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- <text id=92TT0762>
- <title>
- Apr. 06, 1992: The New Scoop On Vitamins
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 06, 1992 The Real Power of Vitamins
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 54
- COVER STORY
- The New Scoop On Vitamins
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>They may be much more important than doctors thought in warding
- off cancer, heart disease and the ravages of aging--and, no,
- you may not be getting enough of these crucial nutrients in
- your diet
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--Reported by Janice M. Horowitz/New York,
- Elaine Lafferty/Los Angeles and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It's raining. Flooding, to be precise. But business is as
- brisk as ever at Mrs. Gooch's natural-foods market in West Los
- Angeles. As usual, traffic is backed up along Palms Boulevard
- as drivers wait for a spot in the store's parking lot. Inside,
- crowds jam the supplement section, which gleams with row upon
- row of small, white-capped vials. Here the true believers in the
- gospel of vitamins linger over labels, comparing brand names and
- dosages, trading health sermons and nutritional arcana. They
- discuss the relative merits of Buffered C and Lysine, as opposed
- to Bio-C Plus Rose Hips, or perhaps Bio-Absorbate Vitamin C
- Complex capsules. There are no fewer than 10 types and dosages
- of vitamin C to choose from, not to mention eight of vitamin E.
- </p>
- <p> Maryanne Latimer is among the faithful. A middle-age
- massage therapist, she has been plagued by chronic fatigue
- syndrome and has therefore expanded her usual menu of vitamins
- and minerals. She shops at Mrs. Gooch's about once a week, in
- addition to other vitamin shops. "I take tons of vitamin C and
- E," she admits, plus calcium and a daily vitamin-mineral
- complex. Recently she added to her regimen three tablets a day
- of pantothenic acid (a lesser-known vitamin) "to help me wake
- up." Basically, says Latimer, "I'm looking for anything to make
- me feel better."
- </p>
- <p> But for every true believer in the power of vitamins--and the U.S. has more devotees than any other country--there
- is an agnostic, a skeptic who insists that vitamins are the
- opiate of the people. Among the doubters are many doctors. They
- have been persuaded by decades of public-health pronouncements,
- endorsed by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and the
- National Institutes of Health, that claim people can get every
- nutrient they need from the food they eat. Popping vitamins
- "doesn't do you any good," sniffs Dr. Victor Herbert, a
- professor of medicine at New York City's Mount Sinai medical
- school. "We get all the vitamins we need in our diets. Taking
- supplements just gives you expensive urine."
- </p>
- <p> Wavering in confusion between these two schools of thought
- are the vast majority of Americans, wondering whom to believe.
- They have heard the gospel of vitamin C as preached by the
- great chemist Linus Pauling, but they have also heard him
- ridiculed by health authorities. They may feed their children
- chewable vitamin tablets, but they question whether the pills
- are worth the high price. "I'd be thrilled to know what's right
- and to have someone tell me what to do," says Jane Traulsen, a
- mother of two who lives in White Plains, N.Y. "But all the
- information is so contradictory. It's like trying to make your
- way through a fog."
- </p>
- <p> But now, thanks to new research, the haze is beginning to
- lift. And it unveils a surprise: more and more scientists are
- starting to suspect that traditional medical views of vitamins
- and minerals have been too limited. While researchers may not
- endorse the expansive claims of hard-core vitamin enthusiasts,
- evidence suggests that the nutrients play a much more complex
- role in assuring vitality and optimal health than was previously
- thought. Vitamins--often in doses much higher than those
- usually recommended--may protect against a host of ills
- ranging from birth defects and cataracts to heart disease and
- cancer. Even more provocative are glimmerings that vitamins can
- stave off the normal ravages of aging.
- </p>
- <p> "The field is currently undergoing a paradigm shift," says
- Catherine Woteki, director of the food and nutrition board at
- the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences.
- "We are now entering the second wave of vitamin research,"
- explains Jeffrey Blumberg, associate director of the Human
- Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University. "The
- first wave was the discovery of vitamins and their role in
- combatting nutritional deficiencies such as rickets and
- beriberi. That occurred in the first half of the century. Now
- we're on the second wave. You don't need to take vitamin C to
- prevent scurvy in this country today. But you could need it for
- optimal health and the prevention of some chronic disease."
- </p>
- <p> Scientists have so far identified 13 organic substances
- that are commonly labeled vitamins. In the human body, they
- play a vital role in helping regulate the chemical reactions
- that protect cells and convert food into energy and living
- tissue. Some vitamins are produced within the body. Vitamin D,
- for example, is manufactured in the skin during exposure to
- sunlight, and three other vitamins (K, biotin and pantothenic
- acid) are made inside the human gut by resident bacteria. But
- most vitamins must be ingested.
- </p>
- <p> Mystique and faddish lore have long surrounded these
- essential biochemical compounds. Consider vitamins C and E.
- "Somebody has made practically every claim you could dream of
- about these vitamins," points out John Hathcock, chief of the
- experimental-nutrition branch of the Food and Drug
- Administration. People have been gobbling vitamin C for 20 years
- in the certainty that it can cure the common cold, though
- evidence is still lacking. Vitamin E has been wildly popular for
- four decades because of its putative power to enhance sexual
- performance. In fact, studies indicate only that it is necessary
- for normal fertility in lab animals.
- </p>
- <p> More recently, B6 has won favor as a relief for
- premenstrual syndrome. Vitamin A is touted as a rejuvenator by
- people who mistakenly believe that it, like its synthetic
- relative Retin-A, can give wrinkled, mottled skin that youthful
- rosy glow. "We never know what next year's fad is going to be,"
- says Hathcock.
- </p>
- <p> It is just this whiff of quackery that made vitamins a
- research backwater for years. Most reputable scientists steered
- clear, viewing the field as fringe medicine awash with kooks and
- fanatics. A researcher who showed interest could lose respect
- and funding. Certainly Linus Pauling lost much of his
- Nobel-laureate luster when he began championing vitamin C back
- in 1970 as a panacea for everything from the common cold to
- cancer. Drug companies too have been leery of committing
- substantial energy and money to studies, since the payoff is
- relatively small: vitamin chemical formulas are in the public
- domain and cannot be patented.
- </p>
- <p> But attitudes have been shifting over the past few
- decades. Despite all the sneering, Pauling's speculations did
- get more scientists thinking about vitamins' impressive powers.
- As a class of compounds, they are known to produce hugely
- dramatic effects when missing from the diet: scurvy, pernicious
- anemia, rickets. What other exciting properties might they--or related compounds--have?
- </p>
- <p> Another driving force in the U.S. is the new "demographic
- imperative." With a rapidly aging population, America has moved
- its medical focus from treating acute illness to caring for
- chronic maladies like heart disease and cancer--a shift that
- has sent health-care costs skyward. "There's a growing
- appreciation of the need to find the most economical way to
- treat and prevent chronic disease," notes Dr. Charles
- Butterworth Jr. of the University of Alabama. "Food and
- vitamins are not that expensive." Calculates Tufts' Blumberg:
- "We could save billions of dollars if we could delay the onset
- of chronic diseases by as little as 10 years."
- </p>
- <p> Overriding all else, however, is the impact of scientific
- studies. Beginning in the 1970s, population surveys worldwide
- started to uncover a consistent link between diet and health.
- A diet rich in fruits and vegetables, for instance, became
- associated with a lowered incidence of cancer and heart disease.
- Researchers then turned to examining the data nutrient by
- nutrient, looking at minerals as well as vitamins, to see which
- are tied most closely with specific ailments. Low vitamin C
- intake appears to be associated with a higher risk of cancer,
- low levels of folic acid with a greater chance of birth defects,
- and high calcium consumption with a decreased danger of
- osteoporosis.
- </p>
- <p> Intrigued by such clues, the National Institutes of
- Health, universities and other research organizations began
- funding laboratory and clinical investigations. By the late
- '80s, research exploring vitamins' potential in protecting
- against disease was on its way to respectability. Though the
- evidence is still preliminary, scientists are excited about
- several nutrients.
- </p>
- <p> One vitamin attracting attention is folic acid, also known
- as folate, which was first isolated from spinach. This B
- vitamin appears to guard against two of the most common and
- devastating neurological defects afflicting newborns in the
- U.S.: spina bifida, in which there is incomplete closure of the
- spine, and anencephaly, in which the brain fails to develop
- fully. British researchers found that when women who had already
- given birth to a malformed child received folic acid supplements
- during a subsequent pregnancy, the chances of a second tragic
- birth fell sharply.
- </p>
- <p> Another enticing finding reported last January established
- a link between folic acid and prevention of cervical cancer.
- According to a study at the University of Alabama's medical
- school, women who have been exposed to a virus that causes this
- cancer are five times as likely to develop precancerous lesions
- if they have low blood levels of folic acid. The discovery may
- help explain why cervical cancer is more common among the poor.
- Indigent women usually eat few vegetables and fruits, which are
- prime sources of folate. Says Butterworth, head of the research
- team: "It looks like many cases of cervical dysplasia [a
- precancerous condition] could be prevented with a healthy
- diet."
- </p>
- <p> Vitamin K, long known to promote blood clotting, appears
- to help bones retain calcium. Rapid calcium loss is a major
- plague among postmenopausal women, giving rise to the
- fragile-bones syndrome called osteoporosis. A recent Dutch study
- of 1,500 women ages 45 to 80 found that calcium loss (as
- measured in urine samples) could be halved with daily
- supplements of vitamin K.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the excitement, however, is being generated by a
- group of vitamins--C, E and beta carotene, the chemical parent
- of vitamin A--that are known as antioxidants. These nutrients
- appear to be able to defuse the volatile toxic molecules, known
- as oxygen-free radicals, that are a byproduct of normal
- metabolism in cells. These molecules are also created in the
- body by exposure to sunlight, X rays, ozone, tobacco smoke, car
- exhaust and other environmental pollutants.
- </p>
- <p> Free radicals are cellular renegades; they wreak havoc by
- damaging DNA, altering biochemical compounds, corroding cell
- membranes and killing cells outright. Such molecular mayhem,
- scientists increasingly believe, plays a major role in the
- development of ailments like cancer, heart or lung disease and
- cataracts. Many researchers are convinced that the cumulative
- effects of free radicals also underlie the gradual deterioration
- that is the hallmark of aging in all individuals, healthy as
- well as sick. Antioxidants, studies suggest, might help stem the
- damage by neutralizing free radicals. In effect they perform as
- cellular sheriffs, collaring the radicals and hauling them away.
- </p>
- <p> Supporters of this theory speculate that antioxidants may
- one day revolutionize health care. Biochemist William Pryor,
- director of the Biodynamics Institute at Louisiana State
- University, foresees screening people through a simple urine,
- blood or breath test to assess how much damage free radicals
- have done to tissue, much as patients today are screened for
- high cholesterol. "If you can predict who is most susceptible
- to oxidative stress," notes Pryor, "you can treat them with
- antioxidants more effectively." Ultimately, says biochemist
- Bruce Ames at the University of California, Berkeley, "we're
- going to be able to get people to live a lot longer than anyone
- thinks."
- </p>
- <p> In that brave new world, people might pop vitamins C and
- E to deter the development of cataracts, the clouding of the
- lens in the eye that afflicts 20% of Americans over 65.
- Patients taking high doses of both vitamins appear to reduce the
- risk of cataracts by at least 50%, according to a Canadian
- study. Vitamin C may be especially efficient because it
- concentrates in the eye. Scientists at the National Eye
- Institute estimate that if cataract development could be delayed
- by 10 years, about half of cataract surgery could be eliminated.
- </p>
- <p> Vitamin E may be particularly helpful in preventing free
- radicals from injuring the heart. Doctors speculate that giving
- the vitamin to patients during or shortly after a heart attack
- might help preserve heart muscle. One clue from a study at
- Toronto General Hospital: rabbits injected with vitamin E within
- two hours of a heart attack showed 78% less damage to heart
- tissue than was expected. The vitamin appears to speed recovery
- in patients who have had coronary-bypass operations, suggesting
- that nutrient supplements may one day become part of standard
- pre-op procedure.
- </p>
- <p> Chugging vitamin E seems to boost the immune system in
- healthy old people, raising the possibility that supplements
- could help thwart life-threatening infections. The nutrient may
- also turn out to be a potent lung saver, warding off the
- depredations of cigarette smoke, car exhaust and other
- pollutants. "The effects of air pollution are chronic," says Dr.
- Daniel Menzel of the University of California at Irvine. "Over
- a lifetime people develop serious diseases like bronchitis and
- emphysema. We have fed animals in our labs vitamin E and have
- found that they have fewer lung lesions and that they live
- longer." Menzel suggests that priming children with doses of
- antioxidants could protect them against lung disease as adults,
- much the way fluoridated water protects them against tooth
- decay.
- </p>
- <p> For patients found to have Parkinson's disease, vitamin E
- may hold special promise. The nutrient seems to delay the
- appearance of tremors, rigidity and loss of balance, thus
- postponing the need for therapy with dopamine. The vitamin also
- appears to alleviate some of the unpleasant side effects of
- antipsychotic drugs, such as twitchy hands, face and feet.
- </p>
- <p> Holding center stage in antioxidant circles, however, is
- beta carotene, a complex deep orange compound that is naturally
- abundant in sweet potatoes, carrots and cantaloupes. Beta
- carotene is turned into vitamin A by the body as needed. That
- makes it impossible to overdose on beta carotene, even though
- taking too much vitamin A can lead to liver damage and other
- effects.
- </p>
- <p> Doctors at Harvard Medical School, who have been following
- 22,000 male physicians as part of a 10-year health study, have
- made a stunning discovery about beta carotene. They found that
- men with a history of cardiac disease who were given beta
- carotene supplements of 50 mg every other day suffered half as
- many heart attacks, strokes and deaths as those popping placebo
- pills. No heart attacks occurred among those in this group who
- received aspirin along with the beta carotene capsules. The
- Harvard researchers have begun a trial in 45,000 postmenopausal
- women to see if a similar effect occurs in women. Scientists
- speculate that the antioxidant helps prevent those nasty
- oxygen-free radicals from transforming LDL, the bad form of
- cholesterol, into an even more menacing artery clogger.
- </p>
- <p> Beta carotene may prove powerful in combatting cancer as
- well. In countries such as Japan and Norway, where diets are
- rich in beta carotene, the populations have a low incidence of
- lung, colon, prostate, cervical and breast cancer. And a study
- at the University of Arizona Cancer Center found that three to
- six months of daily beta carotene pills dramatically reduced
- precancerous mouth lesions in 70% of patients. Pharmaceutical
- giant Hoffmann-La Roche is so enamored with beta carotene that
- it plans to open a Freeport, Texas, plant next year that will
- churn out 350 tons of the nutrient annually, or enough to
- supply a daily 6 mg capsule to virtually every American adult.
- </p>
- <p> As vitamin research surges, confusion swirls around two
- basic questions: How much of these nutrients is needed, and
- what's the best way to get them--in food or in supplements?
- For half a century, Americans' vitamin intake has been guided
- by the Recommended Daily Allowances, or RDAs. Introduced during
- World War II as a way to ensure that military recruits did not
- suffer from malnutrition, the levels quickly became a standard
- for the general population. Technically the National Academy of
- Sciences sets different RDAs for people of different ages and
- sexes, but to simplify matters, the FDA has since 1968 taken the
- highest RDAs--those appropriate for teenage boys--and
- endorsed them as the national standard. These are the numbers
- that appear on cereal boxes.
- </p>
- <p> Two years ago, the FDA announced plans to change this
- policy. Instead of endorsing an allotment appropriate to
- ravenous, fast-growing teenage males, it would simply average
- the RDAs for different age groups. The new figures are
- considerably lower and, says the agency, are a better barometer
- of the typical American's nutritional needs. Essentially they
- reflect the requirements of adult women. The agency has proposed
- slashing the RDAs for many vitamins, including A, B, C and E,
- as well as nutrients such as iron, by 10% to 80%. The RDA would
- also acquire a new name: the Reference Daily Intake, or RDI. (On
- food labels the RDI would be listed as the Daily Value, or DV.)
- "By using the old RDAs, you're trying to make the entire
- population consume more nutrients than it needs," explains John
- Vanderveen, director of the FDA's nutrition division. "Young
- males need more nutrients than women, children and the elderly."
- </p>
- <p> But the move to slash RDAs, scheduled to go into effect
- next year, flies in the face of research that suggests benefits
- from higher doses of vitamins. The current RDA for vitamin C,
- for example, is 60 mg. But to get a protective effect against
- cataracts or cancer may require as much as 100 mg. Similarly,
- vitamin E may need a boost from the RDA of 10 mg to 100 mg.
- (There is no RDA for beta carotene, but scientists speculate
- that 25 mg or more a day could be needed.)
- </p>
- <p> Already many people consider the old RDAs, with their
- focus on preventing scurvy and other rare deficiency problems,
- to be irrelevant to real health needs. "Our clientele generally
- thinks of the RDA as a kind of joke," says Sandy Gooch, owner of
- the chain of seven Mrs. Gooch's markets in Southern California.
- What's actually needed, vitamin advocates suggest, is
- guidelines for optimal consumption. That amount may very well
- depend upon age, sex and life-style habits.
- </p>
- <p> Do people have to take supplements to get enough vitamins?
- Nutritionists and doctors agree that everyone's basic needs
- could be met by eating a diet rich in vegetables and fruits. The
- U.S. government's 1990 dietary guidelines urge an ambitiously
- varied meal plan: three to five servings daily of vegetables,
- two to four of fruit, as well as six to 11 of breads, rice,
- pasta and grains and two to three of meat, eggs, poultry and
- dried beans.
- </p>
- <p> As far as America is concerned, most people don't even
- come close. A mere 9% of adults manage to consume five servings
- of fruits and vegetables each day, according to the National
- Center for Health Statistics. By and large, Americans simply
- don't like vegetables. The most prominent example: President
- Bush, who once admitted he detested broccoli, now has taken to
- deriding carrots as "orange broccoli."
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, failing to match daily dietary guidelines is
- no reason to go running for the vitamin bottle. "What you do
- one day or one week isn't the whole story," stresses Jeanne
- Goldberg, assistant professor of nutrition at Tufts. "It's what
- your general eating patterns are." Blitzing on junk food for a
- day or two is no problem if over the long haul a diet regularly
- contains fruits and veggies. If it does not, popping pills is
- a good insurance policy, especially important for those who
- reject greens outright. Supplements are also useful to people
- with special conditions, including shut-ins, alcoholics and
- those on very restrictive diets, who tend to be poorly
- nourished.
- </p>
- <p> Virtually all experts agree that a daily multivitamin
- won't hurt anybody. Opinion is divided, however, about whether
- people should be taking high doses of vitamins to prevent
- chronic disease or delay aging. Some argue that enough evidence
- is in to justify taking moderately high amounts of antioxidants.
- Several researchers admit they are already doing so.
- </p>
- <p> Others believe it is too soon to be making recommendations
- to the public. The long-term effects of high-dose supplements
- are still unknown, and doctors warn of dangers even in the
- short term. Too much vitamin D, for example, can cause damaging
- calcium deposits in muscle tissue, including the heart.
- </p>
- <p> Last February the FDA rejected as premature applications
- by vitamin makers to promote folic acid as a means of
- preventing neural-tube birth defects, antioxidants as a hedge
- against cancer, and zinc as a booster of aging immune systems.
- Both federal and state regulatory agencies have been cracking
- down on nutrient health claims. The FDA says it will hold label
- claims to standards similar to those applied to drugs. Advises
- Dr. Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health: "At
- this time I say don't take megadoses, but I'm not ruling out
- that in two or three years we might change our mind."
- </p>
- <p> The wisest strategy right now may be to redouble those
- efforts to eat more broccoli and carrots, spinach and squash.
- And to follow the familiar exhortations: get up and get moving,
- cut down fat and cut out smoking. No matter how powerful
- antioxidants and the other nutrients turn out to be, they will
- never be a substitute for salutary habits. But stay tuned.
- Vitamins promise to continue to unfold as one of the great and
- hopeful health stories of our day.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-