Jason Striker II
Blue Belt
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2012
- Messages
- 233
- Reaction score
- 2
Just wondering who takes what? At 50, training 5 days per week, I take a multiple and 200 mg of E Mon. - Fri. with dinner.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Call me crazy, but, I have been doing this for many many years.
Take a look at some of the food we eat with the pesticides, growth hormones, preservatives in it. Vitamins and supplements are a good alternative to a poor diet.
The OP asked what Vitamins and Supplements everyone was taking. Nobody looking for a fight here, if you don't take Vitamins and Supplements great. The OP was asking who took them, not, lets debate and cut people down. I take Vitamins so there for I'm foolish, dumb, and desperate, your words.Junk science on top of junk food. Just guessing and hoping, is what.
The OP asked what Vitamins and Supplements everyone was taking. Nobody looking for a fight here, if you don't take Vitamins and Supplements great. The OP was asking who took them, not, lets debate and cut people down. I take Vitamins so there for I'm foolish, dumb, and desperate, your words.
Nice, way to go.................
seasoned said:I take Vitamins so there for I'm foolish, dumb, and desperate, your words.
Foolish, dumb, desperate, and 68, and still doing karate,and without diabetes, vitamin D deficiency or high blood pressure...:lol:
You live in NM and I live in MI. I wasn't Vitamin D deficient when I lived in NM either
ust curious why a scientist would shove a bunch of expensive unproven folk remedies into himself, but even more curious why one would think anecdotal evidence proves anything and even MORE curious as to why a person imbued with logic such as yourself would think I would not recognize a post hoc ergo propter hoc argument when I see one. I'd ask seasoned the same question, but he's crankypants in this thread. I say with a smiley.
There is promising evidence that glucosamine may reduce pain symptoms of knee osteoarthritis and possibly slow the progression of osteoarthritis. For example, a study published in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine examined people with osteoarthritis over three years. Researchers assessed pain and structural improvements seen on x-ray. They gave 202 people with mild to moderate osteoarthritis 1,500 mg of glucosamine sulfate a day or a placebo.
You say anecdotal, I say my knees don't hurt nearly as much without the glucosamine, for which there are studies that show promise:
Of course, there are also recent studies that show it didn't alleviate pain-it seems to work for me. Should I have my knees hurt, when an unproven folk remedy seems to significantly reduce the pain?
As for vitamins and amino acids, these are proven substances.
BTW, I'm not recommending that you take any of this stuff, and I'm not doing it willy-nilly: I've been under rather extensive medical care all of my life, remember.....
I'm also not just a scientist, I'm an engineer- I mean, at 50 or more, we've lived past our engineering design basis: mammals generally live long enough for their offspring to raise offspring, which, engineering wise, is something like 30-40 for humans. I liken it to the extra care one has to take with a 50 year old or even older machine-and you can't do a frame off restoration on a human body.:lol:
In the end....we all wind up the same way, vitamins or no......whatever works for you, that's my motto....
NEW YORK | Thu Apr 9, 2009 3:03pm EDT
(Reuters Health) - More than 30 percent of multivitamins tested recently by ConsumerLab.com contained significantly more or less of an ingredient than claimed, or were contaminated with lead, the company reports.
ConsumerLab.com, based in White Plains, New York, is privately held and provides consumer information and independent evaluations of products that affect health and nutrition. According to the company, it is neither owned by nor has a financial interest in any companies that make, distribute or sell consumer products.
I cant remember his name, but wasnt the oldest guy in the world a while ago a War Veteran who drank Whiskey and Smoked Cigars?No, as I said earlier, people should spend their money on whatever they want and take whatever they want.
However, Fen-Phen. Using oneself as a laboratory might not harm one; or it might.
In any case, I'm in favor of your knees not hurting.
Of course, my knees don't hurt (they are weak, but that is not the same). I also wear glasses. Therefore, wearing glasses prevents my knees from hurting.
Stop right there. Let's not do the marketing dance, you're not selling and I'm not buying. Gasoline is a proven substance, but I'm not going to drink any.
Vitamins and various other supplements of various types have been proven to do various things, and are sometimes medically indicated. That is a far cry from being self-diagnosable and in many cases, mega-doses are actually far more dangerous, even toxic, than having a deficiency. If one has not been diagnosed as being deficient in a given vitamin or nutrient, it is difficult to say one can benefit from taking it, let alone what the proper dose would be. A great example would be B12, which is something vegetarians should get in some form since they do not get it in meat. Meat-eaters, not so much.
And I'm sure you're as familiar as I am with the studies of the off-the-shelf store and national-brand vitamin supplements which showed they contained nothing close to the dosages they indicated, and in some cases, different things entirely.
Don't worry, I won't be taking any of it.
I'm in favor of whatever works also. I just like to know it actually works. My wife won't wear her Red Wings sweater when they play, because if she does, they lose. Hey, I'm not going to say a word. On the other hand, wearing or not wearing it isn't going to endanger her life.
There are lots of arguments pro and con with reference to vitamins and various other supplements. And the thing is, some of it might work. Some might be good for you. Some might be safe. The problem is the signal to noise ratio.
One problem is that people want to believe. Normally intelligent people who laugh at old advertisements for patent medicines and various cure-alls of the past will gladly shove anything with an 'Oriental' name or a super marketing pitch into their mouths. I saw a great ad the other day, made my head explode. A B12 vitamin pusher was saying that 'B12 deficiency can mimic the effects of aging.' BRILLIANT! No one is going to look in the mirror and say "I look older, perhaps it is because I am getting older." No no! Now if they look older, they have a B12 deficiency! Ta-da! This is a problem with can be solved!
Human nature also not only adopts the placebo effect quickly, but also turns people into devotees, even acolytes. Especially when someone like me says it's all (or mostly) bunk. It reminds me of cult members in some extreme cases, people begin insisting that supplement Y works BECAUSE IT WORKS DAMN YOUR EYES, and if a person says it doesn't, they are being personally attacked and their integrity assaulted.
Another tell-tale sign of marketing and the madness of groups is the running from one supplement to another. Not talking about the multi-vitamin crowd here, but the ones that chase the latest hoojapooja cure-all, often led by the nose by companies with a vested interest in selling that same hoojapooja.
Another problem is that the FDA does not regulate vitamins or food supplements as to efficacy; but they do regulate some parts of the industry. This gives the mistaken public impression that if it's advertised or sold, it's true. People tend to think that if a bottle of vitamin X says it makes your pencil sharp, then it must, or the FDA would not allow it to be sold. They are mistaken.
And as I have pointed out, and as something an engineer should be well-acquainted with, there is some evidence that quite often the substance one thinks one is ingesting isn't even that substance or that amount.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2009...842O20090409?feedType=RSS&feedName=healthNews
Now I've pointed this out before; but the response I often get is a glib "Oh, you just have to buy your vitamins from a reputable source." Uh, that's where the bogus vitamins came from, champ. That kind of denial is yet another nail in the coffin of the vitamin-and-supplement "I'm going to live forever" crowd.
Bottom line; people should take whatever they want, and if they think it helps them, great.
However, if it irritates them that naysayers like me point out the clothes they are not wearing, perhaps they might consider there's a chance they are not wearing any.
Lots of vitamins and some supplements have known medicinal properties and many more have interesting possibilities; all need to be scientifically explored and developed. That does not generally indicate shoving pills into one's gaping maw willy-nilly, as you said.
Just wondering who takes what? At 50, training 5 days per week, I take a multiple and 200 mg of E Mon. - Fri. with dinner.
A short list of Some side effects for Metformin.
- Abnormal stools
- Changes in taste
- Muscle pain
- Difficulty breathing
- Lightheadedness or dizziness
- Nail problems
- Flu-like symptoms such as muscle pain, fever, chills, and weakness
- Feelings of a rapidly or forcefully beating heart (heart palpitations).
- Flushing (a skin reddening, commonly on the face)
- Increased sweating
- Increased thirst
Big Pharmaceutical pumps a lot of money into lobbing for their products. The FDA is in their hip pocket, and approves many drugs that cause a litany of side effects that make the above list minuscule.
Both sides make a lot of money hawking their wares. Fact is your on one side of the issue and I'm on the other. I'm trying to take no drugs because, where they help in one area they hurt in others. (side effects) I personally fine Vitamins and Supplements a benefit, you don't, and thats ok.
This whole issue is like politics and religion, many opinions, along with who is telling the truth about their products. Drugs don't heal, they cover up problems.
I won't be debating this issue anymore, I just had a few things to comment on.
Have a great day.
Quoting an advertisement that appeared in the February 9, 1923 issue of the Newark Ohio Advocate:
"Radium ends agony of rheumatism. Neuritis, neuralgia and gout. Say doctors - How Arium - radium in simple harmless tablets often bring amazingly quick and lasting relief to even seemingly hopeless cases. $5,000,000 reward if they fail."