Vitamin E May Help Reduce Diabetes
Risk
A daily dose of vitamin E may help delay
the onset of type 2 diabetes in people at high risk of the disease,
preliminary research suggests.
Researchers in New Zealand found
that high-dose vitamin E appeared to temporarily improve insulin
resistance -- a precursor to type 2 diabetes -- among 41 overweight
adults.
Though the improvement was short-lived,
another diabetes risk factor -- elevations in a liver enzyme called
alanine transferase -- changed for the better throughout the six-month
stud
"These results suggest that vitamin
E could have a role to play in delaying the onset of diabetes
in at-risk individuals," Dr. Patrick J. Manning and colleagues
at the University of Otago in Dunedin report in the journal Diabetes
Care.
Some past studies have reached
similar conclusions. A recent study found that people whose diets
had a healthy dose of antioxidants, including vitamin E, had a
lower diabetes risk than those with lower antioxidant intakes.
And vitamin E has been shown to help some diabetics gain better
control over their blood sugar.
The new study included 80 overweight
adults ages 31 to 65. Overweight and obese individuals are at
increased risk of developing insulin resistance, in which the
body loses sensitivity to the hormone insulin, causing blood sugar
levels to soar.
According to Manning's team, excess
fat may speed the production of oxygen free radicals, potentially
cell-damaging byproducts of normal metabolism. Compounding this,
overweight people tend to have low levels of antioxidants, which
counter the effects of free radicals. It's hypothesized that the
resulting oxidative stress may contribute to insulin resistance.
To see whether vitamin E can alter
oxidative stress and insulin resistance, Manning and his colleagues
randomly assigned study participants to take either vitamin E
or a placebo pill every day for six months. For the first three
months, the treatment group took 800 International Units (IU)
of vitamin E each day, followed by 1,200 IU per day for the next
three months -- doses many times the recommended dietary allowance
of 22 IU.
The researchers found that at both
the three- and six-month marks, plasma peroxides, which are markers
of oxidative stress, had fallen in the vitamin E group. After
three months, blood sugar levels and insulin sensitivity had also
improved, but the gains did not remain through the sixth month.
On the other hand, the researchers
found, there was a lasting decline in blood levels of alanine
transferase liver enzymes, elevations of which have been tied
to a heightened diabetes risk. The liver, the authors note, plays
a key role in sugar and insulin metabolism, and is the main site
of insulin clearance from the blood.
According to Manning's team, vitamin
E may boost insulin sensitivity and decrease diabetes risk in
a number of ways, including by reducing oxidative stress to cells
and by improving liver function.
However, the researchers note,
it's unclear why blood sugar levels and insulin resistance improved
only temporarily, when markers of oxidative stress and liver function
continued to look better. A larger study, they conclude, is needed
to clarify the picture.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care, September
2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 24, 2004
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