There are many cases where adding a low-marginally-effective (low MR%) supplement, food, or intervention may be pointless if you’re already implementing a more effective related intervention. This is due to diminishing returns, overlap in mechanisms, or redundancy in benefits. Here are some common examples:
1. Redundant Antioxidants
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InExample: Taking both vitamin C and vitamin E while already consuming a diet rich in berries, dark chocolate, and other polyphenol-rich foods.
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Why? The body has a saturation point for antioxidants, and excess may not provide additional benefits.
2. Multiple Anti-Inflammatory Supplements
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Example: Taking curcumin, fish oil, and ginger while already on a low-inflammation diet (e.g., Mediterranean diet).
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Why? The anti-inflammatory effects may plateau, and adding more may not further reduce inflammation meaningfully.
3. Overlapping Nootropics/Cognitive Enhancers
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Example: Stacking caffeine, L-theanine, and creatine when you already respond well to just caffeine + L-theanine.
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Why? Some cognitive enhancers work on similar pathways (e.g., adenosine or acetylcholine), so adding more may not improve focus further.
4. Multiple Protein Sources Beyond Requirements
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Example: Consuming whey protein, collagen, and pea protein when you already meet your protein needs through whole foods.
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Why? Excess protein doesn’t necessarily improve muscle synthesis beyond a certain threshold (~1.6g/kg bodyweight for most people).
5. Multiple Gut Health Supplements
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Example: Taking probiotics, prebiotics, and fermented foods when your gut health is already optimal.
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Why? More isn’t always better—some people may experience bloating or dysbiosis from excessive probiotic strains.
6. Multiple Sleep Aids
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Example: Stacking melatonin, magnesium, and glycine when magnesium alone fixes your sleep.
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Why? If sleep is already optimized, extra supplements won’t improve it further and may disrupt natural sleep architecture.
7. Multivitamin + Individual Micronutrients
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Example: Taking a multivitamin plus extra B12 and zinc when blood tests show no deficiencies.
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Why? Excess B12 and zinc may not provide additional benefits and could cause imbalances.
When to Consider Dropping Low MR% Interventions:
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If blood tests show sufficiency (e.g., vitamin D levels >40 ng/mL, no need for extra D3).
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If benefits plateau (e.g., no noticeable difference when adding ashwagandha to an already low-stress lifestyle).
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If the cost outweighs the marginal gain (e.g., expensive mushroom extracts with minimal evidence).
Takeaway:
Focus on high-MR% interventions first (e.g., strength training, protein intake, sleep optimization) before layering low-impact supplements. Eliminate redundancies and track biomarkers to avoid wasting money on unnecessary additions
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