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Adverse Effects Associated with Multiple Classes of Dietary Supplements: The Military Dietary Supplement Use Study.

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BACKGROUND About 50% of Americans and 70% of United States military service members (SMs) regularly use dietary supplements (DSs) and some are associated with adverse effects (AEs). SMs are more… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND About 50% of Americans and 70% of United States military service members (SMs) regularly use dietary supplements (DSs) and some are associated with adverse effects (AEs). SMs are more likely to use unsafe DSs than civilians. OBJECTIVE The aim of this investigation was to examine the prevalence of, and factors associated with, AEs. DESIGN Cross-sectional. PARTICIPANTS A stratified random sample of 200,000 SMs from the Air Force, Army, Marine Corps, and Navy were obtained from military workforce records. Eighteen percent (n=26,681) of successfully contacted SMs (n=146,365) volunteered to participate between December 2018 and August 2019. Participants completed a detailed on-line questionnaire on demographics, lifestyle factors, and AEs associated with DS use. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Prevalence of, and factors associated with, AEs among DS users. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS Prevalence of AEs was calculated by DS categories. Chi-square statistics, linear trends, and multivariable logistic regression examined associations between AEs and demographic characteristics, lifestyle factors, and number DSs consumed. RESULTS Proportion of DS users (≥1 time /week) reporting ≥1 AE was 18% overall, 20% for combination products (i.e., weight loss, muscle building, pre-/post-workout supplements), 8% for purported prohormones, 6% for protein/amino acid products, 6% for multivitamin/multiminerals, 6% for individual vitamins/minerals, 4% for herbal products, and 2% for joint health products. Combination products are very popular in military personnel with nearly half of SM regularly taking them. In multivariable analysis, reporting AEs were independently associated with female gender, younger age, higher body mass index, smoking, higher alcohol intake, service in the Army, Navy, or Marine Corps (compared to Air Force), and consumption of a greater number of DSs. CONCLUSION A large proportion of SMs report experiencing AEs, especially users of combination products and purported prohormone supplements. This study presents contemporary data collected from a very large at-risk population on potentially hazardous categories of DSs.

Keywords: dietary supplements; combination products; associated multiple; effects associated; adverse effects; use

Journal Title: Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics
Year Published: 2022

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