Talk:Vitamin O (product)
This redirect does not require a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||
|
Untitled
[edit]If it's not a real vitamin then why r ppl sellng it?
- For the same reasons that people sell homeopathy treatments. Some because they truly believe the product works, others simply for profit, and most a mix of the two. GeeJo (t)⁄(c) • 18:21, 17 May 2007 (UTC)
I agree, despite its name it’s not a vitamin. Even Manufactures are unsure on what the chemical formula
is. Some suppliers describe its product as a mildly buffered solution of deionized water and sodium chloride with a pH of 7.2. Another supplier lists magnesium peroxide as the active ingredient. It is also confusing because other suppliers sometimes call the chemical liquid oxygen, but it seems very unlikely since oxygen only exists in a liquid form at temperatures below -183 degrees C.
Here are some reasons why people are taking this chemical called vitamin O:
People take vitamin O for increasing energy; improving immune function; eliminating bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites; treating yeast infections; eliminating toxins and poisons from the body; and healing mouth sores. But who are the people consuming this product?
One source also states that Vitamin O is also used for improving concentration, memory and alertness; calming the nervous system; easing depression, irritability, unexplained hostility and dizziness; relieving arthritis, muscle aches and pains, asthma, bronchial problems, emphysema and lung disease, sinus infection, diabetes, body weakness, chronic fatigue, and heart and circulation problems.
Along with improving those symptons vitamin can also be used for obesity; constipation; gas and bloating; loss of appetite; poor digestion; stomach acid; premenstrual syndrome (PMS); menopause; sexual performance problems; headaches; migraines; premature aging; rashes; skin problems; itchy ears, nose, and anus; and tumors and deposit buildup. Vitamin O is also sometimes applied to the skin as a germ-killer (antiseptic).
Vitamin O has been used for obesity; constipation; gas and bloating; loss of appetite; poor digestion; stomach acid; premenstrual syndrome (PMS); menopause; sexual performance problems; headaches; migraines; premature aging; rashes; skin problems; itchy ears, nose, and anus; and tumors and deposit buildup.
However for all of this scientific evidence are scarce and for how vitamin O actually works on the body it appears that it contains ingredients that release oxygen, but there is little scientific evidence to back this claim. There is no reason to believe that the products actually deliver oxygen to the body. It is possible to use an electric current to add a tiny amount of oxygen to water, but to access it, a human would need gills. Even if they could, taking oxygen into the stomach through a liquid, pill, or food would not significantly raise the body's blood level of oxygen. Oxygen enters the bloodstream through the lungs. The body adapts to what it needs by changing its breathing rate. The oxygen content of air is not changing and remains constant at 21% regardless of the weather. If enough oxygen is available to sustain life, the body will extract what it needs from the air and deliver what is needed to the cells. Blood returning to the lungs contains surplus oxygen. "Oxygen deficiency" is not an underlying cause of disease.
It is completely confusing that this vitamin/liquid oxygen could do so many different things to help the human body but it is not even listed as a real vitamin yet. I would like to know who is trying this substance, let alone buying it. I am not sure if we should keep this article up but it would be great to get some scientific information on this substance, Dixon 105 (talk) 03:44, 15 November 2011 (UTC)
Orgasms
[edit]Vitamin O (product) also refers to orgasms.[1] Jidanni (talk) 10:29, 17 September 2016 (UTC)
Orgasms are better for you than any product called Vitamin O