researchers are unable to show that antioxidant supps reduce illness?
the Women's Health Initiative study provided convincing evidence that multivitamin use has little or no influence on the risk of common cancers, CVD, or total mortality in postmenopausal women.
If you want to argue as opposition, you can always find an article that says what you want it to say.
Since we are not talking about postmenopausal women, I don't think your reference is readily applicable. There are always limitations to the conclusions you can draw about the general population when you are studying a very small and specific subgroup.
The biology and cancer risk of a woman is very different than a man. Also, menopause has detrimental effects on women that men do not have to endure. Therefore, it would be imprudent to draw a conclusion about young men, or young women, or other demographic group based on data from post-menopausal women.
Loss of ovarian hormones and age alone dramatically increase cancer risk in women. Therefore, those risk factors alone probably mask any benefit that may be gained from multivitamin antioxidants.
In addition, the benefit of antioxidants will depend on what cancer you are studying. I never said multivitamins will prevent all cancers and I do not believe this is true.
good point on the multivits.. It's also cool that researchers are unable to show that antioxidant supps reduce illness
JTL, propagation of misinformation is why I find it disturbing when people go find the one article defending their view point, even one that is not very relevant, then mislead others into believing something that is fringe and far from what the overwhelming scientific evidence shows. Multivitamins/antioxidants, even supplemental, can reduce risk of certain cancers.
Karky, if you go to pubmed () and search vitamin and cancer, there are 29686 results. If the relationship of vitamins and cancer was not important, we would not be studying it. Start by scrolling down and read some of these papers. Some of those articles will say there is benefit for certain cancers and none for other cancers.
Keep in mind that there is a bias in many of these epidemiologic studies against multivitamins, since people with increased family/genetic risk for cancer not only tend to take more than 7 multivitamins per week, but also load up on additional individual vitamin and herbal supplements which cause more harm than good.
Just to answer JTL's single reference attack, and to show you how easy and potentially misleading it can be, here is mine.
And no, that woman's study did not look at Barrett's or esophageal cancer.
Dietary Supplement Use and Risk of Neoplastic Progression in Esophageal Adenocarcinoma
A Prospective Study
Final conclusions:
1. There are multiple studies that show a reduction in risk for certain cancers in patients taking multivitamin supplements.
2. Not all cancers are affected
3. Vitamin deficiencies DO cause illness and a "presumed normal" diet does not guarantee normal vitamin levels.
4. Everyone is different and an individual's gastrointestinal tract may or may not absorb dietary vitamins efficiently. These individuals would most likely benefit greatly from vitamin supplementation. There are many people with undiagnosed gastrointestinal motility disorders and malabsorption.
5. The belief that there is no benefit from multivitamin supplements, once per day, is a fringe opinion.