The sentence seems to be incomplete or has some errors. Based on the provided part, it could be translated as: "Air Jordan Retro 1 can find thousands upon thousands of nuts..." However, "nuts" in this context might refer to fans or enthusiasts (slang for people who are crazy about something), or it could be a mistake. If you meant something else, please provide more details or correct the original sentence.

by lide8742 on 2012-02-07 19:11:27

You can find thousands upon thousands of nutritional supplements offered in the market, each promising several health benefits. Due to insufficient regulations governing the supplement industry, which do not adequately address supplement quality, the market has become flooded with poorly formulated supplements that are not based on good science.

The Physicians Management Journal supports this by stating that one out of every three dollars spent on supplements is WASTED!

We are now living in an information age, and smart consumers can easily research nutritional supplement options before purchasing, especially online. They are fully aware that the multitude of supplements competing for their money are not equal in terms of efficacy, safety, and value for money.

However, a primary issue exists because the information put out by virtually all supplement companies, including the large, well-known U.S. multinationals, is far less than truthful. The marketing presentations by these companies are very clever and designed to hide product weaknesses while attempting to impress people with fancy scientific buzzwords that make their supplements appear better than they really are.

To overcome this, consumers need a transparent way to easily and properly evaluate and compare supplements so they can avoid the junk and focus on the best vitamin supplements in the market.

I previously worked for a leading manufacturer in the nutritional supplement industry and was able to uncover the secrets and shortcuts that supplement producers take. During this time, I gained access to a world-renowned bio-scientist who has developed nearly 200 new pharmaceutical and health supplement formulas. He showed me how to evaluate and compare nutritional supplements using six easy-to-use criteria, and I created a website to teach supplement users how to use these criteria.

All supplements, regardless of how many ingredients they contain, can be evaluated using either all or most of the following criteria:

* The formula

* Ingredient quality

* Bioavailability (absorption)

* Manufacturing protocols and standards

* Synergy

* Value for money

Let’s look at the simple use of the first of these criteria: **The Formula**.

**THE FORMULA**

The evaluation part is straightforward, but when comparing supplements, you must compare apples with apples and oranges with oranges. So, the type of supplements being compared should be of the same general category.

For example, there is no point in comparing a natural supplement taken to treat a specific condition, containing one or two major active ingredients (the herbs or extracts), plus some other vitamins or minerals acting as co-factors, with a multi-ingredient supplement containing 80 ingredients taken for overall health and preventative healthcare.

A multi-ingredient nutritional supplement must be compared to another multi-ingredient supplement that has been formulated for the same health benefits, etc.

There are three things to consider when using a supplement formula as a criterion to help evaluate a supplement:

* Are the key ingredients well-established as the most effective and powerful nutrients for their target purpose in the body, and what is the total amount of these ingredients in the product?

* Whether the dose amounts of selected key ingredients fall within clinically established ranges for health benefits.

* Whether the dose amounts of all vitamins and minerals are within established safe upper limits.