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> " HSI - Jenny Thompson "

> <HSIResearch

 

> Silent Partners

> Thu, 05 Aug 2004 09:38:12 -0400

>

> Silent Partners

>

> Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

>

> August 05, 2004

>

>

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

 

> Dear Reader,

>

>

> A friend of mine recently wondered aloud if the

> money he's

> spending on vitamins is really worth it. Along with

> a daily

> multivitamin, he's been taking additional

> supplements of several

> key vitamins. So is the extra vitamin boost really

> necessary?

>

> I'm going to be sending today's e-Alert to my friend

> to provide

> this simple answer to his question: Keep taking

> those extra

> supplements. Because although he's only 53 and in

> good health, a

> new study indicates that two of the additional

> vitamins he's taking

> may be laying the groundwork to help prevent the

> development of

> Alzheimer's disease (AD) in years to come.

>

>

-

>

> Sum of the parts

>

-

>

>

> In the e-Alert " Stockholm in July " (7/24/02), I told

> you about a

> study from Johns Hopkins Alzheimer's Disease

> Research Center in

> which the diets of nearly 580 subjects, aged 60 or

> older, were

> followed for more than seven years. After adjusting

> for gender,

> education, and age (all factors that come into play

> with AD risk), a

> diet high in vitamin E

> was strongly associated with a significant reduction

> of Alzheimer's

> risk. Intake of dietary vitamin C was somewhat

> useful in reducing

> AD risk, but not nearly as effective as vitamin E.

>

> Nearly two years later, another Johns Hopkins team

> has reported

> on a similar study that specifically examines

> dietary supplement

> intake of the antioxidant vitamins C and E.

>

> As reported in the Archives of Neurology,

> researchers interviewed

> more than 4,700 subjects (aged 65 or older) in Cache

> County,

> Utah. Supplement intake was assessed, as well as the

> prevalence of

> dementia and Alzheimer's disease, from 1995 to 1997,

> and again

> from 1998 to 2000. The collected data showed that in

> the first

> phase, those who took supplements of vitamins C and

> E combined

> had a 78 percent lower risk of AD. In the second

> phase, the

> percentage dropped to 64, but still indicated a

> significant level of

> protection.

>

> In addition, subjects who took a vitamin E

> supplement along with a

> multivitamin that contained vitamin C, had a lower

> AD risk. But

> researchers found no evidence of protection among

> subjects who

> took vitamin C or E supplements alone (with no

> multivitamins), or

> among subjects who took multivitamins alone, or

> multivitamins

> with B-complex supplements (with no additional C or

> E).

>

> What's significant here is the recognition that

> multivitamins are

> useful, but that key vitamins such as C and E may

> deserve

> additional supplementation.

>

>

 

>

> Increasing importance

>

 

>

>

> In the e-alert " Taking History " (9/18/03), I told

> you about research

> from the University of Florida College of Nursing

> (UFCN) that

> revealed some of the important health benefits of

> key antioxidant

> supplements.

>

> The lead researcher of the UFCN study, James Jessup,

> PhD, RN,

> told the University of Florida News that when we

> reach our 40s,

> most people begin to naturally produce fewer

> amounts of antioxidants, but larger amounts of free

> radicals.

> Therefore, it becomes progressively more difficult

> to get the

> amounts of vitamin E necessary to fight free

> radicals through diet alone.

>

> Good dietary sources of vitamin E include spinach,

> eggs, nuts and

> seeds, avocados, tomatoes, peaches, and

> blackberries. But based on

> his study results, Dr. Jessup

> suggests that older adults will benefit from a

> vitamin E

> supplement, " because of its clear benefits to aging

> and systolic

> blood pressure. "

>

> Dr. Jessup's opinion is in line with previous

> information I've shared

> with you about vitamin E. In the e-Alert " C-ing

> Double " (6/12/03),

> HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D.,

> recommended 400 IU of vitamin E (ideally, as mixed

> tocopherols)

> daily, as well as 200 mcg of selenium for general

> antioxidant

> protection. And while it is possible to get too much

> selenium, a

> range of 200-400 mcg daily is considered quite safe.

>

> In the e-alert " Multi-Talented " (4/23/03), Dr.

> Spreen explained

> how the low amounts of vitamin C found in most

> multi-vitamins

> should be considered only the start of the

> supplementation of this

> important nutrient. As Dr. Spreen pointed out in

> that e-Alert: " The

> amount of vitamin C in a supplement is far less than

> I'd want a

> person to take. I nearly always start with a minimum

> of 1000

> milligrams 2x/day. "

>

>

--

>

> Clear thinking

>

--

>

>

> My friend is currently taking 1,500 mg of vitamin C

> and 500 IU of

> vitamin E as mixed tocopherols each day. He doesn't

> believe that

> these additional vitamins necessarily make him feel

> any healthier

> on a day-to-day basis, but – one day at a time – he

> may be giving

> his body and brain the nourishment that could help

> keep his

> thought processes clear and lucid as he moves into

> his later years.

>

>

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

 

> ...and another thing

>

>

> I hate to gloat, but...

>

> No, that's not true. I LOVE to gloat when a

> respected medical

> journal like the American Journal of Clinical

> Nutrition publishes a

> study that runs against the grain of one of the

> mainstream's most

> cherished platitudes.

>

> In this case the platitude is the low-fat diet

> mindset that

> mainstream organizations seized on years ago. And

> although a lot

> of people are catching on that " low-fat " does not

> translate directly

> to weight loss and radiant good health, the

> platitude continues to be

> a mainstay of the American Heart Association and

> other " higher

> ups. "

>

> Meanwhile, a team of researchers at Iowa State

> University

> conducted a modest study; small enough, I'm afraid,

> to keep me

> from gloating too much. At three different sittings,

> seven subjects

> were asked to eat three salads. Each salad consisted

> of spinach,

> romaine lettuce, cherry tomatoes, and carrots. One

> of the salads

> was served with a dressing that contained 28 grams

> of canola oil,

> one dressing had six grams of the same oil, and the

> third salad had

> a completely fat-free dressing. Several blood

> samples were

> collected from each subject in the 12 hours

> following each salad.

>

> After eating the salad with fat-free dressing, blood

> tests showed

> negligible levels of alpha-carotene, beta-carotene,

> and lycopene in

> all subjects. These levels were higher after

> subjects ate the salad

> with the low-fat dressing. And I'll let the authors

> of the study

> describe the results of the third category: " A

> substantially greater

> absorption of carotenoids was observed when salads

> were

> consumed with full-fat than with reduced-fat salad

> dressing. "

>

> Of course, canola oil wouldn't be my first choice

> for a healthy oil –

> far from it (which is a can of worms that I'll open

> in an upcoming

> e-Alert). But you have to love the irony: Pour on

> the full-fat salad

> oil, and increase the natural nutrients in the fresh

> vegetables.

>

> A small study like this isn't going to bring the

> low-fat juggernaut

> to a screeching halt, but sooner or later... sooner

> or later...

>

> To Your Good Health,

>

> Jenny Thompson

> Health Sciences Institute

>

>

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

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

>

> Sources:

> " Reduced Risk of Alzheimer Disease in Users of

> Antioxidant

> Vitamin Supplements: The Cache County Study "

> Archives of

> Neurology, Vol. 61, No. 1, January 2004,

> ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

> " Study: High Doses of Vitamins Ward Off Alzheimer's "

> Reuters

> Health, 1/19/04, naturaplus.com

> " Carotenoid Bioavailability is Higher from Salads

> Ingested with

> Full-Fat than with Fat-Reduced Salad Dressings as

> Measured with

> Electrochemical Detection " American Journal of

> Clinical

> Nutrition, Vol. 80, No. 2, August 2004,

> ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

> " Order the Salad, but Don't Hold the Fat: Report "

> Alison McCook,

> Reuters Health, 7/27/04, reutershealth.com

>

> Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com,

> L.L.C.

> The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites

> without

> written permission.

>

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