"Vitamin trouble," Stuart replied. "She took vitamin
D when she needed A. She took vitamin B when she was short of C, and her
system became overloaded with riboflavin, thiamine hydrochloride, and
pyridoxine, the need for which in human nutrition has not yet been
established." --From Stuart
Little, by E.B. White (1945)
Dietary Insurance:
A Daily Multivitamin
If you eat a healthy diet, do you need to take
vitamins? Not long ago, the answer from most experts would have been a
resounding "no". Today, though, there's good evidence that taking a daily
multivitamin makes sense for most adults.
What's changed? Not only have scientists determined why
we need pyridoxine (vitamin B6), but they are also accumulating evidence
that this vitamin and others do much more than ward off the so-called
diseases of deficiency, things like scurvy and rickets. Intake of several
vitamins above the minimum daily requirement may prevent heart disease,
cancer, osteoporosis, and other chromic diseases.
This summary will focus on vitamins with newly
recognized or suspected roles in health and disease. It will present some of
the evidence about vitamins' possible new roles, point out how to get more
of these in your diet, and assess the value of taking a daily multivitamin.
Vitamin A:
Vitamin A does much more than help you see in the dark.
It stimulates the production and activity of white blood cells, takes part
in remodeling bone, helps maintain the health of endothelial cells (those
lining the body's interior surfaces), and regulates cell growth and
division. This latter role had researchers exploring for years whether
insufficient vitamin A caused cancer. Several studies have dashed this
hypothesis, as have randomized trials of supplements containing beta
carotene, a precursor of vitamin A.
Although it's relatively easy to get too little vitamin
A, it's also easy to get too much. Intake of up to 10,000 IU, twice the
current recommended daily level, is thought to be safe. However, there is
some evidence that this much preformed vitamin A might increase the risk of
hip fracture or some birth defects.
Optimal Intake: The
current recommended intake of vitamin A is 5,000 IU for men and 4,000 IU for
women. Many breakfast cereals, juices, dairy products, and other foods are
fortified with vitamin A. Many fruits and vegetables, and some supplements,
also contain beta-carotene and other vitamin A precursors, which the body
can turn into vitamin A.
The 3 Bs: Vitamin
B6, Vitamin B12, and Folic Acid
One of the advances that changed the way we look at
vitamins is the discovery that too little folic acid, one of the eight B
vitamins, is linked to birth defects such as spina bifida and anencephaly.
Fifty years ago, no one knew what caused these birth defects, which occur
when the early development of tissues that eventually become the spinal
cord, the tissues that surround it, or the brain goes awry. Twenty five
years ago, British researchers found that mothers of children with spina
bifida had low vitamin levels. Eventually, two large trials in which women
were randomly assigned to take folic acid or a placebo showed that getting
too little folic acid increased a woman's chances of having a baby with
spina bifida or anencephaly and that getting enough folic acid could prevent
these birth defects.
Enough folic acid, at least 400 micrograms a day, isn't
always easy to get from food. That's why women of childbearing age are urged
to take extra folic acid. It's also why the US Food and Drug Administration
now requires that folic acid be added to most enriched breads, flour,
cornmeal, pastas, rice, and other grain products, along with the iron and
other micronutrients that have been added for years.
The other exciting discovery about folic acid and two
other B vitamins is that they may help fight heart
disease and some types of cancer. It's too early
to tell if there's merely an association between increased intake of
folic acid and other B vitamins and heart disease or cancer, or if high
intakes prevent these chronic diseases.
B Vitamins and
Heart Disease
In 1968, a Boston pathologist investigating the deaths
of two children from massive strokes wondered if the high levels of a
protein breakdown product called homocysteine in their systems could have
been the reason their arteries were as clogged with cholesterol as those of
a 65-year-old fast food addict. Since then, some-but not all-studies have
linked high levels of this breakdown product, called homocysteine, with
increased risks of heart disease and stroke.
Folic acid, vitamin B6, and vitamin B12 play key roles
in recycling homocysteine into methionine, one of the 20 or so building
blocks from which the body builds new proteins. Without enough folic acid,
vitamin B6, and vitamin B12, this recycling process becomes inefficient and
homocysteine levels increase. Several observational studies show that high
levels of homocysteine are associated with increased risks of heart disease
and stroke. Increasing intake of folic acid, vitamin B6, and vitamin B12
decreases homocysteine levels. And some observational studies show lower
risks of cardiovascular disease among people with higher intakes of folic
acid, those who use multivitamin supplements, or those with higher levels of
serum folate (the form of folic acid found in the body). However, other
prospective studies show little or no association between homocysteine and
cardiovascular disease. Ongoing randomized trials, such as the Women's
Antioxidant Cardiovascular Study and the Vitamin Intervention in Stroke
Prevention Study should yield more definitive answers regarding
homocysteine, B vitamins, and cardiovascular risk.
Folic Acid and
Cancer
In addition to recycling homocysteine, folate plays a
key role in building DNA, the complex compound that forms our genetic
blueprint. Observational studies show that people who get higher than
average amounts of folic acid from their diets or supplements have lower
risks of colon cancer and breast cancer. This could be especially important
for those who drink alcohol, since alcohol blocks the absorption of folic
acid and inactivates circulating folate. An interesting observation from the
Nurses' Health Study is that high intake of folic acid blunts the increased
risk of breast cancer seen among women who have more than one alcoholic
drink a day.
Optimal Intake: The
definition of a healthy daily intake of B vitamins isn't set in stone, and
is likely to change over the next few years as data from ongoing randomized
trials are evaluated. Because only a fraction of U.S. adults currently get
the recommended daily intake of B vitamins by diet alone, use of a
multivitamin supplement will become increasingly important.
Folic Acid: The current recommended intake for folic
acid is 400 micrograms per day. There are many excellent sources of folic
acid, including prepared breakfast cereals, beans, and fortified grains.
Vitamin B6:
A healthy diet should include 1.3 to 1.7 milligrams of vitamin B6.
Higher doses have been tested as a treatment for conditions ranging from
premenstrual syndrome to attention deficit disorder and carpal tunnel
syndrome. To date, there is little evidence that it works.
Vitamin B12:
The current recommended intake for vitamin B12 is 6 micrograms per
day. Barely 100 years ago, a lack of vitamin B12 was the cause of a common
and deadly disease called pernicious anemia. Its symptoms include memory
loss, disorientation, hallucinations, and tingling in the arms and legs.
Although full-blown pernicious anemia is less common today, it is still
often diagnosed in older people who have difficulty absorbing vitamin B12
from food. It's also possible that some people diagnosed with dementia or
Alzheimer's disease are actually suffering from the more reversible vitamin
B12 deficiency.
Vitamin C:
Vitamin C has been in the public eye for a long time. Even before its
discovery in 1932, nutrition experts recognized that something in
citrus fruits could prevent scurvy, a disease that killed as many as 2
million sailors between 1500 and 1800. More recently, Nobel laureate Linus
Pauling promoted daily megadoses of vitamin C (the amount in 12 to 24
oranges) as a way to prevent colds and protect the body from other chronic
diseases.
There's no question that vitamin C plays a role in
controlling infections. It's also a powerful antioxidant that can neutralize
harmful free radicals, and it helps make collagen, a tissue needed for
healthy bones, teeth, gums, and blood vessels. The question is, do you need
lots of vitamin C to keep you healthy?
No. Vitamin C's cold-fighting potential certainly
hasn't panned out. Small trials suggest that the amount of vitamin C in a
typical multivitamin taken at the start of a cold might ease symptoms, but
there's no evidence that megadoses make a difference, or that they prevent
colds. Studies of vitamin C and heart disease, cancer, and eye diseases such
as cataract and macular degeneration also show no clear patterns.
Optimal Intake:
The current recommended dietary intake for vitamin C is 90 mg for
men and 75 mg for women (add an extra 35 mg for smokers). There's no good
evidence that megadoses of vitamin C improve health. As the evidence
continues to unfold, 200 to 300 mg of vitamin C a day appears to be a good
target. This is easy to hit with a good diet and a standard multivitamin.
Excellent food sources of vitamin C are citrus fruits or citrus juices,
berries, green and red peppers, tomatoes, broccoli, and spinach. Many
breakfast cereals are also fortified with vitamin C.
Vitamin D: If you live north of the line connecting
San Francisco to Philadelphia, odds are you don't get enough vitamin D. The
same holds true if you don't, or can't, get outside for at least a 15-minute
daily walk in the sun. A study of people admitted to a Boston hospital, for
example, showed that 57% were deficient in vitamin D.
Vitamin D helps ensure that the body absorbs and
retains calcium and phosphorus, both critical for building bone. Laboratory
studies also show that vitamin D keeps cancer cells from growing and
dividing.
Some preliminary studies indicate that insufficient
intake of vitamin D is associated with an increased risk of fractures, and
that vitamin D supplementation may prevent them. Other early studies suggest
an association between low vitamin D intake and increased risks of prostate,
breast, colon, and other cancers.
Optimal Intake:
The current recommended intake of
vitamin D is 5 micrograms up to age 50, 10 micrograms between the ages of 51
and 70, and 15 micrograms after age 70. Very few foods naturally contain
vitamin D. Good sources include dairy products and breakfast cereals (which
are fortified with vitamin D), and fatty fish such as salmon and tuna. For
most people, the best way to get the recommended daily intake is by taking a
multivitamin.
Vitamin E:
For a time, vitamin E supplements looked like an easy way to prevent
heart disease. Promising observational studies, including the Nurses' Health
Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study,
suggested 20% to 40% reductions in coronary heart disease risk among
individuals who took vitamin E supplements (usually containing 400 IU or
more) for least two years.
The results of several randomized trials have dampened
enthusiasm for vitamin E's ability to prevent heart attacks or deaths from
heart disease among individuals with heart disease or those at high risk for
it. In the Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Sopravvivenza nell'Infarto
miocardio (known as the GISSI Prevention Trial), more than three years of
treatment with vitamin E had no effect on the rate of heart attacks,
strokes, or deaths from any cause among 11,000 heart attack survivors,
although it did appear to reduce sudden deaths and deaths due to
cardiovascular disease. Results from the Heart Outcomes Prevention
Evaluation (HOPE) trial also showed no benefit of four years worth of
vitamin E supplementation among more than 9,500 men and women already
diagnosed with heart disease or at high risk for it.
It's entirely possible that in secondary prevention
trials, the use of drugs such as aspirin, beta blockers, and ACE inhibitors
mask a modest effect of vitamin E, and that it may have benefits among
healthier people. Ongoing randomized trials of vitamin E, such as the
Women's Health Study and will tell us more about its possible benefits in
the coming years.
Optimal
Intake:
The recommended daily intake of vitamin E from food now stands at
15 milligrams from food. That's the equivalent of 22 IU from natural-source
vitamin E or 33 IUs of the synthetic form. Researchers are still writing the
book on vitamin E. Evidence from observational studies suggests that at
least 400 IU of vitamin E per day, and possibly more, are needed for optimal
health. Since standard multivitamins usually contain around 30 IU, a
separate vitamin E supplement is needed to achieve this level.
Vitamin K:
Vitamin K helps make six of the 13 proteins needed for blood
clotting. Its role in maintaining the clotting cascade is so important that
people who take anticoagulants such as warfarin (Coumadin) must be careful
to keep their vitamin K intake stable.
Lately, researchers have demonstrated that vitamin K is
also involved in building bone. Low levels of circulating vitamin K have
been linked with low bone density, and supplementation with vitamin K shows
improvements in biochemical measures of bone health.
A report from the Nurses' Health Study suggests that women who get at
least 110 micrograms of vitamin K a day are 30% less likely to break a hip
as women who get less than that. Among the nurses, eating a serving of
lettuce or other green leafy vegetable a day cut the risk of hip fracture in
half when compared with eating one serving a week. Data from the Framingham
Heart Study also shows an association between high vitamin K intake and
reduced risk of hip fracture.
Optimal Intake: The
recommended daily intake for vitamin K is 80 micrograms for men and 65 for
women. Because this vitamin is found in so many foods, especially green
leafy vegetables and commonly used cooking oils, most adults get enough of
it. According to a 1996 survey, though, a substantial number of Americans,
particularly children and young adults, aren't getting the vitamin K they
need.
Antioxidants
Our cells must constantly contend with nasty substances
called free radicals. They can damage DNA, the inside or artery walls,
proteins in the eye--just about any substance or tissue imaginable. Some are
made inside the body, inevitable byproducts of turning food into energy.
Others come from the air we breathe and the food we eat.
We aren't defenseless against free radicals. We extract
free-radical fighters, called antioxidants, from food. Fruits, vegetables,
and other plant-based foods deliver dozens, if not hundreds, of
antioxidants. The most common are vitamin C, vitamin E, beta-carotene and
related carotenoids. Food also supplies minerals such as selenium and
manganese, which are needed by enzymes that destroy free radicals.
During the 1990s, the term antioxidants became a huge
nutritional buzz word. They were promoted as wonder agents that could
prevent heart disease, cancer, cataracts, memory loss, and a host of other
conditions.
It's true that the package of antioxidants,
minerals, fiber, and other substances found in fruits, vegetables, and whole
grains help prevent a variety of chronic diseases. Whether high doses
vitamin C, vitamin E, or other antioxidants can accomplish the same feat is
an open question.
The evidence accumulated so far isn't promising.
Randomized trials of vitamin C, vitamin E, and beta-carotene haven't
revealed much in the way of protection from heart disease, cancer, or
aging-related eye diseases. Ongoing trials of other antioxidants, such as
lutein and zeaxanthin for macular degeneration and lycopene for prostate
cancer, are underway.
The Bottom Line
A standard multivitamin supplement doesn't come close
to making up for an unhealthy diet. It provides a dozen or so of the
vitamins known to maintain health, a mere shadow of what's available from
eating plenty of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. Instead, a daily
multivitamin provides a sort of nutritional safety net.
While most people get enough vitamins to avoid the
classic deficiency diseases, relatively few get enough of five key vitamins
that may be important in preventing several chronic diseases. These include:
- Folic acid
- Vitamin B6
- Vitamin B12
- Vitamin D
- Vitamin E
A standard, store-brand, RDA-level multivitamin can
supply you with enough of these vitamins for under $40 a year. It's about
the least expensive insurance you can buy.
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