Dementia link to lack of vitamin B

A diet lacking in B-vitamins may increase the risk of vascular dementia, according to a US study.

Researchers tested the effects of a vitamin B-deficient diet on the spatial learning and memory of mice. They found that mice fed a diet deficient in folate and vitamins B6 and B12 over 10 weeks had deficits in spatial learning and memory compared with mice fed a normal diet.

Examination of the brains of the vitamin B-deprived mice showed that they had suffered microvascular damage in the regions of the brain involved in memory.

The vitamin B-deprived mice also had high blood serum levels of homocysteine, a chemical that has previously been associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment.

The researchers concluded that a diet deficient in B-vitamins causes cerebrovascular damage, and could result in cognitive impairment and dementia or other cerebrovascular disease.

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Vitamin B 9 may blunt heart attack damage

BALTIMORE, March 27 (UPI) — Folate — vitamin B 9 – potentially may be used to limit the damage of a heart attack, U.S. researchers say.The study, scheduled to be published in the April 8 edition of the journal Circulation, finds the vitamin blunted the damage from heart attack in animal studies.

“We want to emphasize that it is premature for people to begin taking high doses of folic acid,” senior study investigator Dr. David Kass, of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore says in a statement. “But if human studies prove equally effective, then high-dose folate could be given to high-risk groups to guard against possible heart attack or to people while they are having one.”

“We do not know how much or how little of it is needed to be effective,” Kass cautions. A large amount could yield unpredictable side effects and studies have linked folic acid supplements to increased rates of colon and prostate cancer, Kass says.

Folate — naturally found in leafy green vegetables, beans and nuts — is sometimes used as a general term to include folic acid — the form of vitamin B9 put in supplements and added to foods, especially grain products.

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Multivitamins — Are they the best thing for you?

Do you take a multivitamin? Or a single vitamin, mineral, or combination supplement? If so, you are in the company of tens of millions of U.S. adults.

Why do you take them? Most people say it makes them feel healthier or they believe it will prevent chronic diseases, or colds and flu. But you may be surprised to know that what is in your bottle and on the label is not strictly regulated. And there is no system in place to collect reports of adverse affects.

Over the past few years there has been increasing evidence that multivitamins and single or combination type vitamin/mineral supplements may not provide the health benefit sought by you, the consumer. In some cases the opposite or no beneficial effects have been reported.

Alarming to think that vitamin or mineral supplements could actually cause more harm than good. An example of this is the use of beta carotene by smokers actually increased the incidence of lung cancer. This is echoed by a recent study out of the University of Washington that reports the use of multivitamins, vitamin C, vitamin E and folate did not reduce the risk of lung cancer.

It is not all bad news though; there are studies to support the use of folate (folic acid) prior to and during pregnancy in the prevention of neural tube defects in the developing fetus. And history has proven that vitamins and minerals play a critical role in our health — the reason we know about the benefits of vitamins and minerals in food is because of the major discoveries in disease prevention such as vitamin C and scurvy and thiamine, a B vitamin, and beri beri (a wasting type disease).

This may leave you wondering if those vitamin mineral supplements in your medicine cabinet are doing what they should or even worth your money.

Let’s look at this way — do you eat a well balanced diet? If so, you may not need a multivitamin and if you take one as a “safety net” know that you may exceed what your body needs or can use.

Are you concerned about a chronic disease? If so, making changes in your diet and exercise habits, not smoking and following through with recommended screenings by your physician are more likely to benefit your overall health picture.

Consider your current state of health, talk to your doctor and/or dietitian, and weigh the possible benefits and risks of a multivitamin and mineral supplement for you.

To your health,

Katherine

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Safety of Multivitamins Questioned

The use of some vitamin supplements can be controversial, with scientists and manufacturers arguing over their usefulness. But they don’t spend much time arguing about the lowly and somewhat boring multivitamin.No one has ever argued that multivitamins might not be good for you. Until now.

The Harvard Men’s Health Watch, which once endorsed these popular supplements, now says that a reappraisal of that advice is in order.

The publication, in its March 2008 issue, notes that some recent studies have linked multivitamin use to prostate cancer. More convincingly, it says studies have linked high intakes of folic acid to colon polyps, the precursors of colorectal cancer.

Researchers speculate that high intakes of folic acid, which was first added to grain products in the 1990s, may have contributed to an increase in colorectal cancers in the mid-1990s.

What does all of this have to do with multivitamins?

Now that folic acid is added to so many grain products, it’s easy to see how a healthy diet, combined with a multivitamin, could boost a person’s daily intake to 1,000 mcg or more, potentially increasing the risk of colorectal and possibly prostate and breast cancers.

In light of this research, Harvard Men’s Health Watch editors suggest that the average man give up the multivitamin, at least until scientists solve the puzzle of folic acid and cancer.

However, if you stop taking a multivitamin, the authors suggest you consider taking a vitamin D supplement. The typical diet for most men and women doesn’t supply enough of this crucial vitamin, and while sun exposure boosts vitamin D production, it has health risks of its own.

Last month, a study suggested some multivitamins might increase cancer risk.

“Our study of supplemental multivitamins, vitamin C, vitamin E and folate did not show any evidence for a decreased risk of lung cancer,” wrote the study’s author, Christopher G. Slatore, M.D., of the University of Washington, in Seattle. “Indeed, increasing intake of supplemental vitamin E was associated with a slightly increased risk of lung cancer.”

Findings of the study of 77,000 vitamin users were published in the first issue for March of the American Thoracic Society’s American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

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Take your vitamin supplement — with folic acid

f you’re a young women, take a vitamin supplement with folic acid.

Public health experts have been saying this for years, because folic acid - a synthetic form of the B vitamin folate found in leafy green veggies - can reduce the risk of brain and spinal cord birth defects by up to 70 percent.

Alas, only 12 percent of women ages 18 to 45 have heard about the benefits of folic acid, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Among Hispanic women, awareness is even less, which the CDC says is why their children are 1.5 times to three times more likely to have a “neural tube” birth defect such as spina bifida than children of non-Hispanic white women. Continue Reading…

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