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Too Much of This Vitamin May Raise Cancer Risk, New Study Says

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Too Much of This Vitamin May Raise Cancer Risk, New Study Says

Vitamin A is crucial for maintaining healthy vision, a robust immune system and radiant skin. There are also some carotenoids with provitamin A activity—meaning they get converted to vitamin A in your body.

Vitamin A functions as an antioxidant, reducing oxidative stress and inflammation. In addition, there’s evidence that vitamin A plays a role in cancer prevention. But how much is enough? And can too much be, well, too much?

How Was This Study Conducted?

Researchers recruited participants from four major university hospitals in Vietnam. There were two groups of participants. One group was made up of over 3,700 cancer patients; the other was almost 3,000 control patients who did not have cancer, but were admitted to the hospital for other reasons. The cancer group included patients with esophageal, stomach, colon, rectal, lung, breast and other cancers.

Read More:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/too-much-vitamin-may-raise-185039288.html

 

 

 

Arnold Judas Rimmer of Jupiter Mining Corporation Ship Red Dwarf

Not sure how to take this study.   Tin foil hat side of me, thinking funded by big pharma, so people don't take Vit A supplement, so they can sell more cancer treatment drugs  :cheesy:

 

Hopefully common sense kicks in with people that supplement, or thinking of doing, especially fat soluble vitamins, and get a blood test before supplementing, to find out if deficient of any thing they are thinking about supplementing.

 

image.png.618d6c8c3f7be1ba33bd90ddda4cf884.png

Too much vitamin A or D can be toxic.

11 hours ago, KhunLA said:

Not sure how to take this study.   Tin foil hat side of me, thinking funded by big pharma, so people don't take Vit A supplement, so they can sell more cancer treatment drugs 

 

I wouldnt rely on Yahoo news for health advice.

Much more reliable sources out there. 

 

11 minutes ago, save the frogs said:

I wouldnt rely on Yahoo news for health advice.

Much more reliable sources out there. 

Zero real info about the study, or in the link of original source.   Although ...

 

image.png.9f7ef06abc9d77bf0ca1fd51fad8b6b5.png

 

is repeatedly shown in the OP's link, so most should realize what the link really is.

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