High doses of vitamin E, which millions of people take to protect themselves against heart attacks, Alzheimer’s disease and other ailments, appear to actually increase the overall risk of dying, ...
High-dose vitamins and supplements, once seen as harmless, now show potential for serious harm. Excessive intake of Vitamin A ...
The reported failure of vitamin E to prevent heart attacks may be due to underdosing, according to a new study. The findings suggest that these earlier studies all had a fundamental flaw -- the doses ...
Vitamin E hasn't proven to be good for the heart, and now a study suggests that too much vitamin E — daily doses of 400 IU or more — actually increases the risk of dying, according to new findings.
Excess vitamin E can promote bleeding by interfering with vitamin K. Nutrition researchers review some possible explanations. Vitamin E has been heralded for its ability to reduce the risk of blood ...
Vitamin E is required by very low birth weight (VLBW) infants to prevent vitamin E deficiency. However, prolonged intravenous intakes of vitamin E >4 international units (IU)/kg/day often yield ...
Getting the right vitamins, minerals, and nutrients is one of the best ways to care for and maintain your physical health. For reproductive health, in particular, vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol), is ...
A high daily dose of vitamin E slowed functional decline in patients diagnosed with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease by about six months, according to a new study. However, the research to be ...
This case highlights vitamin E’s potential as an effective adjunct treatment for patients with antipsychotic-induced motor symptoms resistant to standard therapies. Vitamin E has shown significant ...
A new study says daily vitamin E increases prostate cancer risk by 17 percent. Oct. 11, 2011— -- New evidence about the effect of vitamin E on prostate cancer risk may make some men think twice ...
Vitamin E hasn't proven to be good for the heart, and now a study suggests that too much vitamin E — daily doses of 400 IU or more — actually increases the risk of dying, according to new findings.