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Author Vitamin E May Stave Off Lou Gehrig's Disease
Roman Bystrianyk

2004-12-16, 9:08 am

http://www.healthsentinel.com/news....ist_item&id=464

"Vitamin E May Stave Off Lou Gehrig's Disease", Reuters UK, December
13, 2004,
Link:
http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticl...storyID=7080346

In a new study, regular users of vitamin E were at decreased risk for
death from Lou Gehrig's disease, also called amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS), compared with nonusers.

Given that vitamin E is an antioxidant, the new findings support the
hypothesis that oxidants play a key role in the development of ALS.
Moreover, the results are consistent with earlier findings showing that
increased brain levels of vitamin E seem to delay the onset of ALS in
lab animals.

Still, use of another antioxidant, vitamin C, seemed to confer no
protection against ALS, the report in the Annals of Neurology
indicates.

In the study, Dr. Alberto Ascherio, from Harvard School of Public
Health in Boston, and colleagues analyzed data from nearly 1 million
subjects enrolled in the American Cancer Society's Cancer Prevention
Study II.

All of the subjects were at least 30 years of age when the study began
in 1982. Information on vitamin E use was collected at enrollment and
the subjects were followed from 1989 through 1998.

During follow-up, 525 deaths from ALS were recorded, the investigators
note.

Compared with nonusers, patients who took vitamin E for less than 15
days per month did not reduce the risk of death from ALS.

However, patients who used vitamin E for 15 or more days per month for
at least 10 years had a reduced risk of ALS death of 62 percent. As
noted, the use of vitamin C, even on a regular basis for many years,
did not protect against ALS.

As to why no benefit was seen with vitamin C, the authors believe it
may be because vitamin C is "a water-soluble antioxidant with different
properties than vitamin E and thus may not" act the same in the body.

Further studies are needed to confirm the apparent anti-ALS effect for
vitamin E, the authors note. Also, because most cases in the current
study occurred spontaneously, it remains to be determined whether or
not a relationship exists for hereditary ALS, they add.
SOURCE: Annals of Neurology, November 2004.

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