Originally posted by Flash-LB:
quote:
Originally posted by frayedends:
Clinical studies are not clinical trials. Here is an example of clinical trial for this stuff and the conclusions and trial criteria show that the trial was less than successful. If it’s helping you that is great. But buyer beware. There is a reason supplements put the statement about the not meant to treat disease.
https://www.pbm.va.gov/PBM/cli...iteDrugMonograph.pdf
Less than successful? I guess you didn't read the whole paper at your link. I'll paste the relevant parts here:
• Patients at high risk for developing advanced AMD (Categories 3 and 4) reduced their
risk of developing advanced stages of AMD by about 25% when treated with the
combination of antioxidants and zinc (odds ratio = 0.66; 99% CI: 0.47-0.91; p=0.01).
• Patients at high risk for developing advanced AMD who were treated with zinc alone or
antioxidants alone reduced their risk of developing advanced AMD by 21% (significant) and 17% (not significant), respectively.
• The combination of antioxidants and zinc statistically significantly reduced the risk of
visual acuity loss in Categories 3 and 4 AMD (odds ratio = 0.73; 99% CI: 0.54-0.99;
p=0.008) as compared to placebo. Zinc alone and antioxidants alone showed favorable
trends on this measure, but the differences were not statistically significant.
• No statistically significant evidence of a benefit in delaying progression from Category
2 to Categories 3 and 4 was shown in any treatment group