There has been no shortage of "experts" and naysayers in recent months
downplaying the health benefits of dietary supplementation, but time and
again science proves them wrong.
New research by scientists at
Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School has found that
long-term daily use of multivitamin supplements can work to reduce the
risk of men developing cataracts.
A research team led by Dr. William Christen of Harvard Medical School, which published its findings in the journal Opthalmology,
said current study results mimic previous research indicating that
vitamin supplementation is helpful in boosting eye health, though the
team admitted that there is little information regarding the link
between long-term multivitamin use and the risk of developing eye
diseases.
As reported by Medical News Today (MNT),
Christen's team analyzed data from 12,641 male doctors from the United
States aged 50 years or older. All of the men were part of the
Physician's Health Study II (PHS II) and were assessed from 1997 to
2011:
Half of the men were randomly assigned to receive a
common daily multivitamin, alongside vitamin C, vitamin E and beta
carotene supplements, while the other half of the participants took a
placebo. Vitamins were given to participants at doses in line with US
dietary allowance recommendations.
'Even 10 percent is significant'
The
scientists followed the men over an average span of 11.2 years to find
out how many in each group contracted new cases of cataract or
age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
Cataracts are cloudy
areas in the lens of the eye that can cause blurred vision, while AMD is
defined as the deterioration of the macula -- the part of the eye
responsible for sharpness of vision, MNT reported.
According to a PRNewswire
press release, the results of the study found that, in the group of
participants given a placebo, there were 945 new cases of cataract
reported. But the group receiving the daily multivitamin reported only
872 new cases of cataract, or a 9 percent risk reduction for the condition. But there were additional findings:
This
risk was even lower, at 13 percent, for nuclear cataract, which occurs
at the center of the lens and is the most common variety of cataract
associated with the aging process. Given that an estimated 10 million
adults in the United States have impaired vision due to cataract, even a
modest reduction in risk of cataract has potential to improve public
health outcomes.
More research is needed
"If
multivitamins really do reduce the risk of cataract, even by a modest 10
percent, this rather small reduction would nonetheless have a large
public health impact," said Christen.
Researchers also found that, in the multivitamin
group, there were 152 new cases of visually significant AMD (which is
defined as best-corrected visual acuity of 20/30 or worse), versus 129
new cases in the placebo group.
The scientists said that their
findings for AMD risk were not that statistically significant. They also
said that, though their findings contradict earlier studies indicating
that supplement use may reduce the risk of AMD, different supplements,
doses and objectives were applied in their study, which could help
explain the disparity.
Christen says that further examination and research into multivitamin supplementation and eye disease is still necessary.
"This
finding of more cases of AMD in the multivitamin group than in the
placebo group, although not statistically significant, does raise some
concerns," he said. "Clearly, this finding needs to be examined further
in other trials of multivitamin supplements in both men and women."
Recent reports have completely downplayed any and all supplementation as a worthless waste of money -- but, as noted by Natural News editor Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, the "findings" were pulled from an editorial published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, which is a pro-Big Pharma source "almost entirely funded by pharmaceuticals which compete with multivitamins."
Sources:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com
http://www.prnewswire.com
http://www.naturalnews.com
http://annals.org
http://science.naturalnews.com
0 comments:
Post a Comment