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Vitamins
Reduce Children's Heart Risk
Excerpt
By
Maggie
Fox, Reuters Health
Children and young adults who have inherited high cholesterol
may reduce their risk of clogged arteries by taking vitamins C
and E, researchers reported on Monday.
The vitamins improve blood flow
through the arteries and may prevent the damage that leads to
atherosclerosis, commonly known as hardening of the arteries,
the researchers said.
Writing in the journal Circulation,
Marguerite Engler of the University of California San Francisco
and colleagues there and in Austria said the study is the first
to show that vitamins can reverse the damage as well.
"When we gave these children moderate
doses of vitamins C and E for six weeks, we saw a significant
improvement in blood-vessel function, which is an important indicator
of cardiovascular health," Engler said in a statement.
An estimated 50 million U.S. children
have high levels of cholesterol, and thus a high risk of heart
disease and heart attack. The American Heart Association defines
this as cholesterol of 200 or higher and low-density lipoprotein
-- LDL or "bad" cholesterol -- of 130 or higher.
Drugs including statins work very
well to lower cholesterol levels in adults but they can have severe
side-effects and are not usually recommended for children.
"The findings of this study suggest
hope for children with abnormally high cholesterol levels that
their condition can be improved through vitamin supplements,"
said Patricia Grady, director of the National Institute of Nursing
Research, which helped fund the study.
KIDS NOT GETTING THE RIGHT DIET
Diets rich in fruits and vegetables
and low in fat, especially animal fat, have also been shown to
lower cholesterol and the risk of heart disease -- but most Americans
do not eat this kind of diet.
"Our dilemma was that these kids
are supposed to be getting how many servings of fruits and vegetables
a day but they aren't doing it," Engler said in a telephone interview.
"We thought, 'let's still keep
up the diet counseling but also let's try the vitamin supplements'."
Engler's team studied 15 children
and young adults age 9 to 20, who had average cholesterol levels
of 242 with LDL of 187 on average.
Half the children got daily does
of 500 milligrams of vitamin C and 400 international units of
vitamin E for six weeks. The other half got placebos.
Then the groups were switched.
Better diet alone reduced LDL by
about 8 percent, but the vitamins, as expected, did not affect
cholesterol levels.
The researchers measured how well
the arteries were working by examining flow-mediated dilation
of the brachial artery.
They were looking for signs of
endothelial dysfunction, which can cause blood vessels to stiffen,
meaning they do not stretch to accommodate increased blood flow.
It is one of the earliest signs of atherosclerosis.
The endothelium is the inner lining
of the blood vessels. It releases nitric oxide, which causes the
blood vessels to open. The vitamins may restore this process in
damaged arteries by reacting with charged particles known as free
radicals that damage cells.
Flow-mediated dilation of the brachial
artery was around 6 at the start and for those patients given
placebo or diet alone, but it was 9.5 after the children got the
vitamins.
"Normal FMD of the brachial artery
in children is reportedly between 8 percent and 12 percent," the
researchers wrote.
Reference
Source 89
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