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Wednesday, February 25, 2009 - 6:08 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. A combination of vitamin B-6, vitamin B-12 and folic acid might
protect women against age-related macular degeneration, the leading
cause of blindness in the elderly, a new study finds.
Women taking this trio of vitamins in amounts well beyond the
recommended daily doses were one-third less likely to develop macular
degeneration than were people taking placebos, researchers report in
the Feb. 23 Archives of Internal Medicine.
Cigarette smoking is known to increase a person’s likelihood of
developing macular degeneration. Other than not smoking, there is
little a person can do to limit risk, says study coauthor William
Christen, an epidemiologist at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and
Women’s Hospital in Boston. “This is the first trial to suggest a
benefit” from vitamin B and folic acid, he says. “I’d like to see it
corroborated in other populations.”http://34819louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
Christen and his colleagues analyzed data collected as part of a
large trial originally designed to test the effects of other vitamins
on women with heart problems. In 1998, researchers selected 5,205 women
in the trial who didn’t have macular degeneration and were willing to
take part in a test of B-6, B-12 and folic acid — also called folate
and vitamin B-9. Half of the women were randomly assigned to get these
supplements; the others received placebo pills.http://34819louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
Most of the women were overweight. Their average age was 63. The
women in both groups provided information about their vision by
responding to annual questionnaires in the mail. All were permitted to
take multivitamins with B-6, B-12 and folate up to, but not exceeding,
recommended daily allowances. Those getting the B-6, B-12 and folate
pills received many times that amount.
Whenever a participant reported that she’d been diagnosed with
macular degeneration, scientists contacted the woman’s eye doctor and
elicited a report.
After 7.3 years of follow-up, those reports had turned up 82 cases
of age-related macular degeneration among women taking placebos and
only 55 cases in the women getting the vitamin supplements.
While an explanation for the apparent protection from macular
degeneration remains unknown, it is known that folate, B-6 and B-12 can
drive down blood concentrations of homocysteine, a compound suspected
of damaging blood vessels. Researchers have tried to finger
homocysteine in heart disease, but studies have failed to show a heart
benefit from reducing homocysteine levels.
Age-related macular degeneration is also a vascular ailment —
resulting from a disruption of proper blood flow to the macula, a part
of the retina. It may be that the tiny vessels in the eye are more
vulnerable to high homocysteine than the larger coronary arteries are.
“But this is speculation, not a hard hypothesis,” Christen says.
While the homocysteine connection remains unproven, the new findings
might draw more resources toward work examining the compound’s role in
macular degeneration, says study coauthor Emily Chew, an
ophthalmologist at the National Eye Institute in Bethesda, Md. "Increased
homocysteine levels have been shown in many studies involving
age-related macular degeneration," says ophthalmologist Sibel
Kadayifcilar of Hacettepe University Medical School in Ankara, Turkey.
"However, we still don't know whether homocysteine is causative or only
a marker." Meanwhile, other research shows that a vitamin B-12
deficiency is a risk factor for macular degeneration.
Combined, these lines of evidence suggest that elderly people with a
shortage of these B vitamins or folate should take supplements,
Kadayifcilar says. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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