|
|
| Nature Made Vitamin E 400 I.U. Water Soluble, (300 Softgels) |
|
|---|
|
|
|
| Vitamin E All from Amazon |
 |
|
Nature Made Vitamin E 400 I.U. Water Soluble, (300 Softgels)
List Price: $26.99
Amazon Price: $16.25
Average Customer Rating: (5 reviews)
Customer Reviews:
0 of 0 found this review helpful:
vitamins, 2007-05-18
These vitamins came quickly. And I use this product all the time, I believe that these vitamins are very best!
7 of 13 found this review helpful:
Product bottle shows that it actually contains "dl-Alpha Tocopherol Acetate" as the main ingredient., 2006-02-09
The description of the ingredients lists "d-Alpha Tocopherol Acetate" as the main ingredient. However, the product bottle indicates that the actual main ingredient is "dl-Alpha Tocopherol Acetate", an articial and very different version of the advertised ingredient. The Amazon.com listing is very misleading.
22 of 29 found this review helpful:
Vitamin E Can be Toxic in High Dosages, 2005-09-22
Vitamin E is a fat-soluble vitamin, meaning it is an oil-based vitamin. All the oil based vitamins are stored in the liver or in body fat cells. When too much of a fat soluble vitamin is ingested, the excess is stored in fat. If too much is ingested over a period of time, the excess vitamin can become toxic. Thus, taking too much of a fat-soluble vitamin can be dangerous to your health.
This formualtion of Vitamin E, at 400 IU's is perhaps too great a dose to take in my opinion. I much prefer the 200 IU dose (or less). The recommended daily allowance (in adults) for Vitamin E set by the FDA is only 15 mg a day.
Vitamin E is a fat-soluble vitamin that exists in eight different forms. Each form has its own biological activity, which is the measure of potency or functional use in the body [1]. Alpha-tocopherol (á-tocopherol) is the name of the most active form of vitamin E in humans.
Vitamin E is a powerful antioxidant and it attaches itself to free radicals (by-products of metabolism that can harm the body), and neutralize them. Vitamin E can have beneficial effects on the skin, the heart, and the immune system. Vegetable oils, nuts, green leafy vegetables, and fortified cereals are common food sources of vitamin E in the United States.
Long-term supplementation (over a year) with Vitamin E has not been adequately studied, thus it is best to take a 200 IU dose or LESS. I would stay clear of the higher dosages.
Jim "Konedog" Koenig
6 of 17 found this review helpful:
Great Product, Lousy Service, 2004-05-05
The product is great, but I'm having to continue to buy it at K-Mart. I ordered it here under a special offer in March 2004 with some other items to qualify for free shipping; delayed shipment of this item is holding another in-stock item hostage (they won't ship it separately unless I cancel this item) until this item becomes available, possibly as late as March 2005! I'm just letting the order ride to see how long it takes them! Amazon, you're losing my respect!
11 of 20 found this review helpful:
Shipping a big problem, 2004-04-23
I ordered this item on March 19, 2004 and as of this writing (April 23) have not received it. The tracking information now says I should expect delivery some time in June. For those of you that can wait that long, I guess it's a deal. Seems to me the shipper could get orders to customers faster than 4 months. I'm glad it wasn't something I needed right away.Very disappointed.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy from Amazon
|
| |
 |
|
 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|