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Thu, 6 May 2004 11:34:50 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Type Casting

 

Type Casting

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

May 6, 2004

 

************************************************************

 

Dear Member,

 

Are you confused about vitamin A? Long before I knew anything about natural

medicine, I had heard how dangerous this vitamin could be in excessive doses,

especially for pregnant women.

 

I'm sure many of you have heard all the same things I did. And even more

confusion still lingers from a widely reported 2002 study, which showed that a

high intake of vitamin A increases the risk of hip fractures in postmenopausal

women.

 

But now a new study has concluded that we don't absorb vitamin A as efficiently

as previously thought, so we should actually increase our dietary sources of the

vitamin.

 

What to do? A closer look at both of these studies will weed out the facts from

the myths.

 

----------------------------

The basics

----------------------------

 

Vitamin A is essential to the health of your eyes, bones, skin and immune

system. Growth and healing also benefit from the antioxidants that this key

vitamin supplies. And some studies have even shown that vitamin A may help fight

cancer. So can you really get too much? The answer to that is Yes... if you're

getting the wrong kind.

 

Researchers at the Harvard Medical School collected diet and supplement data

from the Nurses' Health Study for more than 72,000 postmenopausal women, aged

34-77. Over a period of 18 years their dietary questionnaires were updated

periodically.

 

Analysis of the data revealed that subjects who consumed the most vitamin A from

food sources had a 69% higher risk of hip fracture compared to women who

consumed the least vitamin A. Women who had a high intake of dietary vitamin A

and vitamin A supplements had an 89% higher risk of hip fracture.

 

Or those are the basic details that the mainstream media reported anyway. The

actual conclusions of the Harvard study are not quite so cut and dried. But they

do provide some useful guidance in determining the best way to get your vitamin

A.

 

----------------------------

What's in a name?

----------------------------

 

Vitamin A from food sources comes in two different forms: retinol and

beta-carotene. Retinol is a vitamin A compound that has previously been

associated with hip fractures in postmenopausal women. In comparison,

beta-carotene (which the body converts into vitamin A) has not been associated

with fracture risk.

 

Retinol can be found in a wide variety of animal foods, including: dairy

products such as whole milk and whole milk yogurt, butter and cheese. Beef and

chicken liver also contain retinol. And these are the foods that the Harvard

research found to be associated with increased hip fracture risk. (An earlier

study that used data from the same Nurses' Health Study concluded that women who

drank two or more glasses of milk per day increased their risk of fractures

compared with women who drank less than one glass per week.)

 

The Harvard study also shows that most of the vitamin A supplements taken by the

women in the study were included in multivitamins that contained a synthetic

form of vitamin A - a form that delivered (yep, you guessed it) retinol. This

vitamin A form has been associated with insufficient bone density and

osteoporosis risk.

 

The preferable type of vitamin A is pro-vitamin A, also known as beta-carotene,

and is abundant in dark green leafy vegetables and colorful orange vegetables

and fruits (for which it helps supply the color) such as pumpkins, squash, sweet

potatoes, peaches, apricots, cantaloupes, mangoes and (most famously) carrots.

 

In supplement form, beta-carotene is naturally available in fish oil. A

particularly good source is cod liver oil, which contains beta-carotene along

with vitamin D, and the combination of the two may provide excellent support for

good bone health.

 

----------------------------

Up the intake

----------------------------

 

The most recent vitamin A study comes from researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA

Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University.

 

In two separate phases, the Tufts team fed 100 grams of pureed carrots and 300

grams of pureed spinach to male subjects. Analysis of serum blood samples

revealed that, in both cases, considerably less absorption of beta-carotene took

place than was previously thought.

 

Further studies will be needed to confirm that foods with high beta-carotene

content need to be eaten in greater quantities to ensure adequate vitamin A

intake. But let's face it; a higher consumption of vegetables would do almost

all of us a world of good. Nevertheless, the question lingers: Can you get too

much vitamin A, even if it's in the " right " form?

 

Apparently you can if you smoke cigarettes. Studies show that smokers with a

high intake of beta-carotene are at greater risk of developing lung cancer. And,

again, as the Harvard study demonstrates, postmenopausal women should avoid

excessive intake of food sources and supplements that contain vitamin A in the

retinol form.

 

As for just about everyone else, it's almost impossible to overdo vitamin A

consumption, according to HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D. In fact, Dr. Spreen

tells me there are only about two-dozen recorded cases of people who took too

much vitamin A and suffered any distress whatsoever. Regarding supplement

dosage, Dr. Spreen suggests that 10,000 IU of beta-carotene vitamin A per day is

adequate.

 

If you still have questions or doubts about getting too much vitamin A, consult

with your doctor or a dependable nutritionist to devise a balanced plan that's

right for you.

 

************************************************************

 

....and another thing

 

What can I say?

 

I often ask myself that question when some aspect of healthcare comes up in

conversation with friends and family. I don't want to bore them with a constant

stream of healthcare information. But I also don't want people I care about to

make dangerous decisions.

 

For instance, a good friend of mine recently had a wisdom tooth extracted and

was given a pain-killer that contained acetaminophen. Unfortunately, this wasn't

enough to manage the pain, so he took several acetaminophen tablets in addition

to the pain killer. Knowing the danger he was putting himself in, I simply told

him I had an e-mail that I'd like him to read, and immediately forwarded the e-

Alert " Flick of the Wrist " (1/19/04), which illustrates just how easy it is for

a normally healthy person to suffer severe liver damage from excessive

acetaminophen intake.

 

While it's easy for me to share important health information with over 400,000

of you every day through this e-Alert, it can be hard to talk about some of

these issues with my friends and family (especially controversial ones like the

dangers of acetaminophen, which most people think is safe as mother's milk).

 

And I may not even know what health problems they're facing. So while I could

send information that would absolutely help them, I wouldn't necessarily know

what to send.

 

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

************************************************************

Sources:

" Vitamin A Intake and Hip Fractures Among Postmenopausal Women " Journal of the

American Medical Association, Vol. 287, No. 1, 2002, jama.ama-assn.org

" Vitamin A Value of Spinach and Carrots as Assessed Using a Stable Isotope

Reference Method in Adults " Experimental Biology 2004, Abstract #6305,

select.biosis.org

" People Need to Eat More Beta Carotene to Get Enough Vitamin A " Research news

from Tufts University, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy: May

2004, eurekalert.org

" Beta-Carotene Levels May Be Too Low For Adequate Vitamin A "

NutraIngredients.com, 4/27/04, nutraingredients.com

 

Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C. The e-Alert may not be

posted on commercial sites without written permission.

 

************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please visit here

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past e-Alerts and products

or you're an HSI member and would like to search past articles, visit

http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

************************************************************

 

 

 

 

 

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