Posted on 10/14/2011 7:20:30 PM PDT by decimon
If it's Monday, it must be bad news about multivitamin day -- or was that Wednesday? No, Wednesday was good news about vitamin D, not so good news about vitamin E -- if you're confused, join the club.
The alphabet soup of vitamin studies making headlines in the last few weeks has left more than one head spinning, and most clinicians scrambling for answers.
As the dust begins to settle, physicians interviewed by MedPage Today and ABC News agreed on a bit of simple wisdom -- a healthy diet is more important than a fistful of supplements.
"I had already asked my patients to stop their vitamin supplements four to five years ago, with the exception of those with a deficiency of vitamin D, ... pregnant patients [who should get] folate and prenatal multivitamins, or those with cognitive impairment, when I would recommend a vitamin B complex," Albert Levy, MD, a primary care physician in New York, said in an email to MedPage Today and ABC News.
Whether patients heed the advice is another question, as recent research has shown that more take supplements now than ever before. More than half of Americans report taking a multivitamin or other dietary supplement, up from 40% just two decades ago.
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
I’d agree with you but I know the value of extra Vit C and D.
Reading about intravenous Vit C and it's ability to control pain is extremely interesting.
The major contribution to our current life-expectancy is control of infectious disease. That results from sanitation measures and vaccinations, and has nothing to do with adequate nutrition. And the observation that a lack of a particular nutrient leads to pathological conditions does not mean that excesses of that same nutrient will lead to super-health. Quite the opposite, in many cases. Either you have enough of a given nutrient, or you don't. In addition to control of infectious disease, genetics plays a huge role in life span.
Unfortunately, its hard to do that with todays balanced diet. By the time that tomato arrives at your house after its trip from Holland, or the green pepper gets here from California, or the grape is eaten after being shipped from Chile, its questionable whether much nutrition remains in it. A valid case can be made that people who dont raise their own food ought to take supplements just to restore the nutrition that is supposed to be in a balanced diet.
I highly question that all the nutrients are somehow disappearing during shipment. According to this article, the half life of some of those compounds is 6-8 days, and the loss is mediated through tissue death. Which suggests to me that the nutrient loss occurs in proportion to the degradation of the veggies. I don't know about you, but I avoid buying or eating any produce that doesn't look nearly perfect. BTW, I would ignore the pink editorial note at the end of the article I linked. The article was written on the basis of scientific research; the editorial note was not.
Its also been clearly demonstrated that the office worker who lives north of Charleston, South Carolina is not getting enough Vitamin D because he isnt exposed to enough sunlight in the winter, especially if hes black. This phenomenon has been linked to the increasing incidence of asthma in black children. One may reasonably assert that its appropriate for those who live in northern latitudes to take Vitamin D supplements.
I'm highly skeptical of many of those vitamin D claims; for instance, the blanket assertion that we cannot get enough vitamin D through normal sun exposure. It sounds like a ploy to sell more vitamins to me (as do a lot of these claims--vitamins are a HUGE business). In the one special case you mentioned, that of black people living in the north, the point is probably valid that they don't get enough sunlight. That's because the high levels of pigment in black people's skin is an adaptation to living in an area with strong sunlight, very unlike what one finds in the US. That pigment does such a great job of blocking UV light that little of it penetrates down into the living cells where it is needed for vitamin D synthesis. Those of us who have European or Asian ancestry, especially if our ancestors came from the northern parts of those continents, are far better adapted to the amount of sunlight that we are exposed to here. We have far less of that pigment, so more UV light can penetrate.
BTW, I've noticed that American blacks, in general, are lighter than African blacks. Maybe because they're adapting to the lower levels of sunlight in the US as compared to Africa?
And are you really going to be able to consume enough dairy foods to take in 1500 mg per day of calcium needed to sustain strong bones into old age? You can eat a balanced diet, whatever that may consist of, and still have osteopenia or osteoporosis after menopause. So calcium and Vitamin D supplements may be appropriate.
Once again, you're bringing pathological conditions into the discussion of normal nutrition. Bone diseases associated with menopause are related to genetics. A woman whose genetics predispose her to osteoporosis may not be able to consume enough extra calcium or vitamin D to counteract the bone loss, because she DOES have a genetic disease. Luckily, there are drugs developed to treat those diseases now.
Theres just too much sound science demonstrating that some supplements really do improve health and the quality of life.
No, there is no science that says that consuming excesses of trace nutrients is superior to consuming adequate amounts of them. While fostering the belief that more=better is excellent for the supplement industry, it is not based in rigorous science. In 2009, Americans spent $26.9 billion on dietary supplements, including vitamins, according to Carlotta Mast, editorial director at Nutrition Business Journal. Vitamins are Big Business.
Genetic problems are separate from the issue of taking excesses of trace nutrients. The best that you can do is try to get proper nutrition and exercise--and NOT load up on supplements, which can do more harm than good. Heart disease and other circulatory problems run in my family, on both sides. So far, my longest-lived relative died when he was 81 or 82... the next longest-lived was 72. My sister has high blood pressure. I exercise and try to eat right, and I don't have any cardio problems. I never had high blood pressure, except when I had preeclampsia when I was pregnant. My resting heart rate is below 60. Maybe I was lucky and avoided getting the nasty genes that kill off other members of my family--I don't know.
The bottom line is still, either you get enough of the trace nutrients, or you don't. It's just like oxygen--either you get enough, or you don't; consuming more than enough won't make you healthier.
Taking excessive vitamin supplements has nothing to do with longevity. I already said this above, but I’ll say it again: the biggest factor in our current lifespan is control of infectious disease, through sanitation measures and vaccination.
The fact that your doctor got colon cancer and you didn’t is highly unlikely to be related to the fact that you consume huge quantities of a trace nutrient. I suspect that a formal study would not reveal that people who take excess doses of trace nutrients have a lower cancer rate than people who are adequately nourished but do not consume excess trace nutrients. My mother in law died of breast cancer several years ago; she was a big believer in the miracles of supplements. She had many bottles of various supplements that she took on a regular basis, and she sold them, as well. But she still died of cancer.
Estrogen seems to have a protective effect against heart disease, which is why men and post-menopausal women have higher rates of heart disease than pre-menopausal women. It has nothing to do with the monthly loss of iron. (If you cook using iron skillets, btw, you should be able to consume sufficient iron without ever popping a pill.)
So far, there have not been many studies on long-term effects of taking excessive amounts of trace nutrients. It *is* known that excessive vitamin C causes kidney damage, but that’s just one effect. Scientists are becoming more interested in these questions, which is good—but, given the amount of money in the vitamin industry, getting funding to do those studies may be problematic.
You had better address that to ExDemMom, who does not agree with you. I’m on your side. Except I’m too busy to go on debating her today.
A link to a few abstracts by Dr. Ames about the importance of getting adequate nutrition:
http://mcb.berkeley.edu/index.php?option=com_mcbfaculty&name=amesb
Firstly, I welcome your input. This, like every topic, benefits from informed discussion.
As far as I can tell, that vitamin C causes kidney stones was an assumption not verified. Mega-doses of anything seems a bad idea to me unless targeted at some specific condition.
Near all I’ve read about vitamin D leads me to believe that few of us will get adequate amounts without supplementation.
I’m one of those people described as taking a muti-vitamin, mineral, etc. pill as ‘insurance’ against inadequacy in diet. The pill I take has no mega-doses of anything.
Ames has been everyone’s hero at one time or other. ;-)
“In the 1970s, Bruce Ames was a hero to environmentalists—the inventor of the Ames Test, which allows scientists to test chemicals to see whether they cause mutations in bacteria and perhaps cancer in humans. His research and testimony led to bans on such synthetic chemicals as Tris, the flame-retardant used in children’s pajamas. A world renowned cancer researcher with a calm, reasoned manner, Ames was an ideal witness in the case against man-made chemicals. As science writer John Tierney aptly described him in Hippocrates, “He has a quiet, kindly tone of authority as he patiently explains why things are the way they are....He sounds so sensible. which is one reason he made such a good witness for the environmentalists in the 1970s.”
But it’s a scientist’s imperative to change his mind when the data change— and recent data have made Ames deeply suspicious of high dosage chemical testing and especially of the notion that man-made chemicals are uniquely dangerous. We are, he has discovered, surrounded by mutagens—not only synthetic chemicals but also natural ones—and blindly banning suspicious modern substances can do more harm than good.”
http://reason.com/archives/1994/11/01/of-mice-and-men
I think a definition of “excessive” is in order....
It would be easy to create a similar study showing that people who take prescription drugs die earlier than those who don’t.
There are also been grants made to study the effect of intravenous Vit C on cancer.
It's been a long time since I spent a lot of time researching it but it's fascinating reading once you get started.
The damage caused by excessive doses of vitamin C and other water-soluble vitamins isn’t so much kidney stones, but deposits of oxalate (or other) crystals in the kidney tubules and other organs. Furthermore, the process of straining the excess vitamin C out of the blood puts needless wear-and-tear on the kidneys.
Given the huge profits of the vitamin industry, I would take anything claiming that you can’t get adequate amounts of whatever nutrient from your diet or normal activities with a huge grain of salt. It makes no sense at all to believe that we evolved to need higher doses of trace nutrients from our diet than we can get through our natural activities. Our diets are far more varied than those of our ancestors, meaning that the likelihood of missing essential nutrients (as long as we make an effort to “eat healthy”) is far lower than what our ancestors faced.
"Excessive" means more than your body needs to carry out metabolic functions. When you take in more than you need, your body either discards the excess through urination (putting strain on the kidneys proportionate to the amount of excess), or stores it in fat deposits,which can lead to other toxic effects.
To a certain extent, your body is equipped with a sophisticated system for eliminating excess trace nutrients... but stressing those systems with large excesses can have very deleterious effects.
It is impossible to put numerical values on what constitutes "adequate" or "excessive" trace nutrient intake. Like calorie intake, these are very individual.
Are you a Chemist?
Are you a Scientist?
Do you have a Degree of any type? And if so..what might that be?
I'm not asking to be an ass....I just thought it might be helpful.
Are you saying...when you say "our", you mean American's?
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