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Vitamins:
More May Be Too Many
Excerpt
By Gina
Kolata,
The New York Times
A growing number of medical experts
are concerned that Americans are overdoing their vitamin consumption.
As many as 70 percent of the population is taking supplements,
mostly vitamins, convinced that the pills will make them healthier.
But researchers say that vitamin
supplements cannot correct for a poor diet, that multivitamins
have not been shown to prevent any disease and that it is easy
to reach high enough doses of certain vitamins and minerals to
actually increase the risk of disease.
No longer, the experts say, are
they concerned about vitamin deficits. Those are almost unheard
of today, even with the population eating less than ideal diets
and skimping on fruits and vegetables. Instead, the concern is
with the dangers of vitamin excess.
"There has been a transition from
focusing on minimum needs to the reality that today our problem
is excess excess calories and, yes, excesses of vitamins and minerals
as well," said Dr. Benjamin Caballero, a member of the Food and
Nutrition Board at the National Academy of Sciences and the director
of the Center for Human Nutrition at Johns Hopkins University.
Dr. Caballero said that for some
supplements, including vitamin A, the difference between the recommended
dose and a dose that could lead to bad outcomes like osteoporosis
was not large. Popular multivitamins, he added, often contain
what could be risky doses.
"Certainly," he said, "by consuming
supplements, people can reach that level."
Doctors who once told patients
that multivitamins were, at worst, a waste of money now say they
are questioning that idea.
"All of a sudden, scientists are
rearing back and saying, `Wait a minute, do we really know that
we need this and do we really know that we need that?' " said
Dr. Ruth Kava, nutrition director at the American Council on Science
and Health, a consumer foundation in Manhattan that is in part
financed by industry.
With vitamin A in particular, it
is easy to step over the edge into a danger zone, said Dr. Joan
McGowan, chief of the musculoskeletal diseases branch at the National
Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases.
"You can be eating Total cereal,
drinking fortified milk, taking a multivitamin," Dr. McGowan said.
"You can get into a situation where you're getting more than you
need. Until recently, there was little concern about vitamin A
and bone health."
Now, she added, "we may have to
rethink the issues."
Similar questions are being raised
about other vitamins and minerals, notably iron and vitamins E
and C.
Researchers say the questions involve
multivitamins taken by healthy people, not specific vitamins or
minerals taken by groups with specific needs. Some elderly people,
for example, may be deficient in vitamin B12 because they lose
their ability to absorb it from foods. People who spend little
time outdoors may require vitamin D, which the skin makes when
it is exposed to sunlight. Even when older people are in the sun,
aging skin loses much of its ability to synthesize the vitamin.
Pregnant women who do not receive
enough folic acid, a vitamin in fruits and vegetables that is
added to enriched flour, are at increased risk of having babies
with neural tube defects. Because the vitamin is needed at the
very start of pregnancy, some advocate folic acid supplements
for all who might become pregnant, just to be sure they are protected.
For most people, however, the issue
is not deficits. Instead, nutrition researchers ask: Do people
eating relatively healthy diets with fresh fruits and vegetables
and not too many calories or fats benefit from multivitamins or
other supplements? Do those whose diets are abysmal, heavy on
fast foods and lacking in fruits and vegetables, make up for some
deficits if they take multivitamin pills?
Dr. Annette Dickinson, president
of the Council for Responsible Nutrition, a group that represents
the supplement industry, says 70 percent of Americans sometimes
take supplements usually multivitamins or individual vitamins
and minerals and 40 percent take them regularly.
"Our position," she said, "is that
most people, literally most people, would benefit from taking
a multivitamin every day. It's insuring adequate and even generous
intake of all the nutrients."
The most popular individual supplements
are vitamins C and E, said Dr. Robert M. Russell, the director
the Human Nutrition Research Center of Agriculture Department
at Tufts University, who is head of the Food and Nutrition Board.
Scientists once thought those vitamins could help prevent ailments
like cancer and heart disease, but rigorous studies found no such
effects.
Vitamin E supplements can increase
the risk of heart attacks and strokes, and studies of vitamin
C supplements consistently failed to show that it had any beneficial
effects.
"The two vitamins that are the
most not needed are the ones most often taken," Dr. Russell said.
Excess vitamin C is excreted in
the urine, but excesses of some other vitamins are stored in fat,
where they can build up. Of particular concern, researchers say,
is vitamin A. It is found in liver, and small amounts are added
to milk. But for most people who are reaching worrisome levels,
the main source is supplements, multivitamins, nutrition bars,
health drinks and cereals.
Several recent large studies indicate
that people with high levels of vitamin A in their blood have
a greater risk for osteoporosis. People can easily reach a potentially
dangerous level, about five times the recommended dose, by taking
vitamins and supplements, nutrition researchers say. Some popular
multivitamins run 1,500 micrograms a pill, twice the recommended
daily amount and a level that, in one recent study, doubled the
risk of bone fractures. Some supplements provide as much as 4,500
micrograms a day, well above the level that the National Academy
of Sciences calls an upper limit for safety.
"If you have a good source of vitamin
A in your food and you take a supplement with another 100 percent,
you can easily reach a level that can accumulate" to one associated
with increased risk of osteoporosis, Dr. Caballero said.
Dr. Dickinson said that multivitamin
manufacturers were decreasing the vitamin A in their products,
but that it might take a year for the reformulated products to
appear.
Others warn about overdosing on
other vitamins and minerals.
Dr. Richard J. Wood, director of
the mineral bioavailability laboratory at Tufts, worries about
iron overload, which can increase the risk of heart disease. In
a large federal research effort, the Framingham study, Dr. Wood
found that 12 percent of the elderly participants had worrisome
levels. "Hardly anyone had iron deficiency anemia," he said. "But
16 percent were taking iron-containing supplements."
While readily noting that the proof
of a benefit is not in, some researchers said they took multivitamins.
They agree with Dr. Joann E. Manson, chief of preventive medicine
at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, who takes a multivitamin
and recommends it to patients whose diets seem imbalanced.
"I think it's a good form of insurance,"
Dr. Manson said. "I don't think there's a significant downside.
We don't have the evidence yet that it is beneficial."
Dr. Robert H. Fletcher, a professor
of ambulatory medicine at Harvard Medical School, also takes multivitamins.
For him, the deciding factor was whether he ingested enough folic
acid. Studies have suggested that high levels of folic acid can
protect against heart disease by lowering levels of another substance,
homocysteine. High levels of homocysteine are associated with
increased risks of heart disease, but there is no study showing
definitively that reducing homocysteine levels protects against
heart disease.
So far, the folic acid studies
are suggestive, not definitive. But Dr. Fletcher said, "If I were
a betting man, I'd bet on it."
But a European study, reported
recently at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology, found
that folic acid supplements actually made matters worse for heart
disease patients. The study, the Folate After Coronary Intervention
Trial, involved 626 patients who were having stents inserted into
blocked arteries to keep them open. Half were randomly assigned
to take folic acid, and the rest took a placebo. Six months later,
the arteries of those taking folic acid were significantly narrower
than the arteries of those taking a placebo, exactly the opposite
of what the investigators had expected.
A previous study, however, had
found that folate helped such patients. Dr. Eric Topol, an interventional
cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic, said he thought the truth
was that it was neither helpful nor harmful for most people. "Over
all, the likely explanation is that there is a neutral effect,
and these relatively small trials found opposite findings due
to the play of chance," he said.
Dr. Topol said B vitamins, like
folic acid, "can't be recommended" at this point, except for people
with extremely low levels of homocysteine, and even then their
value has not been rigorously demonstrated.
Karen Miller-Kovach, chief scientist
for Weight Watchers International, has a compromise. She takes
a child's multivitamin, with its much lower levels of vitamins
and minerals.
"It is virtually impossible to
find an adult multivitamin and mineral supplement that is only
100 percent of the R.D.A.," Ms. Miller-Kovach said. "All are 150
percent or so. I worry about getting too much and I worry about
imbalances. They put in more of the things that are inexpensive,
like B vitamins and things with consumer appeal like vitamin C.
The formulas are based on market forces, not nutritional needs."
Others decided against taking the
pills.
Dr. Kava, of the American Council
on Science and Health, said she abstained. "People ask me what
vitamins I take," she said. "I say I don't take any. They look
at me askance. They can't believe I'm a nutritionist."
Dr. Caballero also does not take
vitamins. "There is no disease I know of that is prevented by
multivitamins," he said.
In fact, Dr. Caballero said, typical
pills, which contain a variety of minerals as well as vitamins,
have ingredients that actually cancel out one another. "Minerals
antagonize each other for absorption," he said. "Zinc competes
with iron which competes with calcium."
Dr. Caballero also notes that large,
rigorous studies that were supposed to show that individual vitamins
prevented disease ended up showing the opposite. Those who took
the vitamins actually had more of the disease it was meant to
prevent.
Two large randomized trials of
vitamin A and beta carotene that researchers hoped would show
a protective value against cancer found no benefit, and one found
that participants who took the supplements had more cancer.
A large study of vitamin E and
heart disease found that it did not prevent heart attacks and
that people taking it had more strokes.
Another study, of women with heart
disease, found that antioxidant vitamins might actually increase
the rate of atherosclerosis.
Dr. Caballero said people were
deluding themselves if they thought multivitamins could make up
for poor diets.
"If you eat junk food every day,
vitamins are the least of your problems," he said. "You cannot
replace a healthy diet. We don't know what ingredient in a healthy
diet is responsible for which condition. We do know that people
who consume five servings or more of fruits and vegetables have
less disease. But we don't know which ingredient. We tried beta
carotene, vitamin E and antioxidants, and they didn't work.
"People are looking for the magic
bullet. It does not exist."
Reference
Source 117
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