Low vitamin E levels associated with physical decline in elderlyJanuary 23, 2008Researchers at Yale School of Medicine have found that a low concentration of vitamin E in the blood is linked with physical decline in older persons. Published in the January 23 issue of Journal of the American Medical Association, the study included 698 people age 65 or older who were randomly selected from the population registry in two municipalities close to Florence, Italy. The researchers, led by first author Benedetta Bartali of Yale, collected blood samples to measure the levels of micronutrients including folate, iron and vitamins B6, B12, D and E. They assessed physical decline in the study participants over a three-year period using an objective test of three tasks: walking speed, rising repeatedly from a chair, and standing balance. "We evaluated the effects of several micronutrients and only vitamin E was significantly associated with decline in physical function," said Bartali, a nutritionist and a Brown-Coxe Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale School of Medicine. "The odds of declining in physical function was 1.62 times greater in persons with low levels of vitamin E compared with persons with higher levels."
Bartali added, "It is unlikely that vitamin E is simply a marker for poor nutrition because our results are independent of energy intake, and the effect of low levels of other micronutrients was not significant. Our results suggest that an appropriate dietary intake of vitamin E may help to reduce the decline in physical function among older persons. Since only one person in our study used vitamin E supplements, it is unknown whether the use of vitamin E supplements would have the same beneficial effect." Bartali stresses that vitamin E was the only antioxidant measured in the study and further studies are needed to determine whether low levels of other antioxidants would yield the same results. As an antioxidant, vitamin E may prevent or reduce the propagation of free radicals in the human body, which are associated with physical decline. This may help reduce muscle or DNA damage and the development of pathological conditions like atherosclerosis. Bartali said further studies are needed to determine the mechanisms of how low levels of vitamin E contributes to a decline in physical function. Yale University | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Related Physical Decline Current Events and Physical Decline News Articles Understanding the have-knots: The role of stress in just about everything Stress, to put it bluntly, is bad for you. It can kill you, in fact. A study now reveals that stress causes deterioration in everything from your gums to your heart and can make you more susceptible to everything from the common cold to cancer. Exercise helps elderly regain physical function and avoid major disability Regular structured exercise may allow previously sedentary elderly people to attain significant improvements in their physical functioning and reduce the likelihood they will become disabled in the future. Tiny roundworm's telomeres help scientists to tease apart different types of aging The continual and inevitable shortening of telomeres, the protective "caps" at the end of all 46 human chromosomes, has been linked to aging and physical decline. Bad Teeth May Signal Risk for Heart Attack Elderly persons with active root caries, a type of tooth decay, have an increased risk of having irregular heart beats. This study is published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. Ace Inhibitors Could Slow Muscle Decline (p 926) Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, a class of drugs used to lower blood pressure, could also be protective against the decline in muscle strength in elderly women suggest authors of a study in this week's issue of THE LANCET. ACE inhibitors are known to prevent the decline in physical function in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF). Graziano Onder and colleagues from Wake Forest University, USA, investigated whether ACE inhibitors could also prevent reduction in physical performance and in muscle strength in elderly women who did not have CHF. 3-year rates of decline in the strength of the extensor muscle around the knee and walking-speed reduction was assessed in 641 More Physical Decline Current Events and Physical Decline News Articles |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||