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Head-to-head evidence comparison — which supplement is right for you?
Vitamin B6 wins 1 of 3 categories. Both are solid choices — the best pick depends on your specific goals.
Verdict
Probably helps
6 of 11 studies with measurable effects showed benefit.
Top outcomes
Verdict
Likely helps
9 of 11 studies with measurable effects showed benefit.
Top outcomes
Shared outcomes (2)
Outcomes where both Thiamine and Vitamin B6 have evidence — compare verdict strength side-by-side.
50-100mg daily; 150-600mg benfotiamine for neuropathy
With food, Morning with other B vitamins
Benfotiamine (fat-soluble, higher bioavailability)
25-100mg daily
Morning with food, Can take with other B vitamins
P-5-P (Pyridoxal-5-Phosphate)
2-4 weeks
4-8 weeks
4-12 weeks
2-4 weeks
1-2 cycles
Months of high doses
Dietary supplements for dysmenorrhoea
The Cochrane database of systematic reviews (2016) · Meta analysis · n=3101
Supplements versus other supplementsThere was no evidence of a difference in effectiveness between ginger and zinc sulphate (MD 0.02 points, 95% CI -0.58 to 0.62; one RCT, 101 women).
Evaluation of the Efficacy of the Addition of a Combination of Pyrimidine Nucleotides and Vitamin B1 and B12 to Standard Treatment in the Management of Painful Radiculopathy and in the Quality of Life of Patients
Nutrients (2024) · Rct · n=122
Both groups showed pain improvement, but the VAS reduction (control: 24.58 vs. experimental: 31.35) was not statistically significant.
Efficacy of B-vitamins and vitamin D therapy in improving depressive and anxiety disorders: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials
Nutritional neuroscience (2023) · Systematic review · n=2256
Systematic review examining Thiamine efficacy
Dosage exploration of combined B-vitamin supplementation in stroke prevention: a meta-analysis and systematic review
The American journal of clinical nutrition (2024) · Meta analysis · n=76664
In areas without and with partial folic acid fortification, combined B-vitamin supplementation significantly reduced the risk of stroke by 34% [RR: 0.66; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.50, 0.86] and 11% (RR: 0.89; 95% CI: 0.79, 1.00), respectively.
Vitamin and mineral supplementation for maintaining cognitive function in cognitively healthy people in mid and late life
The Cochrane database of systematic reviews (2018) · Meta analysis · n=83000
We found that giving B vitamin supplements to cognitively healthy adults, mainly in their 60s and 70s, probably has little or no effect on global cognitive function at any time point up to 5 years (SMD values from -0.03 to 0.06) and may also have no effect at 5-10 years (SMD -0.01).
Drug Efficacy in the Treatment of Antipsychotic-Induced Akathisia: A Systematic Review and Network Meta-Analysis
JAMA network open (2024) · Meta analysis · n=492
No association between effect sizes and psychotic severity was found.
Based on limited RCT evidence showing VAS pain reduction with B-vitamin combinations. Effect magnitude conservative due to mixed statistical significance. Higher bioavailability forms like benfotiamine likely more effective than standard thiamine HCl.
Based on systematic review of nutritional interventions for PMS psychological symptoms. Evidence quality limited by study heterogeneity and need for more consistent protocols.
AI-estimated from published studies. Interpret as directional guidance.
Vitamin B6 has a higher evidence score (9/10 vs 9/10) and wins in 1 of 3 categories.
For prenatal support, Vitamin B6 has a higher relevance score (88 vs 78).
No known interactions between Thiamine and Vitamin B6 have been documented in our database. However, always consult a healthcare provider before combining supplements.