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STUDY FINDS HUGE VARIABILITY IN VITAMIN E ABSORPTION

PSA Rising, NewYork. January 16, 2004 - A new study has found that cereal fortified with vitamin E has a very high rate of absorption into the bloodstream, whereas pills taken separately with the same food have inconsistent effects, and taking the supplements alone is largely useless.

It's pretty clear by now that vitamin E can't cure a lifetime of poor health habits, but it may also be true that it has values in preventing disease and promoting health that have not been fully recognized in some of the research. Margaret Traber, Linus Pauling Institute at OSU   

The research was just published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition by scientists from the Linus Pauling Institute at Oregon State University.

The study points the way to more effective methods of taking this essential vitamin if people wish to supplement their diet, said Maret Traber, a professor with OSU's Linus Pauling Institute and national expert on vitamin E who recently served on federal panels to update the RDA for this vitamin.

As an antioxidant, vitamin E is one of the most commonly taken vitamin supplements in the world and included in virtually every multivitamin pill.

The research may explain, Traber said, why many past research studies done with vitamin E have varied findings. It's quite possible, she said, that the manner in which people took vitamin E supplements and the variation in its bioavailability from person to person have yielded widely inconsistent results about the value of this nutrient in heart disease and other degenerative diseases.

It may also be time to consider routine fortification of more foods with this vitamin, Traber said.

"For good reasons, Americans are increasingly moving towards low-fat diets," Traber said. "But average low-fat diets provide only about 5-8 international units a day of vitamin E. The recommended dietary allowance of vitamin E is 30 I.U. and it's possible that higher amounts than that are useful for optimal health. So we have to find ways to make sure everyone is getting enough of this nutrient."

A glitch, the researchers say, is that vitamin E is an oil, and people are now being told to use oils very sparingly. It can be found in nuts, oily fish, some vegetables and oils such as safflower, olive and canola oil. The most common way that people get vitamin E is through rich desserts and cooking oils.

"If people are getting all the vitamin E they need through a healthy, balanced diet, that's great," Traber said. "But we really don't want to be telling people to eat more fat, and that's generally where vitamin E is found. That's why it's appealing to find an effective way of obtaining this nutrient, such as vitamin E fortification of what is essentially a low-fat food."

This controlled study was done by LPI scientists, funded by and in collaboration with the Bell Nutrition Institute of General Mills.

The cereal company may have an interest, of course, in building a scientific basis for promoting vitamin E enriched products.

How the study was done

In this study, scientists tested the results of four different types of breakfasts:

  • a pill of 400 I.U. of vitamin E with skim milk;
  • a serving of a wheat breakfast cereal fortified with 30 I.U. of vitamin E;
  • a serving of wheat breakfast cereal fortified with 400 I.U. of vitamin E;
  • and a serving of wheat breakfast cereal with a pill of 400 I.U. vitamin E taken separately.

The pill of 400 I.U. vitamin E taken with just a glass of milk, in theory, should have provided more than 13 times the RDA of this nutrient.

But, in fact, it raised the level of new vitamin E in the blood by only 3 percent. By comparison, the cereal fortified with 30 I.U. vitamin E raised the blood plasma level of new vitamin E five times higher than that, and the cereal fortified with 400 I.U. raised the new blood plasma level 30 times higher.

The effect of a pill of 400 I.U. taken with a serving of plain wheat cereal was inconsistent; some participants had a significant increase in blood plasma levels of vitamin E, others almost none. "This study clearly showed that applying vitamin E onto a grain cereal provided a huge and consistent increase in its bioavailability," said Scott Leonard, an LPI research assistant who conducted the study. "Even 30 I.U., the RDA for this vitamin, produced a large increase in new blood plasma levels."

According to Traber and Leonard, this indicates that people who are taking vitamin E supplements only with liquids on an empty stomach are accomplishing nothing and getting few if any benefits from the supplements. The vitamin clearly is absorbed better if it is part of, or closely associated with the digestion of a food that has some fat in it.

Vitamin E has been explored in recent years for its potential value in prevention of heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer's disease and other health concerns. The results of this study may explain in part why the other research has often yielded inconsistent results, Traber said.

"It's now clear that vitamin E must be taken in a certain way to be effective, either in a food containing vitamin E or in a supplement properly associated with a food," Traber said. "So anyone studying vitamin E for a clinical response must now be sure they are using it in a regimen that works."

It may also be time to consider the expansion of vitamin E as a routine food additive, she said.

"In our pursuit of low-fat diets, we increasingly are taking the fat out of foods but not putting the vitamin E back," Traber said.

There were a number of deficiency diseases in the early 1900s that have been largely eliminated with routine vitamin supplementation of food staples like flour and milk, Traber said. Chronic deficiencies of vitamin D led to rickets, vitamin A to blindness and the B-vitamin niacin to pellagra. In the developed world those diseases are now largely a thing of the past.

Vitamin E is an important antioxidant that prevents oxidation of polyunsaturated fats in membranes and lipoproteins, including the LDL and HDL forms of cholesterol. Although the scientific community is still divided in its conclusions, some studies suggest vitamin E has an important role to play in a healthy cardiovascular, neurologic and immune system.

Source: Oregon State University

PSA Rising 2004. All rights reserved.

Earlier Food News (2002 -3)

Nutritionists would like us to eat 4 servings of fish a week. But fish are dwindling and farmed fish are contaminated. The Washington Post's diet columnist puts on a cheery front: Omega 3: No Fish on Your Dish? No Problem Washington Post August 19, 2003

But Cornell University Program on Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Factors in New York State warns of contamination. "Two Studies Compare Levels of Contaminants in Farmed versus Wild Salmon" Fall 2002

The way it was when the world was young: Power of Fish Oil

More on what's gone wrong: Farmed and Dangerous By Michael Downey

"So even if your farmed fish is packed with antibiotics and artificial colors, it still provides essential omega-3s, right? Guess again. 'Farmed fish usually don’t contain much omega-3 at all,' says Frank Hu, PhD, of the Harvard School of Public Health and lead author of the April 2002 JAMA study. 'Only fish from the open oceans contain many omega-3 essential fatty acids.' "

Certified organic salmon is available in the UK. Wild Alaska salmon is certified at present as "sustainable." BBC story about organic standards for salmon in the UK.

SUper-Broccoli Bred to Fight Cancer

May 25 2000. SUPER-BROCCOLI bred from garden broccoli and a wild Sicilian variety is the latest veggie to hold out anti-cancer promise. The team that developed super-broccoli at the John Innes Centre at the Institute of Food Research in Norwich, England now have two commercial partners. Full storyFull story


Cow's Milk and Dairy Foods as Risk for Prostate Cancer

Updating an earlier research study, Harvard researchers cautiously warn that high dairy consumption puts men at higher risk for prostate cancer and for metastastic spread. Full story Full story


See Fruit versus Calcium for fuller background, earlier story.

High Tofu Consumption Linked to Brain Aging Tofus has become popular as part of an anti-prostate cancer (and breast cancer) diet. But soy genistein is known to have an effect on body chemicals that affect memory and brain efficiency. A longterm study of Japanese Americans living in Hawaii finds that those who ate the most tofu tended to have worse cognitve function in old age. Full storyFull story

Greens, B12 May Lower Cancer Risk Eating three times the recommended daily intake of folate and vitamin B12 may lower the risk factors for cancer by protecting your DNA, an Australian study claims. Folate-rich foods include leafy green vegetables and wholegrains. B12 is found in meat, chicken, fish, liver and kidneys or in vegetarian supplement form. Full storyFull story

Plant Compounds Slow Growth of Tumor Cells April 6, 1999 Two compounds from edible plants --one from cereals and the other from fruits and vegetables -- suppress the growth of three kinds of human cancer cells in the laboratory, researchers at UW-Madison report. Their findings "strengthen the idea that a diet rich in plants is beneficial because of the large array of plant compounds rather than the singular action of one kind of plant or one compound in plants."
Full storyFull story


Grapefruit Affects Drugs Including Prostate Cancer Chemo
April 7, 1999 Red grapefruits are high in lycopene, making them a good anti-prostate cancer diet snack. But whatever their color, grapefruit can affect the body's absorption of many medications. Although some drugs are absorbed faster if taken with grapefruit juice, a new study finds that the "grapefruit effect" can block Vinblastine, a drug used in chemotherapy for treating prostate cancer.
Full storyFull story

Citrus Fights Cancer April 6, 1999 Citrus limonoides, found in orange peel and other citrus rinds, could have significant health benefits, scientists said last month at the American Chemical Society conference. The active compound may have anti-cancer effects. Citrus limonoids are present in commercial orange juice at about the same level as vitamin C. A Japanese company is producing an orange juice with triple the level of limonoid glucosides.
Full storyFull story


Fruit and Vegetables Prevent Osteoporosis In Men
April 2, 1999.Two different bone conditions may afflict men who have prostate cancer -- osteoporosis (or bone loss) caused or made worse by hormonal blockade; and spread of cancer to the bones. Drugs may be needed to combat osteoporosis, but diet may play a part in protecting against it. A new look at lifetime diets ofparticipants in the Framington Heart Study found that for both men and women, lifelong dietary intake of potassium, magnesium and fruits and vegetables affected bone strength in old age.
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EATING WELL

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Earlier food news

More Evidence for Anti- Prostate Cancer Value of Flax-Seed November 12, 2002.

Eating Fatty Fish May Slash Risk Of Prostate Cancer June 1, 2001

Heart-Healthy Soy Labels May Help Prostate Cancer Survivors

Super-Broccoli Bred to Fight CancerMay 25 2000.

White Tea May Have Even More Potent Anti-Cancer Effect April 13 2000.

Cow's Milk and Dairy Foods as Risk for Prostate Cancer

Omega Fatty Acids

Tomato

 

Fruit and Vegetables Help Prevent Osteoporosis In Men April 2, 1999.

Plant Compounds Slow Growth of Tumor Cells April 6, 1999

Grapefruit Affects Chemo Meds

Citrus Fights Cancer April 6, 1999

 

 

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