Why a Vitamin Reality Check?
Thursday, January 16, 2020 at 1:38AM
Team RightWay

Every once in a while, a Vitamin Reality Check is needed. What is a VRC? It simply is a step back overall review of the way current vitamin supplement products and usage is impacting health. Are vitamin supplements yielding positive results, or...? Lately it seems more negative and nil results are surfacing. The Scientific community is sending mixed signals which only serve to confuse the Public. Time to clean the windows to allow more clarity. 

The only logical findings of such a VRC review if undertaken today would quickly discover that major flaws exist. Too many opportunities are being missed to improve vitamin forms and dosages which would increase healthier parameters. There are now significant warnings, plus see this article.

THERE ARE SIMPLE WAYS TO VASTLY IMPROVE HEALTH RESULTS FROM VITAMIN SUPPLEMENTS.

Here are some of the current challenges and areas that would be impacted by vitamin formulas and dosages:

These impact areas appear to be somewhat significant but might just be the tip of the iceberg of potential vitamin supplement actions. Vitamin supplement effects can be either positive or negative at different amounts and with different vitamin and mineral forms. The ideal supplement amounts and forms help maintain normal metabolism. Less than ideal and the body has to labor by spending extra energy and organ activities attempting to reestablish this normal. Such as when the Kidneys eliminate excess minerals to balance ratios. This also uses up vital nutrients which eventually could become disruptive to body tissues and organs. Example includes when bones dissolve to maintain blood calcium levels and to use bone minerals to buffer high metabolic acid loads. Small swings in nutrient intake amounts can be accommodated by body adaptations, but over long term, excessive supplement nutrients may overwhelm adaptations and jeopardize body functions.

NOTE: While a vitamin or mineral study might show benefits on a certain condition at a given amount, this same amount could have adverse effects on another part of the body. Far to often research suffers from tunnel vision and misses vital synergism. Antioxidant studies are often guilty of this aspect. A study showed that Seniors who took a multi-vitamin had colds that lasted longer than not taking vitamins. The antioxidant vitamins in the multiple formula rapidly destroyed certain free radicals the body had intentionally produced to help destroy the illness causing viruses. article

Scientific research has consistently been updating vitamin knowledge, concepts, and theories. Some old ones have developed cracks and are no longer valid. But so far, this information on new research results hasn't found a voice to inform the Public and someone to coordinate the many separate areas of study into a coordinated approach. This website, even with it's many shortcomings, is perhaps far ahead of most other websites attempting to offer such nutritional and vitamin usage advice.

Did you know that Scientists long ago discovered that the value of statin drugs was not so much in lowering cholesterol levels, but in associated antioxidant and anti-inflammatory actions. And that milk drinking over the long term does not prevent bone fractures, it might slightly increase them.

USE OF VITAMIN D PATHWAYS AS AN EXAMPLE

Vitamin D actions do not happen without magnesium first activating the storage form of vitamin D as 25OHD3 into the hormone form, 1,25(OH)2D3, so that it can then combine with certain receptors and special forms of vitamin A and K.

Factors such as these and many others that have come to light from new and ongoing vitamin research would form a vital part of the VRC. Here is a list of some of these new factors.

These are a few of the overlooked areas of vitamin research that prompts the need for a VRC.

NOTE: This term VRC was found to be first used here. Overall, this article has some good advice, but notice that many of the short-comings mentioned on this website are still not addressed.

In far too many vitamin studies the wrong form, or a missing synergistic nutrient(s), or use of an improper dosage, is skewing the results. THERE ARE HEALTHIER WAYS TO TAKE VITAMIN SUPPLEMENTS. Scientists are failing to check for nutrient synergism and missing out on numerous opportunities to enhance vitamin supplement health benefits. And lower dosages are preferred since the majority of vitamins and minerals should come in food. Always add supplement amounts with estimated food contributions of vitamins and minerals together to get total vitamin intake picture.

Article originally appeared on Vitaminworkshop.com (http://www.vitaminworkshop.com/).
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