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Anyone have any useful info on Chromium Piccolinate? I've tried to do research on it, but I always hit sites which seem just to be "magic weight loss pills" which contain CP. But I have heard that when used as a dietary supplement, it helps regulate normally slow metabolisms. Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Kate |
Chromium Picolinate
Perhaps because of the big media/advertising push given this supplement when it was "discovered" in the 90's, many people still believe that Chromium Picolinate is an effective weight-loss aid. Unfortunately, it does not appear to be...and in fact some studies have shown taking the supplement can increase your risk of cancer.
Here are some links: http://www.hcrc.org/faqs/chrom.html & http://www.hcrc.org/contrib/coleman/chromium.html The above links are from the HealthCare Reality Check website. As an aside, I ran into this interesting commentry written by a Harvard graduate student on the Quackwatch.com website http://www.quackwatch.com/01Quackery...comments.html: Quote:
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Increasing risks???
Mrs. Jim:
Can you please provide the source your information regarding your statement "...some studies have shown taking the supplement can increase your risk of cancer." Otherwise people could think ANYthing could be risky.... |
Sure thing!
From the book "Losing It" by Laura Fraser, page 107-108 (paperback edition):
Quote:
My opinion - if it doesn't work for weight loss (and it appears that the only studies showing that it MIGHT work are the ones which were done by Nutrition 21) and there's a chance of too much causing cancer (a concern to me since I have cancer risks on both sides of my family) - it just ain't worth the risk. Even without the cancer risk, I have better things to spend my hard earned $$ on than another pill that doesn't work. |
I'm coming to the party late...but thought I'd toss my 0.02 in :)
Chromium has been touted as a convert-excess-body-fat-to-muscle wonder---and it simply does NOT do that. There is ample evidence in peer-reviewed medical literature to refute that claim. HOWEVER, it does appear to have value for blood sugar control in diabetics. By extension, some believe that people who are particularly sugar-sensitive benefit from supplementation. (The premise being that wild fluctuations in blood sugar promote cravings, etc.---there's little evidence to support this.) But it's important to remember that chromium is a trace mineral---supplementation should be cautious, and not taken with in a more-is-better approach. I know that my diabetic husband, who takes a single, 200 mcg capsule each day (167% of the RDA), has achieved MUCH greater control of his blood glucose since he started taking it. For him, this is critical, as his blood vessels are already seriously compromised by the diabetes. For nondiabetics, it might not be worth the bucks spent---most of us don't need such rich urine :) |
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