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E-Gems 100 IU (67 mg)

product on market Softgel Capsule Carlson Safety: 100/100
100/100

This product looks safe

  • No ingredients exceed tolerable upper intake levels
  • 100% of ingredients have research evidence
A Label Compliance Grade

What the Evidence Says

AI-generated · Qwen 3.6 · grounded in 1 source · methodology

Vitamin E acts as an antioxidant to protect cells from oxidative damage. There is strong evidence supporting its role in maintaining immune function and skin health. This formulation provides a standard dose of the nutrient with a high safety profile.

AI-generated summary based on research evidence. Not medical advice.

Label

Product Label

Label for E-Gems 100 IU (67 mg)
Open Full PDF View on NIH DSLD →
Details

Label Data

1 Softgel(s)
Serving Size
250
Servings
Vitamin
Product Type
100%
Evidence Coverage
Ingredients

Supplement Facts — Evidence Check

67 mg (447% DV)
4.5× RDA — above typical dose (UL: 1000 mg) 179 studies (A:3, B:90)

Other Ingredients

Soybean Oil Soft Gel Shell
Claims

Label Claims — Verification

Unverified Nutrient
Unverified All Other
Unverified Structure/Function
Info

Product Information

Directions for Use

Directions: Adults: take one soft gel once or twice daily at mealtime.

Formulation Notes

Heart health Antioxidant Optimal wellness

Potency & quality guaranteed

An FDA regulated facility

E-Gems provide 100 IU of natural-source vitamin E per soft gel. Natural-source vitamin E is a powerful antioxidant that promotes cardiovascular system health. Natural-source vitamin E is twice as active inside our body as synthetic vitamin E (by weight).

Gluten-free No artificial preservatives

Additional Information

Carlson Providing the highest quality nutritional supplements since 1965

Metadata

Product Details

UPC / SKU0 88395 00312 7
DSLD Entry Date2020-12-26
Product TypeVitamin
FormSoftgel Capsule
BrandCarlson
DSLD ID241482
Data Updated2026-04-11
Research

Research Evidence

253
Research Sources
55
Avg Quality
128
Meta Analysis
52
Systematic Review
41
Rct
24
Clinical Trial
3
Regulatory Source
1
Narrative Review
1
Other
1
Guideline
1
Openfda Safety
A Vitamin E supplementation in pregnancy
Meta Analysis The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2015 PubMed DOI
A Vitamin E for Alzheimer's dementia and mild cognitive impairment
Systematic Review The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2017 PubMed DOI
A Vitamin E for Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment
Meta Analysis The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2008 PubMed DOI
A Vitamin E for Alzheimer's dementia and mild cognitive impairment
Meta Analysis The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2012 PubMed DOI
A Exercise for intermittent claudication
Meta Analysis The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2017 PubMed DOI
A Effects of vitamin E supplementation on the risk and progression of AD: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Meta Analysis Nutritional neuroscience 2021 PubMed DOI
A Effect of vitamin E supplementation in rheumatoid arthritis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Meta Analysis European journal of clinical nutrition 2023 PubMed DOI
A Vitamin E and the risk of prostate cancer: the Selenium and Vitamin E Cancer Prevention Trial (SELECT)
Rct JAMA 2011 PubMed DOI
A Vitamin E for Alzheimer's dementia and mild cognitive impairment
Meta Analysis The Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2017 PubMed DOI
B Vitamin, Mineral, and Multivitamin Supplementation to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer: US Preventive Services Task Force Recommendation Statement.
Guideline JAMA 2022 PubMed DOI
View all evidence for Vitamin E →
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This product page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before taking any supplement.