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HealthCBC Investigates

Megadoses of popular vitamins may do more harm than good, experts warn

Canadians eager to boost their health by consuming megadoses of vitamins C, E and D may be doing more harm than good, an investigation by the CBC's fifth estate into the vitamins and supplements industry reveals.

Common daily dose of vitamin C is equal to what you'd get from 7 or 8 cantaloupes

Canadian consumers spend $1.4 billion on vitamins, minerals and herbal supplements every year and three out of four Canadians take them. (CBC)

Canadians eager to boost their health by consuming megadoses of vitamins C, E and D may be doing more harm than good, afifth estateinvestigation into the vitamins and supplements industry reveals.

"When people walk into the dietary supplement or vitamin store, they think that everything is just perfectly safe," says Dr. Paul Offit, chief of the division of infectious diseases at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and a bestselling author.

But he is alarmed at the daily high doses people are taking.

"There are studies that show that if you take a megavitamin you actually can hurt yourself. You actually can increase your risk of cancer, increase your risk of heart disease," he says.

Afifth estatedocumentary that airstonighton CBC-TVshows that a common popular dailymegadose of vitamin C 1,000 milligrams is equal to what you'd get from seven or eight entire cantaloupes.

"You're not meant to eat eight cantaloupes. It's a dangerous thing to do," Offit says.

Dr. Paul Offit, chief of the division of infectious diseases at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia and a best-selling author, is alarmed at the daily high doses of vitamins and dietary supplements people are taking. (CBC)

The risks are even higher with large daily doses of vitamin E. Youcan get all the vitamin E you need in just 30 almonds. But many vitamin E capsules contain more than 50 times that amount a dangerous level particularly for men, Offit says.

"If you take large quantities of vitamin E as a supplement, you clearly and definitely increase your risk of prostate cancer," he says.

'Many people are taking too much vitamin D'

Vitamins, minerals and herbal supplements are big business in Canada. Consumers spend $1.4 billion on them every year and three out of four Canadians take them.

But for some pills such as vitamin D, the so-called "sunshine vitamin" so popular among Canadians there is little scientificevidence that more is better.

"Many people are taking too much vitamin D," says Brigham and Women's Hospital researcher Dr. Joanne Manson.

Manson is conducting the largest randomized trial of vitamin D in the world collecting blood samples from 25,000 people to compare disease rates between those who take vitamin D supplements and those who don't. She expects to have the results in two years.

Brigham and Women's Hospital researcher Dr. Joanne Manson says many people 'are taking too much vitamin D.' (CBC)

"When I heard that various groups are recommending 10,000[international units]a day, or even 5,000IUs a day routinely, I really want to say 'Show me the data, show me the evidence,' " she told thefifth estate.

Health Canada recommends a daily dose of just 600 IUs.

Both Health Canada and the AmericanInstitute of Medicinerecommendavoiding consumingmore than 4,000 IUs daily because, according to Manson, "that could be associated with adverse events: calcium in the urine, which can be associated with kidney stones, high blood calcium, calcium in the arteries, vascular calcification, as well as soft tissue calcification."

"There are now studiesthat show ... that those who have high as well as low blood levelsof vitamin D have higher risk of cardiovascular disease," she says.

"So we can't assume that more is necessarily better."

Thefifth estatedesigned a "pill converter" to illustrate what you are consuming when you take certain doses of vitamins.

For example, 1,000 micrograms of B12 is the same asdrinking260 litres of soy milk.And 100 milligrams of B6 is almost the same as consuming 200 potatoes.


Watch "Magic Pills" onthe fifth estatetonighton CBC-TV.

Trythe fifth estate's pill converter.Find out what you're eating when you take those vitamins