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Vitamin E Supplements Portland ME

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Vitamin E Supplements. You will find informative articles about Vitamin E Supplements, including "Take Vitamin E to Help Ward Off Colds!". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Portland, ME that can help answer your questions about Vitamin E Supplements.

Local Companies

Whole Foods Market
207-774-7711
2 Somerset St
Portland, ME
Maine's Pantry
207-228-2028
111 Commercial St Lowr L
Portland, ME
Absolute Health Chiropractic Cl
207-699-2622
503 Woodford St
Portland, ME
Diets Limited
207-799-6394
527 Sawyer St
South Portland, ME
Nutricomm
207-799-1900
42 Stanley St
South Portland, ME
Wild Oats Natural Marketplace
207-699-2626
87 Marginal Way
Portland, ME
Nutrition Works
207-772-6279
805 Stevens Ave
Portland, ME
Quimby Susan
207-772-6279
805 Stevens Ave
Portland, ME
General Nutrition Center
207-772-9274
100 Maine Mall
South Portland, ME
Allen Paula A
207-799-6394
527 Sawyer St
South Portland, ME

Take Vitamin E to Help Ward Off Colds!

Take Vitamin E to Help Ward Off Colds!

12/22/2009 - Articles

By: Robert W. Griffith, MD

Vitamin E has recently taken a hit. Large doses having been shown to actually worsen your chance of developing cardiac disease. But now there are nursing-home results showing that 200 IU vitamin E daily offers some protection against upper respiratory tract infections , in particular, the common cold.

Take Vitamin E to Help Ward Off Colds!

Summarized by Robert W. Griffith, MD
December 22, 2004

Infections occur frequently in nursing home residents, and respiratory infections are an important cause of illness and death in these patients. In older people immunity is often reduced, sometimes because of their nutritional status. Vitamin E has been shown in several studies to improve the immune response, so it's not surprising that supplements have been given to nursing home residents in the hope of improving their resistance to infections. Now a study has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association that gives some support to this theory.

What was done

The study was done in 33 long-term care facilities in the Boston, Massachusetts, area, between 1998 and 2001. Participants had to be 65 or older, not confined to their room, expected to live longer than 6 months, cancer -free, not being tube-fed, not on dialysis, not catheterized, and not on steroids or immunosuppressive drugs.

After screening, there were 617 eligible participants. They were randomly assigned to take either vitamin E (200 IU of DL-alpha-tocopherol) or placebo capsules daily; all of them took a capsule with half the recommended daily allowance of essential vitamins and minerals. Neither nurses nor the participants knew which treatment was assigned to each participant - i.e. the study was 'blinded'.

All respiratory tract infections - upper and lower, including the common cold - were carefully recorded, along with all new antibiotic prescriptions, emergency room visits, hospitalizations, and deaths. Diagnostic criteria were set up for the infections, to ensure only genuine cases were included.

What was found

Of the 617 original participants, 231 and 220 completed the 1-year study period in the vitamin E and placebo groups, respectively. Their average age was 84, three-quarters of them were women, and over a third were taking non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs. A large number of them had chronic diseases, and they were taking on average almost 4 different medications. They all had 'flu shots. Roughly 10% had had pneumococcal vaccination.

The average numbers of respiratory infections per person per year in those subjects who completed the full year's study are shown in the table below:

  Vitamin E (231 subjects) Placebo (220 subjects)
All respiratory infections 1.30 1.44
Lower respiratory infections 0.49 0.47
Upper respiratory infections 0.81 0.96
Common cold 0.66∗ 0.83

∗ a statistically significant difference ...

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