You’re saying you’re 87 and taking 4 vitamins and want to keep going—that’s understandable. The important point is this: most vitamins are safe, but at your age what matters is which ones, the doses, and why you’re taking them.
🧠 General truth
For most older adults:
- Vitamins are supportive, not essential if diet is good
- “More vitamins” does not automatically mean better health
- Some vitamins can build up or interact with medications
⚠️ What can matter at 87
1. Vitamin doses
- Vitamin A, D, E, K (fat-soluble vitamins) can build up in the body
- Too much Vitamin D → can raise calcium and affect kidneys
- Too much Vitamin A → can affect liver and bones
2. Common useful vitamins in older age
These are often actually helpful if needed:
- Vitamin D (bone health, falls prevention)
- Vitamin B12 (memory, nerves, energy)
- Calcium (only if diet is low)
- Multivitamin (low dose) if diet is poor
3. Hidden risk: mixing with medicines
Even vitamins can interact with:
- blood thinners (like warfarin)
- heart medications
- blood pressure drugs
🧠 Important reality check
👉 Vitamins do NOT “keep you alive longer” by themselves
👉 They help only if you are deficient or not eating enough nutrients
🟢 Safe approach (simple)
At your age, the safest general approach is:
- take only what your doctor recommended
- avoid high-dose “megavitamins”
- keep doses moderate
- review them once a year with blood tests if possible
❤️ Most important for staying strong at 87
Far more important than vitamins:
- walking or light movement daily
- enough protein (eggs, milk, lentils, fish)
- hydration
- blood pressure control
- sleep
🧠 Bottom line
✔ Vitamins can help if needed
⚠ Too many or high doses can sometimes cause harm
✔ Best plan = simple, moderate, doctor-guided
If you tell me the exact 4 vitamins you take, I can quickly check if that combination is safe for you or if anything should be adjusted.