Can Vitamin E Help Women Avoid Stroke?
Source: Tufts University
September 7, 2000
(Reviewed: January 2, 2003)
Many people believe that they need to fight disease with an arsenal of
dietary supplements. That arsenal often includes vitamin E. This may not
be the best nutrition strategy, according to a study in the August issue
of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that adds to what scientists
know about the disease-fighting potential of vitamin E.
In the late 1980s, scientists assessed the dietary intakes of more than
34,000 participants in the Iowa Women's Health Study, an ongoing research
project that focuses on the particular health needs of older women. The
scientists then kept track of the participants over the next ten years,
noting the women who died of stroke during that time. After accounting
for other factors that affect stroke risk, such as age, weight, and smoking
status, the researchers noted that the women in the study who consumed
the most vitamin E from foods, without relying on dietary supplements,
were less likely than other women to suffer a stroke. Liberal use of vitamin
E supplements did not appear to provide the women in this study any protection
from stroke, however.
If the vitamin E from food is good, then shouldn't the added amount that
supplements can provide be even better? Scientists aren't sure. The Iowa
Women's Health Study is an epidemiologic study, in which researchers periodically
gather health information and then monitor the participants' health over
a period of years. But it is not always possible to attribute a particular
disease outcome to one specific factor, since people who consume a healthful
diet are also likely to practice other beneficial health habits. For instance,
the women in this study who ate the most vitamin E from foods were also
less likely to be overweight or to smoke, and more likely to exercise,
than other study participants. In addition, a vitamin E-rich diet that
includes fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and vegetable oils contains
plenty of other potentially beneficial nutrients in addition to E. Any
or all of these factors could have combined to offer the protection from
stroke attributed, in this study, to vitamin E in foods.
What's the bottom line? The US National Academy of Sciences (NAS), the
organization responsible for setting recommendations for desirable intakes
of nutrients, says there is not yet enough scientific proof that vitamin
E supplements provide an added edge against disease. Research in this
area continues, but in the meantime nutrition conscious consumers would
be better served by shopping in the produce aisle instead of the dietary supplement aisle of the grocery store.
Source
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Intake of antioxidant vitamins and risk of death from stroke in postmenopausal women. L. Yochum, et al., The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2000, vol. 72, pp. 476--483
Related Links
Vitamin and Mineral Supplements, American Heart Association
Antioxidant
Vitamins, American Dietetic Association
Tufts
University's Nutrition
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