F.D.A. Consumer Update
Fortify Your
Knowledge About Vitamins
On this page:
Vitamins are essential nutrients
that contribute to a healthy life. Although most
people get all the vitamins they need from the
foods they eat, millions of people worldwide
take supplemental vitamins as part of their
health regimen.
Why Buy Vitamins?
There are many good reasons
to consider taking vitamin supplements, such as
over-the-counter multivitamins. According to the
American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), a
doctor may recommend that you take them:
- for certain health problems
- if you eat a vegetarian or vegan diet
- if you are pregnant or breastfeeding
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Vitamin Facts
Your body uses vitamins for
a variety of biological processes, including
growth, digestion, and nerve function.
There
are 13 vitamins that the body absolutely needs:
vitamins A, C, D, E, K, and the B vitamins
(thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, pantothenic acid,
biotin, vitamin B-6, vitamin B-12 and folate).
AAFP cites two categories of vitamins. Water &
Fat soluble.
Our
Herbally Pure has all 13 vitamins listed at 125%
the daily requirement.
- Water-soluble vitamins
are easily absorbed by the body, which
doesn't store large amounts. The kidneys
remove those vitamins that are not needed.
- Fat-soluble vitamins
are absorbed into the body with the use of
bile acids, which are fluids used to absorb
fat. The body stores these for use as
needed.
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Practice
Safety with Dietary Supplements
When it comes to
purchasing dietary supplements, Vasilios
Frankos, Ph.D., Director of FDA's Division
of Dietary Supplement Programs, offers this
advice: "Be savvy!"
Today's dietary supplements are not only
vitamins and minerals. "They also include
other less familiar substances such as
herbals, botanicals, amino acids, and
enzymes," Frankos says. "Check with your
health care providers before combining or
substituting them with other foods or
medicines." Frankos adds, "Do not
self-diagnose any health condition. Work
with your health care providers to determine
how best to achieve optimal health."
Consider the following tips before buying
a dietary supplement:
- Think twice about chasing the latest
headline. Sound health advice is
generally based on research over time,
not a single study touted by the media.
Be wary of results claiming a "quick
fix" that departs from scientific
research and established dietary
guidance.
-
More may not be better. Some products
can be harmful when consumed in high
amounts, for a long time, or in
combination with certain other
substances.
- Learn to spot false claims. If
something sounds too good to be true, it
probably is. Examples of false claims on
product labels include:
- Quick and effective "cure-all"
- Can treat or cure disease
- "Totally safe," "all natural,"
and has "definitely no side effects"
Other red flags include claims about
limited availability, offers of "no-risk,
money-back guarantees," and requirements for
advance payment.
"Also ask yourself, "Is the product worth
the money?'" Frankos advises. "Resist the
pressure to buy a product or treatment on
the spot. Some supplement products may be
expensive or may not provide the benefit you
expect. For example, excessive amounts of
water-soluble vitamins, like vitamins C and
B, are not used by the body and are
eliminated in the urine."
You won't have that problem with our
Herbally Pure Liquid Vitamin at 125% it is
high potency but not extreme.
Develop
a Vitamin Strategy
It is important for
consumers to have an overall strategy for how
they will achieve adequate vitamin intakes. The
2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans advises
that nutrient needs be met primarily through
consuming foods, with supplementation suggested
for certain sensitive populations.
These guidelines, published
by the Department of Health and Human Services
and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA),
provide science-based advice to promote health
and to reduce risk for chronic diseases through
diet and physical activity. They form the basis
for federal food, nutrition education, and
information programs.
Barbara Schneeman, Ph.D.,
Director of FDA's Office of Nutritional
Products, Labeling, and Dietary Supplements,
says, "The Guidelines emphasize that supplements
may be useful when they fill a specific
identified nutrient gap that cannot or is not
otherwise being met by the individual's intake
of food." She adds, "An important point made in
the guidelines is that nutrient supplements are
not a substitute for a healthful diet."
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Special
Nutrient Needs
According to the Dietary
Guidelines for Americans, many people consume
more calories than they need without taking in
recommended amounts of a number of nutrients.
The Guidelines warn that there are numerous
nutrientsincluding vitaminsfor which low dietary
intake may be a cause of concern. These
nutrients are:
- calcium, potassium, fiber, magnesium,
and vitamins A (as carotenoids), C, and E
(for adults)
- calcium, potassium, fiber, magnesium,
and vitamin E (for children and adolescents)
- vitamin B-12, iron, folic acid, and
vitamins E and D (for specific population
groups).
Regarding the use of vitamin supplements, the
Dietary guidelines include the following:
- Consume a variety of
nutrient-dense foods and beverages
within and among the basic food groups. At
the same time, choose foods that limit the
intake of saturated and trans fats,
cholesterol, added sugars, salt, and
alcohol.
- Meet recommended nutrient
intakes within energy needs by
adopting a balanced eating pattern, such as
one of those recommended in the USDA Food
Guide or the National Institute of Health's
Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension
(DASH) eating plan.
- If you're over age 50,
consume vitamin B-12 in its crystalline
form, which is found in fortified foods or
supplements.
- If you're a woman of
childbearing age who may become pregnant,
eat foods high in heme-iron and/or consume
iron-rich plant foods or iron-fortified
foods with an iron-absorption enhancer, such
as foods high in vitamin C.
- If you're a woman of
childbearing age who may become pregnant or
is in the first trimester of pregnancy,
consume adequate folic acid daily (from
fortified foods or supplements) in addition
to food forms of folate from a varied diet.
- If you are an older adult, have
dark skin, or are exposed to insufficient
ultraviolet band radiation (such as
sunlight), consume extra vitamin D
from vitamin D-fortified foods and/or
supplements.
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How
Vitamins are Regulated
Vitamin products are
regulated by FDA as "Dietary Supplements." The
law defines dietary supplements, in part, as
products taken by mouth that contain a "dietary
ingredient" intended to supplement the diet.
Listed in the "dietary ingredient" category
are not only vitamins, but minerals, botanicals
products, amino acids, and substances such as
enzymes, microbial probiotics, and metabolites.
Dietary supplements can also be extracts or
concentrates, and may be found in many forms.
The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act
of 1994 requires that all such products be
labeled as dietary supplements.
In June 2007, FDA established dietary
supplement "current Good Manufacturing Practice"
(cGMP) regulations requiring that manufacturers
evaluate their products through testing
identity, purity, strength, and composition.
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Risks of
Overdoing It
As is the case with all dietary supplements, the
decision to use supplemental vitamins should not
be taken lightly, says Vasilios Frankos,
Ph.D., Director of FDA's Division of Dietary
Supplement Programs.
"Vitamins
are not dangerous unless you get too much of
them," he says. "More is not necessarily
better with supplements, especially if you take
fat-soluble vitamins.(
Meaning Pills )
For some vitamins and minerals, the National
Academy of Sciences has established upper limits
of intake (ULs) that it recommends not be
exceeded during any given day.
Many liquid
vitamins and vitamin pills use mega doses
Which
The FDA Warns Against!
Also, the AAFP lists the following side effects
that are sometimes
associated with taking too much of a vitamin.
Our Herbally Pure Is Safe. We keep main vitamin
levels at 125%.
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Fat-soluble
Vitamins
- A (retinol, retinal, retinoic
acid): Nausea, vomiting, headache,
dizziness, blurred vision, clumsiness, birth
defects, liver problems, possible risk of
osteoporosis. You may be at greater risk of
these effects if you drink high amounts of
alcohol or you have liver problems, high
cholesterol levels or don't get enough
protein.
- D (calciferol): Nausea,
vomiting, poor appetite, constipation,
weakness, weight loss, confusion, heart
rhythm problems, deposits of calcium and
phosphate in soft tissues.
If you take blood thinners, talk to your
doctor before taking vitamin E or vitamin K
pills.
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Water-soluble
Vitamins
- B-3 (niacin): flushing,
redness of the skin, upset stomach.
- B-6 (pyridoxine, pyridoxal, and
pyridoxamine): Nerve damage to the
limbs, which may cause numbness, trouble
walking, and pain.
- C (ascorbic acid):
Upset stomach, kidney stones, increased iron
absorption.
- Folic Acid (folate):
High levels may, especially in older adults,
hide signs of B-12 deficiency, a condition
that can cause nerve damage.
Taking too much of a vitamin can also cause
problems with some medical tests or interfere
with how some drugs work.
Herbally Pure Is Safe. We
keep our main vitamin levels at 125%.
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