Apparently it has testosterone benefits and most of us are deficient BUT there is a controversy about which form and how much to take.
Anyone have the easy answer?
Posted 13 January 2019 - 06:28 PM
Posted 13 January 2019 - 10:05 PM
If you're taking a good multivitamin (e.g. pure essentials multivitamin) and olive oil is in the diet (which is always a good idea and something you should be doing anyway) there's no real need for supplementing vitamin E.
Posted 13 January 2019 - 10:34 PM
Posted 13 January 2019 - 11:01 PM
I disagree. thorne two a day is pretty much the only multi that doesn't completely fuck up their e complex, which is why that's the one I take. even the one you listed is all alpha tocopherol (i think, only looked quickly)
You notice any effects from E supplementation? Or is it just a waste of time.
Posted 13 January 2019 - 11:09 PM
Posted 13 January 2019 - 11:11 PM
I don't know since it's in my multi. I have been taking one jarrow famill-E per week but it's out nownans i'll probably stop.
Vitamin e formula is the fastest way besides b vitamins to use process of elimination on multis. all these multis that use only alpha and have like 500% DV are throwing the entire balance off.
Now that we're on the subject, what's a good multi? I'm looking for one that doesn't have 10000000x the B vitamins, they always make me feel odd in megadoses.
Posted 13 January 2019 - 11:15 PM
Posted 14 January 2019 - 03:00 AM
Vitamin-E is the most common basic vitamin deficiency in the "standard" American diet (see attached pdf), with over 90% not getting sufficient E from dietary sources. The key is to avoid synthetic-E, mega-doses, & insure you are getting an E formulation that includes "mixed tocopherols", rather than a stand alone Alpha-E supp.
Synthetic E is shown as "dl" alpha tocopherol in the ingredient list, whereas natural E is listed as "d" alpha tocopherol. You should also see the mixed toco's listed as beta, gamma & delta tocopherols. I don't care for the "High-Gamma" formulations as these smell funny & make me feel queasy, but I've had no trouble with "Natural E with mixed toco's".
Most stand alone E supps contain 400IU, but 200IU/day is plenty, and this strength is easy to find if you look for it.
The PIVENS trial showed Vitamin-E effective at keeping fatty liver in check, and E has also been shown to slow progression of Alzheimer's disease, which leads me to believe it may also have some prophylactic effect. Moderate / low dose natural E with mixed toco's is a no-brainer in my basic stack, & I've been taking this for well over a decade.
I really don't care for muli-vitamin formulations, as they almost always include something I'd rather not supplement, like high-dose A, copper etc. I found a very low-dose B-Complex in the drug store (Rite Aid B-Complex with B-12). I add low dose C (500mg) which I take on an empty stomach to avoid excess dietary iron absorption; D (2000IU) & Natural E with mixed tocos (200IU) and add my exotics (curcumin, PPC/lecithin, CoQ-10, etc)
Edited by Dorian Grey, 14 January 2019 - 03:16 AM.
Posted 14 January 2019 - 03:04 AM
Vitamin-E is the most common basic vitamin deficiency in the "standard" American diet (see attached pdf), with over 90% not getting sufficient E from dietary sources. , I don't see how anyone could think this might not be an important part of a basic supplement stack. The key is to avoid synthetic-E, mega-doses, & insure you are getting an E formulation that includes "mixed tocopherols", rather than a stand alone Alpha-E supp.
Synthetic E is shown as "dl" alpha tocopherol in the ingredient list, whereas natural E is listed as "d" alpha tocopherol. You should also see the mixed toco's listed as beta, gamma & delta tocopherols. I don't care for the "High-Gamma" formulations as these smell funny & make me feel queasy, but I've had no trouble with "Natural E with mixed toco's".
Most stand alone E supps contain 400IU, but 200IU/day is plenty, and this strength is easy to find if you look for it.
The PIVENS trial showed Vitamin-E effective at keeping fatty liver in check, and E has also been shown to slow progression of Alzheimer's disease, which leads me to believe it may also have some prophylactic effect. Moderate / low dose natural E with mixed toco's is a no-brainer in my basic stack, & I've been taking this for well over a decade.
Posted 14 January 2019 - 03:18 AM
Jarrow Famil-e is great stuff! I took this for quite a while myself until I retired and started watching my pennies.
Posted 22 January 2019 - 07:49 PM
The studies I'm aware of wrt testosterone and Vit E used the alpha-tocopherol version. Here's a link to an article that summarizes the issue:
https://anabolicmen....e-testosterone/
However, I've also read that too much alpha-tocopherol can actually be harmful. You really want a balance of all four tocopherols and all four tocotrienols. Out of all of them, gamma-tocopherol actually seems to be the most useful.
Finding a good mix that's not too-alpha-heavy can be a bit of a challenge. Personally, I'm currently taking Gamma E by Jarrow for the tocopherols, and TocoMin SupraBio for the tocotrienols.
Posted 28 January 2019 - 12:35 AM
I retired and started watching my pennies.
What are your picks for retiree penny-pincher must-haves?
Thanks!
Posted 28 January 2019 - 05:37 AM
What are your picks for retiree penny-pincher must-haves?
Thanks!
If experimenting will pardon a little intermission...
SAM-e is very helpful with retirement age arthritis... https://www.ncbi.nlm...pubmed/15102339
I've found the 200mg tabs work as well as the standard 400mg doses for around half the price, & Life Extension gives me a discount when I buy 4 boxes at a time.
CoQ10 falls dramatically with age, so supplementing seems wise. Ubiquinol is too pricey for me, so Ubiquinone will have to do. Better than nothing, & again around half the price (of ubiquinol).
Age related iron accumulation makes iron homeostasis a top priority for me to combat "Ferrotoxic Disease". Jarrow brand IP6 chelates free/labile iron for pennies per day ($10 / 120 caps). IP6 also has a lot of anti-cancer research behind it which should be important for seniors.
I don't skimp on my probiotic, as I want a viable fresh product. Culturelle's lactobacillus GG has a lot of good research behind it, and I like lactobacillus as the lactic acid it secretes suppresses gram negative bacteria and their associated endotoxin.
I buy cheap drug store brand B-Complex, C, D & E. Why pay more for the basics?
And now back to our topic at hand!
Posted 28 January 2019 - 11:32 PM
What are your picks for retiree penny-pincher must-haves?
Thanks!
Depends on your health status and priorities. For those on a budget, I suggest sticking with high-quality supplements, and limiting breadth or range instead. I want the stuff I take to be effective / absorbable, and to not contain micro-toxins.
From a general perspective, my must-haves include:
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