HouseOfNutrition Vitamin Brands - Bionorica - Sinupret 338 oz
Browse our fine Vitamin Brands - Bionorica - Sinupret 338 oz selections.
![]() | Bionorica's Sinupret 3.38 oz Sinupret 3.38 oz (100 ml) Bionorica products may only be purchased by Health Care Professionals. Patients who want to buy Bionorica products may obtain them from their Health Care Professionals. ...More Bionorica's Sinupret 3.38 oz information here |
Discount Vitamin Shopping>Vitamin Brands>Bionorica>Sinupret 338 oz
Vitamin & Supplement Informatiion News
- Scientists Debate Dietary Supplements And Cancer Risk At AICR Conference (FoodIngredientsOnline)
In the recent, annual research conference of the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR), a panel of leading scientists discussed the state of the evidence on dietary supplements and their effects on cancer risk
- Bayer Faces Suits After FDA Warning on Aspirin With Supplements (Bloomberg)
Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Bayer AG faces at least two consumer lawsuits arising from a warning by U.S. regulators that it was illegally selling pills combining aspirin with dietary supplements to fight osteoporosis and high cholesterol.
- Nature's Sunshine Declares Quarterly Cash Dividend (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
PROVO, Utah----Nature?s Sunshine Products, Inc. , a leading manufacturer and marketer of encapsulated herbs and vitamins, today declared a 5 cents per common share quarterly cash dividend payable December 12, 2008 to shareholders of record on December 3, 2008.
- Vitamins Seen as No Help in Heart Disease (New York Times)
A large long-term trial has found that vitamins C and E work no better than placebos at reducing a person?s risk of heart disease.
- Petitions: The new tool to attack supplements (Nutraingredients.com)
The petition filed earlier this year by GSK in an effort to wipe out the dietary supplement category for weight loss is unlikely to pass. But it highlights a major new threat to the industry: The use of petitions to discredit the supplements sector. Lorraine Heller reports.
- Trial finds no benefits from vitamins C and E in cutting risk of heart disease (International Herald Tribune)
A large long-term trial has found that the supplements work no better than placebos.

