beta-carotene and Hot-Flashes

beta-carotene has been researched along with Hot-Flashes* in 1 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for beta-carotene and Hot-Flashes

ArticleYear
The placebo effect and randomized trials: analysis of alternative medicine.
    The Urologic clinics of North America, 2002, Volume: 29, Issue:1

    Randomized controlled trials are generally regarded as the gold standard of study designs to determine causality. The inclusion of a placebo group in these trials, when appropriate, is critical to access the efficacy of a drug or supplement. The placebo response itself has received some attention in the medical literature over the past fifty years. The recent increasing utilization of dietary supplements and herbal medications by patients makes it imperative to reevaluate the placebo response in conventional and alternative medicine. This article will review some of the negative and positive results from randomized trials utilizing dietary supplements (androstenedione, beta-carotene, CoQ10, garlic, soy, vitamin C and E...) for a number of non-urologic and urologic conditions, including cancer.

    Topics: Androstenedione; Antioxidants; beta Carotene; Coenzymes; Complementary Therapies; Dehydroepiandrosterone; Garlic; Heart Failure; Hot Flashes; Humans; Libido; Neoplasms; Placebo Effect; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Ubiquinone; Vitamin E

2002