Generally speaking, there is no need to deal with it. As long as you stop taking it, you will quickly reduce the concentration of vitamin E in your blood. Because vitamin E is absorbed by the small intestine after oral administration, it is mainly excreted with urine, feces through intestinal-hepatic circulation, or directly from sebum, and the amount of excretion is very large. Therefore, as long as the drug is stopped, the concentration of vitamin E in the blood will drop rapidly.
If you take a large dose of vitamin E by mistake, those who are easily poisoned must stop taking the medicine immediately and go to a regular hospital for emergency treatment such as vomiting, gastric lavage and catharsis.
The clinical manifestations of vitamin E poisoning are nausea, headache, dizziness, fatigue, blurred vision, thrombophlebitis of lower limbs, chapped skin, angular stomatitis, myasthenia, creatine urine, and increased phosphokinase in blood. Some patients may be prone to bleeding.