Buy VitaminWorld Royal Jelly Online
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Royal Jelly Discover the royal treatment with Vitamin World's high-quality Royal Jelly. Royal Jelly is a highly complex substance secreted from the glands of nursing bees and fed to the larvae destined to be queens. The queen eats Royal Jelly exclusively throughout her life, which can be considerable since she grows much larger and lives much longer than the average worker bee. Royal Jelly contains the natural factor, 10-Hydroxy-2-Decenoic Acid (10-HDA), one of the most important components of Royal Jelly. Now you can enjoy the "natural goodness from Mother Nature." |
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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 - Study: Vitamins E and C fail to prevent cancer in men (Spartanburg Herald-Journal)
Published: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 at 5:19 a.m. Last Modified: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 at 12:54 p.m. - 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. - SunnyDazes.com is Bringing Sunshine to the Blogosphere (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
SunnyDazes.com was founded to provide consumers with a wide choice of vitamins, supplements and herbal products. The site has become a one-stop resource for health products. While the website continues the grow, its founder, Ray Johnson, has recently added a new informational blog. - 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. - Vitamin E won't prevent rheumatoid arthritis: study (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
Taking vitamin E supplements does not reduce a woman's risk of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), an analysis of data from the Women's Health Study indicates.

