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How
To Choose A Good Quality Vitamin Supplement
For You And Your Family
The purpose of this article is to look at several important factors that you should consider when looking for a good quality vitamin and mineral supplement and to provide you with resources where you can learn more. Consideration
#1: Absorption Will the ingredients in the vitamin and mineral supplement you are considering actually be absorbed by your body? There are many steps that the ingredients in your vitamin and mineral supplement (referred to as supplement from now on) have to go through in order to make it all the way through your digestive tract, into your blood stream and ultimately to the location where your body can use them. It's
a complex process and there are many opportunities
for the process to not go quite right and prevent
your supplement ingredients from getting to
where they are supposed to. Let's look at some
factors that can affect the journey your supplement
takes and also affect how well your body can
absorb a supplement's ingredients. What
Is Bioavailability? From a non biochemistry perspective, here's a simple way to picture what needs to happen; the nutrient has to make it all the way from your mouth to the cell and be in a form the cell can use. For bioavailability to occur, certain things have to happen once you put that supplement into your mouth. Here are two of those processes. One is dissolution which refers to how fast a supplement dissolves. An example to help you picture this process would be taking some sugar, putting it in a glass of water and stirring it with a spoon until the sugar disappears. Another
process is disintegration. This is similar to
dissolution only disintegration refers to how
fast the capsule or tablet breaks into smaller
pieces so that the dissolution process can take
place. How
to tell if your supplement will dissolve USP refers to U.S. Pharmacopeia, an organization that was established to create state-of-the-art standards to ensure the quality of medicines that humans use. This includes vitamin and mineral supplements. An
example of the kind of USP designation that
you want to look for on the label of a product
you are considering would be something like,
"this product conforms to the USPXXVII
requirements for disintegration and dissolution". What
Chelation Does It can be hard to get minerals all the way to that bioavailable state that was discussed earlier. Chelation involves wrapping the mineral in an amino acid so that the body can more easily absorb it. This can improve the absorption of some minerals from only 10% absorption for a non chelated mineral to 45% and more for a chelated mineral. So
when you are looking at the label of a vitamin
supplement and you find a trace mineral such
as manganese as one of the ingredients, you
want to see something like "Manganese (as
Manganese Chelate)" on the label. This
indicates that the manganese mineral has been
chelated. What
can happen if you pick the wrong supplement To give you an example of this, I have actually seen a photo of an x-ray taken of a person's colon area with the vertebrae of their backbone off to one side. In this photo I could clearly see two supplement tablets, still intact, looking like they had just come out of the bottle. These supplement tablets were poorly made, never disintegrated and would soon end up in the toilet. Photos
like these are a graphic illustration of the
fact that just because you swallow your vitamin
supplement doesn't mean your body is going to
be able to use it. Are
you wasting your money? You think you've found a great deal, however what if it turns out that your Supplement X has been poorly manufactured and is only 10% bio available. What this means is that your body will be only able to use $2 worth of this supplement ($20 times 10%). And what happened to the other $18 you paid for the supplement? It went right through your body, that's what. Looking at it another way, you paid $20 for your sixty day supplement supply yet ended up completely wasting 90% of that $20 you spent. You literally flushed $18 right down the toilet. Just
like everything else in life, there is no free
lunch. When it comes to choosing a supplement,
don't be cheap. Do your homework and find a
good quality supplement that your body can actually
use. Other
factors to consider
Vitamin supplement companies may claim that their product will do certain things or that the way they put their product together or package it will create a particular health benefit. This claim may very well be true but the only thing that matters is have they proven it. Are there proven health benefits from taking their supplement? In other words, have there been clinical trials that prove the health benefit claims?
Just
because the supplement is in a bottle, the bottle
has a fancy label and it looks like it comes
from a big company doesn't mean the ingredients
in the supplement are pure and safe. There can
be many substances in that capsule that can
have an immediate harmful effect as well as
a harmful effect over the long term. Where
you can learn more However, if you would like to learn more about these health benefit and safety subjects, details on these topics can be found on web pages that I have provided a link to below. http://www.ajpip.com/vitamin_supplements/res/ind.htm On these vitamin resources pages you will also find:
Final
Thoughts However, make sure to continue that commitment to yourself by doing your homework and making sure that you choose a good quality supplement. It makes no sense to go that far then end up wasting your money on something that your body can't even use. - Andy Long
After
years of extreme fatigue, severe digestion problems
and frequent sickness, Andy Long now enjoys
energy levels that allow him to windsurf in
30 mph winds for 3-4 hours at a time. He
now shares with others what he did to completely
regain his health through his health related
web sites and newsletter. Note:
Learn about a device that will tell you the
antioxidant levels in your body just by scanning
your hand. http://www.splinfo.com
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