Blog Category:
11/17/2008
JoMarie Klapach
Comments (0)

Vitamins Don't Prevent Heart Disease

Vitamins C and E -- pills taken by millions of Americans -- do nothing to prevent heart disease in men, one of the largest and longest studies of these supplements has found.

Vitamin E even appeared to raise the risk of bleeding strokes, a danger seen in at least one earlier study.

Besides questioning whether vitamins help, "we have to worry about potential harm," said Barbara Howard, a nutrition scientist at MedStar Research Institute of Hyattsville, Md.

She has no role in the research but reviewed and discussed it yesterday at an American Heart Association conference. Results also were published online by the Journal of the American Medical Association.

About 12 percent of Americans take supplements of C and E despite growing evidence that these antioxidants do not prevent heart disease and may even be harmful.

Male smokers taking vitamin E had a higher rate of bleeding strokes in a previous study, and several others found no benefit for heart health.

As for vitamin C, some research suggests it may aid cancer, not fight it. A previous study in women at high risk of heart problems found it did not prevent heart attacks.

Few long-term studies have been done. The new one is the Physicians Health Study, led by Drs. Howard Sesso and J. Michael Gaziano of Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

It involved 14,641 male doctors, 50 or older, including 5 percent who had heart disease at the time the study started in 1997. They were put into four groups and given either vitamin E, vitamin C, both, or dummy pills. The dose of E was 400 international units every other day; C was 500 milligrams daily.

After an average of eight years, no difference was seen in the rates of heart attack, stroke or heart-related deaths among the groups.

However, 39 men taking E suffered bleeding strokes versus only 23 of the others, which works out to a 74 percent greater risk for vitamin-takers.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and several vitamin makers. Results were so clear that they would be unlikely to change if the study were done in women, minorities, or with different formulations of the vitamins.

For more free information about heart disease, please contact the lawyers at Berger & Lagnese, LLC in Pittsburgh.



Category: Medical Malpractice


There are no comments.

Post a comment

Post a Comment to "Vitamins Don't Prevent Heart Disease"

To reply to this message, enter your reply in the box labeled "Message", hit "Post Message."

Username:*

Password:*

Register for an account

Message:

Notify me of follow-up comments via email.

For security purposes, please enter the graphic text in the box below: [hit F5 if you can not read the text]

Contact Us

Name:*

Phone:*

Email:*

Tell us more:*


Berger & Lagnese, LLC

310 Grant Street
Suite 720
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Phone: (412) 471-4300
Fax: (412) 471-3116
Toll Free: (800) 350-6161
Get Directions

Testimonials

  • For a medical malpractice attorney in Pittsburgh, PA, I recommend Joshua Berger. I had a heart surgery that injured me. Attorney Berger got me a great settlement, prepared me well, and his law firm was kind and caring.
  • Attorney Paul Lagnese "He Understood"
  • The lawyers at Berger & Lagnese treated me with dignity and respect.
  • Attorney Josh Berger Recommended For Death of Man After Carotid Artery Surgery
  • Attorney David Paul reccomended for his outstanding job!
  • Attorney Paul Lagnese Recommended for Medical Malpractice Cases in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

View All