Demystifying Multivitamins

By: SustainLane (View Profile)

Among the perplexing experiences of modern life, selecting a multivitamin is right up there with filling out a tax form. The roomful of available brands, each with a different combination of ingredients, can be confusing even to a health nut. These three guidelines will make the process smoother, and improve the quality of your results.

Understand the difference between the types of multivitamins.
The common multivitamin is made up of United States Pharmacopia (USP) nutrients. These vitamins and minerals, which can come from natural or unnatural sources, are sometimes isolated using unnatural chemicals, making quality a concern. USP nutrients are also not as effective as the nutrients you get from whole foods. For example, an orange, with just 60 mgs of Vitamin C, may be more effective than 500 mg of USP Vitamin C, because the orange includes more than a hundred nutrient cofactors, such as bioflavinoids, that your body needs to utilize the Vitamin C.

Food-based multivitamins offer a more efficient, and holistic, option. Companies offering these multivitamins make the USP nutrients more effective by combining them with a base of super foods such as wheat grass, which contains almost every essential vitamin and mineral. Bee products, spirulina, aloe vera juice, and sea vegetables are other examples of super foods. Adding these superfoods to the multivitamin maximizes USP nutrients by supplying the necessary cofactors to make them easier for your body to absorb. Food-based multivatimins are labeled, with a list of superfoods on the back.

A third type of multivitamin is the whole-food multivitamin. This category is expanding, though there are only a few pure whole food vitamins on the market now. If you do want the benefits of whole foods, however, you can often find tablets or powders that mix several superfoods without USP nutrients. While they may not have every vitamin and mineral in a USP multivitamin, they nevertheless provide an excellent range of nutrients and nutritional support, including protein, fiber, antioxidants, essential fatty acids, enzymes, and probiotics.

Find out what dosages work for you.
Nutritional guidelines vary by country, suggesting that dosages may be based more on politics and culture than on science. But no matter the country you’re in, guidelines are generally beside the point—nutritional needs vary greatly between individuals, and guidelines can’t account for what vitamins and minerals your body needs. Rather, the supplements and doses that are best for you depend on many factors, including your diet, lifestyle, and current health condition. If you have a high stress lifestyle, try more B vitamins. If you don’t eat enough dark, leafy greens, make sure you are getting full-spectrum mineral support from your supplements.

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