He may recommend checking your vitamin D level with a blood test; if you are deficient, you may require higher
doses than these recommendations indicate.
Not exact matches
The problem is the
recommendation for you to change your testosterone
dose based on your estrogenic symptoms rather
than testing your testosterone and estradiol levels before changing the approach.
This amount of vitamin D needed is equivalent to less
than a quarter of the human
dose recommended by the Vitamin D Council, which suggests that following the Council's vitamin D
recommendations may in itself turn off any negative effect of vitamin A in humans.
Popping vitamins and minerals in higher
doses than the daily
recommendations (which you can most likely meet just by eating a well - balanced diet day to day) is not necessarily better for you, Dr. Seres explained.
The FDA is making these
recommendations because evidence has shown that severe liver damage has occurred in patients who took more
than the prescribed
dose, took more
than one product containing acetaminophen at the same time, or drank alcohol while taking acetaminophen.