
You've probably seen vitamin E mentioned in anti-aging or antioxidant skincare advertisements. So, does Vitamin E actually provide these advantages?
Research has shown that vitamin E is a very good antioxidant. It works with other antioxidants and enzymes to shield cells against reactive oxygen/nitrogen species. Vitamin E fights aging with skin health by boosting collagen synthesis, preventing its degradation; hence featured in beauty routines.
Recent research shows that vitamin E modulates platelet aggregation, prevents thrombosis, protects vascular endothelium; has anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective effects and aids menopausal women on standard hormone therapy.
However, its cancer-preventing properties are still under debate. Some research indicates that vitamin E lowers cancer risk, but other studies have associated vitamin E intake with higher prostate cancer risk in men. Studies also show that vitamin E supplements can reduce stroke risk by 10%, but increase severe cerebral hemorrhage chances. Despite conflicting results, be careful.
Regardless, "vitamin E deficiency" is something you've probably only heard about once in a blue moon.
If humans can't make my Vitamin E, why is deficiency rare?
That's because Vitamin E is found in many food sources. A balanced diet will easily suffice.
The NIH states that people 14+ years old require 15mg/day. Regular cooking oils — sunflower, canola, soybean, and wheat germ oil — all contain vitamin E. Daily consumption of oils adds up to a common average (25ml or ~20g), meaning wheat germ oil alone gives 34.3mg and more than twice as RDA. You can meet longevity standards without additional efforts.
Additionally, add nuts for assurance: 54g almonds (~10 pieces) or 63g walnuts (~20 kernels and along with normal oil consumption) meet the 15mg daily requirement.
If deficiency still arises, it is likely due to fat metabolism disorders or cholangitis — see a doctor for evaluation.
Important: Over-supplementation can be toxic. Some claims purport cardiovascular protection or cancer prevention with megadoses—ignore these.
While the anticancer nature of vitamin E is still under investigation — excess intake definitely harms. Japanese research showed that too much vitamin E causes cancer and heart disease. Research from JAMA, over a period of 7 years warned high doses for those with cardiovascular disease or diabetes. Taking 400–800mg/day would lead to nausea, vomiting, dizziness, headache, blurred vision, cracked skin symptoms: gastrointestinal or breast enlargement issues.
Dental Embed Developments: Upsetting Current Dentistry
Chinese astronauts’ return to Earth delayed over fears spaceship damaged by debris
French and Malaysian authorities are investigating Grok for generating sexualized deepfakes
Brazil judge orders government to add JBS subsidiary to 'dirty list' for slavery
When is MLK Day? Plus, the dates of when other federal holidays land in 2026.
Foot fossil discovery could reshape human evolutionary history
Closets for Your Room: Plan and Utility Features
Ukraine Now Using Drone Boats To Attack Russian Riverine Targets
Paratroopers kill terrorist who threw rocks at Israeli citizens, soldiers near Ofra in West Bank













