100-Count Puritan's Pride Zinc for Acne Skin Formula Tablets
$2.50
$10.42
w/ Subscribe & Save
+29Deal Score
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Amazon has 100-Count Puritan's Pride Zinc for Acne Skin Formula Tablets for $3.54 - 25% 'clipped' coupon - 5% Subscribe & Save discount = $2.47. Shipping is free with Amazon Prime or on orders $25+.
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Item Details:
Helps support immune system health
Gluten and Soy Free
50 day supply
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About this Offer:
This is $4.11 lower (62% savings) than the next lowest price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $6.59.
About this Product:
This is rated 4.5 out of 5 stars based on over 5,000 ratings at Amazon.
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Edited September 13, 2022
at 07:21 PMby
Amazon[amazon.com] has the 100-Count Puritan's Pride Zinc for Acne Skin Formula Tablets on sale for $2.48 when you 'clip' the 25% discount coupon located on the product page and check out with Subscribe & Save. Shipping is free with Prime or $25+ orders.
Description:
Zinc for Acne tablets provide a combination of nutrients including zinc and Vitamins C, B-6, A, and E, specially blended for your skin. Zinc for Acne is designed to be taken as a supplement. Take two tablets of Zinc for Acne daily, preferably with a meal.
Model: Zinc for Acne by Puritan's Pride a Mineral for Immune Sytem Health 100 Tablets
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Zinc for Acne by Puritan's Pride a Mineral for Immune Sytem Health 100 Tablets
Manufacturer:
NBTY.inc - US Nutrition,inc.
Product SKU:
B0083HA3PE
UPC:
74312125805
ASIN:
B0083HA3PE
Brand:
Puritan's Pride
Item Dimensions LxWxH:
1.94 x 1.94 x 3.7 Inches
Item Weight:
0.16 Pounds
Manufacturer:
NBTY.inc - US Nutrition,inc.
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Uh, as a note, zinc intake can be highly tied to diet and even wearing dentures. Zinc toxicity is a real thing. I only learned this because recently my doctor stopped me from taking a beauty supplement because of the stupidly high levels of zinc and my current diet (which has a lot of nuts, which have zinc). If you already take a multivitamin with zinc, use zinc-based denture adhesives, or consume a metric crap ton of oysters on a regular basic, educate yourself on the effects of zinc toxicity.
If you -don't- take any zinc, this still hits the upper limits of the daily recommended intake. It's a darn good deal for a beauty supplement!
Cut out the sugar, refined grains and seed oils and the acne will improve greatly if not go away completely. Its primary cause is inflammation.
Aren't supplements supposed to refrain from making claims they can treat or mitigate any disease or medical condition? How do they substantiate their claim that this is an effective treatment for acne? I'd also be leery of taking 9 times the USRDA of anything (1 tablet is 455%, label says take 2 a day), you're just forcing your kidneys to process and get rid of all the excess.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank LindsInSC
09-13-2022 at 03:54 AM.
Uh, as a note, zinc intake can be highly tied to diet and even wearing dentures. Zinc toxicity is a real thing. I only learned this because recently my doctor stopped me from taking a beauty supplement because of the stupidly high levels of zinc and my current diet (which has a lot of nuts, which have zinc). If you already take a multivitamin with zinc, use zinc-based denture adhesives, or consume a metric crap ton of oysters on a regular basic, educate yourself on the effects of zinc toxicity.
If you -don't- take any zinc, this still hits the upper limits of the daily recommended intake. It's a darn good deal for a beauty supplement!
Aren't supplements supposed to refrain from making claims they can treat or mitigate any disease or medical condition? How do they substantiate their claim that this is an effective treatment for acne? I'd also be leery of taking 9 times the USRDA of anything (1 tablet is 455%, label says take 2 a day), you're just forcing your kidneys to process and get rid of all the excess.
Uh, as a note, zinc intake can be highly tied to diet and even wearing dentures. Zinc toxicity is a real thing. I only learned this because recently my doctor stopped me from taking a beauty supplement because of the stupidly high levels of zinc and my current diet (which has a lot of nuts, which have zinc). If you already take a multivitamin with zinc, use zinc-based denture adhesives, or consume a metric crap ton of oysters on a regular basic, educate yourself on the effects of zinc toxicity.
If you -don't- take any zinc, this still hits the upper limits of the daily recommended intake. It's a darn good deal for a beauty supplement!
Aren't supplements supposed to refrain from making claims they can treat or mitigate any disease or medical condition? How do they substantiate their claim that this is an effective treatment for acne? I'd also be leery of taking 9 times the USRDA of anything (1 tablet is 455%, label says take 2 a day), you're just forcing your kidneys to process and get rid of all the excess.
Not showing the coupon for me for some reason. Still buying and hoping it will help with my hormonal acne that started after TRT. Down to to try anything at this point. TRT has caused horrible cystic acne as an adult, hope this helps. Thanks OP.
Aren't supplements supposed to refrain from making claims they can treat or mitigate any disease or medical condition? How do they substantiate their claim that this is an effective treatment for acne? I'd also be leery of taking 9 times the USRDA of anything (1 tablet is 455%, label says take 2 a day), you're just forcing your kidneys to process and get rid of all the excess.
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If you -don't- take any zinc, this still hits the upper limits of the daily recommended intake. It's a darn good deal for a beauty supplement!
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank LindsInSC
If you -don't- take any zinc, this still hits the upper limits of the daily recommended intake. It's a darn good deal for a beauty supplement!
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank energyx
If you -don't- take any zinc, this still hits the upper limits of the daily recommended intake. It's a darn good deal for a beauty supplement!
I'll add milk to that. I stopped drinking milk and my acne reduced dramatically.
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Supplements aren't regulated by the FDA