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Clinical Trial
. 1995 Feb;117(3):298-305.
doi: 10.1007/BF02246104.

The impact of long-term vitamin supplementation on cognitive functioning

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

The impact of long-term vitamin supplementation on cognitive functioning

D Benton et al. Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1995 Feb.

Abstract

The possibility that the taking of vitamin supplements may influence cognitive functioning was explored. One hundred and twenty-seven young healthy adults took either ten times the recommended daily dose of nine vitamins, or a placebo, under a double-blind procedure, for a year. After 12 months better performance on two measures of attention was found in females who had taken the vitamin supplement, even though the blood status of nine vitamins reached a plateau after 3 months. The use of regression equations demonstrated the association between improved thiamin status and improved performance on a range of measures of cognitive functioning in females rather than males. Although it was not possible to establish the reason for a beneficial response in females rather than males, the evidence that females respond differently to dietary factors was discussed.

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References

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