How to Choose Supplements, part III
In the first two articles in this series, we reviewed what a clinical trial is, and why clinical trial evidence showing that a supplement does what you want it to do in humans is the most important reason to choose a supplement.
Now, we’ll take you through a couple of examples to illustrate the best way to use this knowledge to choose the right supplements, and to avoid useless ones.
Example: Resveratrol: Not ready for prime time
Observational (but not interventional) clinical trials suggest that drinking red wine is associated with longer life. Several years ago, scientists found that resveratrol, a natural substance found in wine, could make mice live longer.
This study hit the worldwide news media, and soon, resveratrol was showing up in supplements everywhere, being touted as a fountain of youth, promising a longer, healthier life. Just about everyone wants to live longer and healthier, right?
What’s wrong with this picture?
- Only a small percentage of things that work in mice also work in humans
- Daily, mice were given the amount of resveratrol found in 20 gallons of wine
- The currently marketed supplements have only a tiny fraction of the resveratrol amounts used in the mouse study
Why would you even think of taking resveratrol?
- No evidence whatever that it extends life in humans
- Even if it did work, the dose is way too low
- As it is...
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