First Quality Vitamin Supplements
Precisely-formulated to provide comprehensive and effective nutritional performance
Vitamin Power produces a comprehensive line of over 300 1st Quality vitamin supplements and nutritional products, developed to meet a wide range of individual health needs.
Our product line includes many exclusive formulations and specialty products that are not typically available in mass-market channels. Unlike the "commodity" brands sold at chain stores or supermarkets, Vitamin Power supplies a significantly wider range of nutritional solutions for individual health needs. Very often, the vitamin supplements sold at mass merchandise stores are formulated "down" to a target price rather than up to a "value-added" high-quality nutritional standard.
Every Vitamin Power product is formulated for optimum dietary intake and manufactured to the highest standards with the finest quality nutritional ingredients.
No unnecessary artificial colorings, preservatives, flavorings, sugar, salt or starch are added. Each product is laboratory-tested to assure quality and potency. They are then pharmaceutically-bottled, tamper-proof sealed and readily stocked for direct shipments to customers worldwide, fresh from the factory.
Vitamin Power is a member of the National Nutritional Foods Association.
New Survey: The Majority of Americans Take Vitamin Supplements!
The American public is health-conscious and mindful of proper nutrition. According to a new poll commissioned by the national publication USA TODAY, two-thirds of American women take vitamin supplements regularly, and 70 percent of respondents recognize that vitamins provide important health benefits. Other recent nationwide surveys have shown that the number of Americans who regularly take some form of nutritional supplements is approaching 180 million, an overwhelming majority of the population. Public health officials expressed hope that the poll results would encourage even those Americans in the minority to begin looking into vitamin supplementation as a key part of a healthy lifestyle.
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Important New Study Confirms...Mediterranean Diet Associated With Lower Risk Of Cognitive Impairment
Researchers believe that a Mediterranean diet may improve cholesterol levels, blood sugar levels and blood vessel health overall, or reduce inflammation, all of which have been associated with mild cognitive impairment...
Eating a Mediterranean diet appears to be associated with less risk of mild cognitive impairment, a stage between normal aging and dementia, or of transitioning from mild cognitive impairment into Alzheimer's disease, according to a report in the February issue of Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Among behavioral traits, diet may play an important role in the cause and prevention of Alzheimer's disease. Previous studies have shown a lower risk for Alzheimer's disease among those who eat a Mediterranean diet, characterized by high intakes of fish, vegetables, legumes, fruits, cereals and unsaturated fatty acids, low intakes of dairy products, meat and saturated fats and moderate alcohol consumption.
A research team at Columbia University Medical Center, New York, calculated a score for adherence to the Mediterranean diet among 1,393 individuals with no cognitive problems and 482 patients with mild cognitive impairment. Participants were originally examined, interviewed, screened for cognitive impairments and asked to complete a food frequency questionnaire between 1992 and 1999.
Over an average of 4 - 5 years of follow-up, 275 of the 1,393 who did not have mild cognitive impairment developed the condition. Compared with the one-third who had the lowest scores for Mediterranean diet adherence, the one-third with the highest scores for Mediterranean diet adherence had a 28 percent lower risk of developing mild cognitive impairment and the one-third in the middle group for Mediterranean diet adherence had a 17 percent lower risk.
Among the 482 with mild cognitive impairment at the beginning of the study, 106 developed Alzheimer's disease over an average 4.3 years of follow-up. Adhering to the Mediterranean diet also was associated with a lower risk for this transition. The one-third of participants with the highest scores for Mediterranean diet adherence had 48 percent less risk and those in the middle one-third of Mediterranean diet adherence had 45 percent less risk than the one-third with the lowest scores.
The Mediterranean diet may improve cholesterol levels, blood sugar levels and blood vessel health overall, or reduce inflammation, all of which have been associated with mild cognitive impairment. Individual food components of the diet also may have an influence on cognitive risk.
Potentially beneficial effects for mild cognitive impairment or mild cognitive impairment conversion to Alzheimer's disease have been reported for alcohol, fish, polyunsaturated fatty acids (also for age-related cognitive decline) and lower levels of saturated fatty acids. Additional studies are needed to confirm the role of dietary factors in the development of cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease, they conclude.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institute on Aging.

