They are " supplements" intended to add to your diet, not take the place of real food or a healthy meal plan.

WebMD takes a closer look at what vitamin and mineral supplements can and cannot do for your health.

Food First, Then Supplements

Vitamins and other dietary supplements are not intended to be a food substitute. They cannot replace all of the nutrients and benefits of whole foods.

"They can plug nutrition gaps in your diet, but it is short-sighted to think your vitamin or mineral is the ticket to good health -- the big power is on the plate, not in a pill," explains Roberta Anding, MS, RD, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association and director of sports nutrition at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.

It is always better to get your nutrients from food, agrees registered dietitian Karen Ansel. "Food contains thousands of phytochemicals, fiber, and more that work together to promote good health that cannot be duplicated with a pill or a cocktail of supplements."

What Can Vitamin and Mineral Supplements Do for Your Health?

When the food on the plate falls short and doesn’t include essential nutrients like calcium, potassium, vitamin D, and vitamin B12, some of the nutrients many Americans don’t get enough of, a supplement can help take up the nutritional slack. Vitamin and mineral supplements can help prevent deficiencies that can contribute to chronic conditions.

Numerous studies have shown the health benefits and effectiveness of supplementing missing nutrients in the diet. A National Institutes of Health (NIH) study found increased bone density and reduced fractures in postmenopausal women who took calcium and vitamin D.


Anding offers these tips to guide your vitamin and mineral selection:

Think nutritious food first, and then supplement the gaps. Start by filling your grocery cart with a variety of nourishing, nutrient-rich foods. Use the federal government's My Plate nutrition guide to help make sure your meals and snacks include all the parts of a healthy meal.
Take stock of your diet habits. Evaluate what is missing in your diet. Are there entire food groups you avoid? Is iceberg lettuce the only vegetable you eat? If so, learn about the key nutrients in the missing food groups, and choose a supplement to help meet those needs. As an example, it makes sense for anyone who does not or is not able to get the recommended three servings of dairy every day to take a calcium and vitamin D supplement for these shortfall nutrients.
When in doubt, a daily multivitamin is a safer bet than a cocktail of individual supplements that can exceed the safe upper limits of the recommended intake for any nutrient. Choose a multivitamin that provides 100% or less of the Daily Value (DV) as a backup to plug the small nutrient holes in your diet.
Are you a fast food junkie? If your diet pretty much consists of sweetened and other low-nutrient drinks, fries, and burgers, then supplements are not the answer. A healthy diet makeover is in order. Consult a registered dietitian.
Respect the limits. Supplements can fill in where your diet leaves off, but they can also build up and potentially cause toxicities if you take more than 100% of the DV.
Most adults and children don’t get enough calcium, vitamin D, or potassium according to the 2010 Dietary Guidelines. Potassium-rich foods, including fruits, vegetables, dairy, and meat are the best ways to fill in potassium gaps. Choose an individual or a multivitamin supplement that contains these calcium and vitamin D as a safeguard.



What Can Vitamin and Mineral Supplements Do for Your Health? continued...

Keep these additional tips in mind when selecting a vitamin or mineral supplement:

Iron and folic acid are also on the list of nutrients of concern for women in their childbearing years (14 to 50).
The 2010 Dietary Guidelines recommend that people over the age of 50 get most of their vitamin B12 from synthetic sources, either from fortified foods or dietary supplements.
Limit supplemental folic acid to 1,000 micrograms a day. Taking more than this amount increases the chance of developing nerve damage from vitamin B12 deficiency. Grains can be highly fortified with folic acid, with upwards of 100% of the DV in one serving.
Women past menopause and men need a very low iron or no iron supplement.
Women should be discouraged from getting excess vitamin A as it may cause birth defects if they become pregnant.
Remember to take your supplements. They won’t do you any good if you forget to take them. Set up a routine of taking them with meals or before bed.

related content
VIDEO

Drugs vs. Supplements
Watch Now
What Supplements Can’t Do

If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. It is unlikely a vitamin or mineral can deliver on a promise like helping you lose weight. A promise like that goes beyond the function of a supplement. "Don’t expect a vitamin or mineral to do anything more than it does in food," says Anding.

Promises on labels can stretch the letter of the law by using carefully worded claims that suggest exaggerated results. Dietary supplements are not regulated by the FDA as drugs are, and some manufacturers may imply that their products have greater powers than the scientific evidence shows.

Multivitamins have long been considered a secret weapon to aid health and preventing chronic disease, but according to several studies, that may not be the case. The National Institutes of Health convened a group of experts to evaluate the evidence on multivitamins and the effect on chronic disease prevention. Researchers found few studies to make general recommendations for or against multivitamins to prevent chronic disease.

An overall healthy diet and regular physical activity can help prevent chronic disease, not supplements, says Andin
Member
Posts: 13,624
Joined: Apr 20 2010
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Nov 30 2016 01:50am
daily
ˈdeɪli/Submit
adjective
done, produced, or occurring every day or every weekday.


multivitamin
mʌltiˈvɪtəmɪn/Submit
noun
a pill, tablet, etc. containing a variety of vitamins.


Cliffs: Yes


Boost energy, lose weight, beat stress, improve performance, and reduce wrinkles! Do these phrases sound familiar?

These are just a few of the promises found on the labels of vitamin and mineral supplements. But can vitamin and minerals really live up to these claims, or is it more hype than truth? Is there evidence that a vitamin or mineral supplement really can turn a bad diet into a healthy one, melt pounds away, or put the zip back in your step?

Experts say there is definitely a place for vitamin or mineral supplements in our diets, but their primary function is to fill in small nutrient gaps. They are " supplements" intended to add to your diet, not take the place of real food or a healthy meal plan.

WebMD takes a closer look at what vitamin and mineral supplements can and cannot do for your health.

Food First, Then Supplements

Vitamins and other dietary supplements are not intended to be a food substitute. They cannot replace all of the nutrients and benefits of whole foods.

"They can plug nutrition gaps in your diet, but it is short-sighted to think your vitamin or mineral is the ticket to good health -- the big power is on the plate, not in a pill," explains Roberta Anding, MS, RD, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association and director of sports nutrition at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.

It is always better to get your nutrients from food, agrees registered dietitian Karen Ansel. "Food contains thousands of phytochemicals, fiber, and more that work together to promote good health that cannot be duplicated with a pill or a cocktail of supplements."

What Can Vitamin and Mineral Supplements Do for Your Health?

When the food on the plate falls short and doesn’t include essential nutrients like calcium, potassium, vitamin D, and vitamin B12, some of the nutrients many Americans don’t get enough of, a supplement can help take up the nutritional slack. Vitamin and mineral supplements can help prevent deficiencies that can contribute to chronic conditions.

Numerous studies have shown the health benefits and effectiveness of supplementing missing nutrients in the diet. A National Institutes of Health (NIH) study found increased bone density and reduced fractures in postmenopausal women who took calcium and vitamin D.


Anding offers these tips to guide your vitamin and mineral selection:

Think nutritious food first, and then supplement the gaps. Start by filling your grocery cart with a variety of nourishing, nutrient-rich foods. Use the federal government's My Plate nutrition guide to help make sure your meals and snacks include all the parts of a healthy meal.
Take stock of your diet habits. Evaluate what is missing in your diet. Are there entire food groups you avoid? Is iceberg lettuce the only vegetable you eat? If so, learn about the key nutrients in the missing food groups, and choose a supplement to help meet those needs. As an example, it makes sense for anyone who does not or is not able to get the recommended three servings of dairy every day to take a calcium and vitamin D supplement for these shortfall nutrients.
When in doubt, a daily multivitamin is a safer bet than a cocktail of individual supplements that can exceed the safe upper limits of the recommended intake for any nutrient. Choose a multivitamin that provides 100% or less of the Daily Value (DV) as a backup to plug the small nutrient holes in your diet.
Are you a fast food junkie? If your diet pretty much consists of sweetened and other low-nutrient drinks, fries, and burgers, then supplements are not the answer. A healthy diet makeover is in order. Consult a registered dietitian.
Respect the limits. Supplements can fill in where your diet leaves off, but they can also build up and potentially cause toxicities if you take more than 100% of the DV.
Most adults and children don’t get enough calcium, vitamin D, or potassium according to the 2010 Dietary Guidelines. Potassium-rich foods, including fruits, vegetables, dairy, and meat are the best ways to fill in potassium gaps. Choose an individual or a multivitamin supplement that contains these calcium and vitamin D as a safeguard.



What Can Vitamin and Mineral Supplements Do for Your Health? continued...

Keep these additional tips in mind when selecting a vitamin or mineral supplement:

Iron and folic acid are also on the list of nutrients of concern for women in their childbearing years (14 to 50).
The 2010 Dietary Guidelines recommend that people over the age of 50 get most of their vitamin B12 from synthetic sources, either from fortified foods or dietary supplements.
Limit supplemental folic acid to 1,000 micrograms a day. Taking more than this amount increases the chance of developing nerve damage from vitamin B12 deficiency. Grains can be highly fortified with folic acid, with upwards of 100% of the DV in one serving.
Women past menopause and men need a very low iron or no iron supplement.
Women should be discouraged from getting excess vitamin A as it may cause birth defects if they become pregnant.
Remember to take your supplements. They won’t do you any good if you forget to take them. Set up a routine of taking them with meals or before bed.

related content
VIDEO

Drugs vs. Supplements
Watch Now
What Supplements Can’t Do

If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. It is unlikely a vitamin or mineral can deliver on a promise like helping you lose weight. A promise like that goes beyond the function of a supplement. "Don’t expect a vitamin or mineral to do anything more than it does in food," says Anding.

Promises on labels can stretch the letter of the law by using carefully worded claims that suggest exaggerated results. Dietary supplements are not regulated by the FDA as drugs are, and some manufacturers may imply that their products have greater powers than the scientific evidence shows.

Multivitamins have long been considered a secret weapon to aid health and preventing chronic disease, but according to several studies, that may not be the case. The National Institutes of Health convened a group of experts to evaluate the evidence on multivitamins and the effect on chronic disease prevention. Researchers found few studies to make general recommendations for or against multivitamins to prevent chronic disease.

An overall healthy diet and regular physical activity can help prevent chronic disease, not supplements, says Andin

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Nov 30 2016 05:49am
It works by giving you the daily amount of a variety of micronutrients which you may or may not need based on your diet. I wouldn't get an expensive multi as that seems like a waste of money though. Try to get one with a USP stamp on it if you can.
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Nov 30 2016 09:08am
sometimes. kind of. they won't hurt.

lots of factors play into how well your body absorbs and utilizes micronutrients. how well hydrated you are, what your regular diet is like, etc.

then there's the fact that everything crammed into that little pill isn't bioavailable. some of the components will be absorbed, others will be pissed right out.

micronutrition gets a lot more complicated the more you research it. but as i always say, figure out what you're getting from whole foods regularly and then supplement what's lacking with high quality specific supplements.

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Nov 30 2016 09:34am
Quote (Wretch @ Nov 30 2016 11:08am)
sometimes. kind of. they won't hurt.

lots of factors play into how well your body absorbs and utilizes micronutrients. how well hydrated you are, what your regular diet is like, etc.

then there's the fact that everything crammed into that little pill isn't bioavailable. some of the components will be absorbed, others will be pissed right out.

micronutrition gets a lot more complicated the more you research it. but as i always say, figure out what you're getting from whole foods regularly and then supplement what's lacking with high quality specific supplements.


In order to be "pissed right out" something has to be absorbed first. The only way into the bladder is through the kidneys and the kidneys exclusively filter blood. Thus anything in the blood had to have been absorbed via one or more of several routes of entry in the first place
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Nov 30 2016 04:35pm
Quote (Wretch @ Nov 30 2016 09:08am)
sometimes. kind of. they won't hurt.

lots of factors play into how well your body absorbs and utilizes micronutrients. how well hydrated you are, what your regular diet is like, etc.

then there's the fact that everything crammed into that little pill isn't bioavailable. some of the components will be absorbed, others will be pissed right out.

micronutrition gets a lot more complicated the more you research it. but as i always say, figure out what you're getting from whole foods regularly and then supplement what's lacking with high quality specific supplements.



Excess that the body doesn't need will be excreted but there's a lot more to it than you think. First the pill was already processed by the body before it even gets to the kidney. Then the kidney will filter out what it doesn't want and keep what it does when it's forming the urine which will later be exerted. So it won't just get pissed right out as you put it without being processed and absorbed

This post was edited by dark-soul on Nov 30 2016 04:37pm
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Nov 30 2016 05:00pm
yes gives you wings

take with caution, enjoy results

PS: with the right multivitamin i have been able to not work out and still burn fat and maintain mass!
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Nov 30 2016 05:01pm
I only paid $19.99 for the gnc mega men multivitamin. we'll see how it performs. 90 capsules should last me about 2 months. keep up the conversation going guys and thanks for the insight.
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Nov 30 2016 06:47pm
Quote (cloudkicker @ Nov 30 2016 11:34am)
In order to be "pissed right out" something has to be absorbed first. The only way into the bladder is through the kidneys and the kidneys exclusively filter blood. Thus anything in the blood had to have been absorbed via one or more of several routes of entry in the first place


absorbed was a poor word to use

replace absorbed with "enters circulation and is actively utilized"

let's not forget the components that are shat out, while we're at it
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