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Vitamins
Vitamin
Supplementation: What Do You Tell Your Patients?
Definitive
answers remain elusive on the benefits of supplementation. Patients will still
look to you for advice.
Michael
Beime, Associate
Editor ... but further research is
necessary.
That phrase ends nearly every report regarding nutritional
supplements for vision-related diseases and overall eye health. Studies on the
effects of vitamin supplementation on specific eye diseases are relatively new,
mostly ongoing and oft times confusingdepending on who is spinning the
results.
Its very difficult to design a laboratory experiment to learn about
nutrition in the eye, says David A. Newsome, MD, nutrition author and
medical director of the Retinal Institute of Louisiana and Family Eye Centers
in New Orleans. Among other issues, the multi-factorial nature of most diseases
makes it more likely to get conflicting information from various
investigators, he adds.
The dearth of consistent scientific support has done little,
however, to slow the nearly $15 billion-a-year supplementation juggernaut. In
the meantime, what should you tell your patients? Heres some advice from
researchers and others close to the issue.
Evidence from Studies
The antioxidant vitamins A, C and E, the
herbal extract ginkgo biloba, and carotenoids lutein and zeaxanthin have shown
some positive impact counteracting processes that result in disease.
Last year, the
Nurses Health Study reported a lower prevalence of early lens opacities among
women taking vitamin supplements for more than 10 years. Allen Taylor, PhD,
director of the lab for nutrition and vision research at Bostons Tufts
University, and his colleagues observed 600 women in that trial, obtaining 15
years of dietary information and performing eye exams using the Lens Opacities
Classification Sys-tem. Women who took 300-400 mg of vitamin C daily had a
77-percent decreased incidence of age-related cataracts over 10
years.1
One of the largest studies, the Age-Related Eye Disease Study
(AREDS), under the auspices of the National Eye Institute, is nearing
completion. The 10-year study assigned 4,757 participants with none to varying
degrees of eye diseases to treatment with four supplement groups: zinc, beta
carotene and vitamins C and E, a combination of those nutrients, or a placebo.
Researchers are following the group for a minimum of five years, and a
principal goal is to determine whether any of the groups develop fewer
cataracts or cases of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). The medical
community is very anxious for the results.
The AREDS may release information as
early as next Sep-tember, according to Robert Abel, MD, author and clinical
professor of ophthalmology at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.
Because there is a feeling that something is brewing, they are going to
open AREDS in eight years instead of 10, says Dr. Abel. It is going
to be a landmark decision in peoples confidence level. As a major,
double-masked study, it will become the hallmark for whether there is value for
nutrition in age-related diseases, especially macular degeneration.
Researchers point
to the studies done with lutein and zeaxanthin, carotenoids found to be
concentrated in the macular area of the retina. Lutein may act as a filter to
protect the macula from potentially damaging forms of light. Two studies by
Johanna M. Seddon, MD, and researchers at Harvard University suggest evidence
that lutein may help prevent cataracts. A 12-year prospective study of more
than 70,000 female nurses ranging in ages from 45-71 charted that nurses with
the highest intake of lutein and zeaxanthin had a 22-percent lower risk of
cataract extraction compared with those who took little of the
carotenoids.2 Another study found that men with the highest
consumption of lutein/zeaxanthin had a lower risk of cataract extraction than
those with the lowest intake.3
Should You Recommend?
Opinions vary widely on recommending or
prescribing supplements for eye disease and for general eye health. Spencer T.
Thornton, MD, an ophthalmologist in private practice in Nashville, recommends
supplements to his patients and feels other physicians should take his lead. He
says he first discusses the patients lifestyle, diet and habits in
relation to the health of his eyes, and then prescribes what he feels is
indicated for that patient (See What One Practice Does, p. 53).
A number of
citations have shown that the usual American diet is deficient in a number of
vitamins and minerals necessary for maintenance of good health, says Dr.
Thornton, a paid consultant and chairman of the visual wellness advisory board
for supplement manufacturer ScienceBased Health (Corte Madera, Calif.).
Recommending
supplementation is definitely not a consensus, though. At this point, I
dont think that ophthalmologists should recommend supplements for their
patients, says Donald Fong, MD, MPH, director of vitreoretinal surgery at
Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Baldwin Park, Calif., and an assistant
clinical professor at UCLA School of Medicine. The evidence does not
support it. If you do it, youre doing it without any backing. And how
much would you supplement? Theres no evidence to support a dose, let
alone an effect.
Whether you recommend or reject supplementation, staying on the
sidelines is no longer an option. As patients become more interested in and
knowledgeable of vitamin supplementation, they expect their doctors to do the
same.
The
ophthalmologist telling his patient that I wouldnt do it, or it
doesnt work, is not going to be enough to deter most
patients, says Dr. Abel. [Physicians] need to pay attention to the
literature out there.
Risks Involved
The benefits and the appropriate level are
just two parts of the debate over dietary supplementation. Might it do more
harm than good? It used to be thought that vitamin supplements cant
hurt and might be helpful, sort of like chicken soup. But now we know they may
hurt, says Dr. Fong.
Guidelines, though fuzzy, do exist. John Hathcock, PhD, a
vitamin-toxicity expert with the U.S. Food and Drug Administrations
experimental nutrition section, says there are no official limits for maximum
doses, only recommended daily allowances (RDA) at the low end. Dr. Hathcock
states that, if you take supplements, your goal is to stay within the
vitamin zone, that range beginning in the federal governments
RDA and ending at a level that is still safe and well below the toxicity
level.
Also,
be cognizant of Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) guidelines, first released in
1997 by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). The NAS reviews research on
supplements, establishing a set of four values that make up the DRIs. It sets
the UL at a level that does not pose any risk of side effects for most healthy
people.
Dr. Newsome
says that following these recommended dosages presents little risk. Take
a recommended dosage, but dont think that more of everything is
better, he says. Some of these particular ingredients do have toxic
limits that are very real.
Fortunately, say some, it may be difficult to overdose. The
people who megadose tend to be retinitis pigmentosa people who hear vitamin A
may help, so they will do tons of it, claims Dr. Abel. You need
large amounts over years [for the dosage] to become toxic.
Even if toxicity
werent an issue, interference may be. Dr. Fong points out that we know
little about how supplements may affect other substances. There are 50
different carotenoids out there. If you take one, you may block the absorption
of the other 49, says Dr. Fong. You might think that the macula
needs lutein, and the observational evidence suggests that; but it might need
other things. If you block the absorption of the other ones, you might be
harming it.
And theres the rest of the body to consider. For
example, says Dr. Fong, in the beta carotene studies with lung
cancer, the observational evidence suggests that you need higher carotenoids in
the diet to lower the risk of lung cancer.4 But when you supplement,
the risks went up. Its thought that youre blocking the absorption
of the needed carotenoid.
Prescription medications, too, may be affected. Patients on
coumadin or other blood thinners can be harmed by excess vitamin E, which also
thins blood, says Dr. Thornton. When vitamin E is given in high
doses with beta carotene in insulin-dependent diabetics with retinopathy, the
disease appears to increase in severity.5 Vitamin K can reduce the
effectiveness of prescribed blood thinners. Too much zinc can block the
absorption of copper, an essential trace mineral in the formation of blood in
bone marrow, and anemia can result. Excessive levels of zinc may actually
elevate serum lipids and increase the risk of cardiovascular disease.
Dr. Thornton says
the main reason for discouraging self-medication is that patients can easily be
misled by advertisements and lay recommendation. The public is hungry for
accurate information, he says. If it is not forthcoming from the
physician, the public will listen to whoever speaks with authority. It is
essential for the caring physician to monitor the medications of his patients,
including nutritionals.
Diet Is the Key First and
foremost, physicians and researchers agree, is implementing a proper diet.
The diet is the place to intervene, stresses Dr. Fong. Eating
a healthy diet is the way to go, eating a variety of foods so the body can
absorb what it needs, and making sure its low in fat and high in fruits
and vegetables.
Research is backing up the contention that eating fruits and
vegetables is associated with a lower incidence of AMD. Also, in a study from
the Johns Hopkins Medical Institution in Balti-more, researchers found a higher
antioxidant capacity in 83 people who consumed eight to 10 servings of fruits
and vegetables a day than in 40 others who ate fewer servings.6
Dr. Abel points to
daily doses of the food pyramid items: at least five to eight fresh fruits,
specifically oranges, tomatoes and apples, and half-cup servings of vegetables,
notably spinach and carrots.
Dr. Newsome says his patients can obtain the nutrients they need
by eating plenty of green, leafy vegetables. If the patient insists on
augmenting a healthy diet with vitamins, he recommends a broad-spectrum vitamin
antioxidant supplement that has lutein in it. We give patients some of
the basics to look for and tell them to get the supplement that has at least 2
mg of lutein in it and at least one RDA of zinc, that has other minerals and
other antioxidants like vitamins E and C, some of the vitamin A family, the
carotenoids and selenium, he says. We also tell them to get the one
that is the cheapest.
Keeping Informed
Failing to maintain a working knowledge of
current developments can label you as outdated. Patients are becoming
better in-formed through the lay press and are prepared to ask questions,
says Dr. Thornton. If the doctor simply passes it off by saying something
disparaging or that he doesnt believe multivitamins make any
difference, the patient will get the idea that he does not keep up with
current knowledge, or just isnt interested in his patients
needs.
The
subject of supplementation is new territory for most ophthalmologists, and it
wasnt stressed in medical school. There needs to be more on
nutrition and eye disease in medical training, adds Dr. Fong. When
I was in school, there was little discussion on it, especially
micronutrients.
So how do you keep up with the information out there? Recommendations include attending seminars and keeping up with
journals, books and health-news websites, and conferring with conventionally
trained nutritionists and dietitians. Dr. Newsome says to look at the weight of
the information as a whole. Look at the scientific strengths and
weaknesses of the studies that are put forth and really look at it in the
balance, he adds.
- Taylor A et al. Vitamin C in
human and guinea pig aqueous lens and plasma in relation to intake. Current Eye
Res. 1997, Vol. 16 (9) 857-864.
- Seddon JM, et al. Dietary
carotenoids, Vitamins A, C and E, and advanced age-related macular
degeneration. Eye Disease Case-Control Study Group. JAMA. 1994
Nov.9;272(18):1413-1420.
- Seddon JM, et al. A
prospective study of carotenoid intake and risk of cataract extraction in U.S.
men. Am J Clin Nutr 1999 70: 517-524.
- Omenn GS, Goodman GE,
Thornquist MD, et al. Effects of a Combination of Beta Carotene and Vitamin A
on Lung Cancer and Cardiovascular Disease. N Eng J Med 1996; 334:1150-1155.
- Leske MC et al. Antioxidant
vitamins and nuclear opacities. The longitudinal study of cataract.
Ophthalmology 1998; 105:831-6.
- Amer.J. Clin. Nutr, 1998;
68:1081-1098.
Supplementing Your Knowledge
Heres a
sample of resources recommended by both physicians and nutritionists to help
keep current.
Books include:
- The Health Professionals
Guide to Popular Dietary Supplements, by Allison Sarubin, The American Dietetic
Association, 2000.
- Dr. Abels book, The Eye
Care Revolution: Prevent and Reverse Common Vision Problems, Kensington Books,
1999.
- The Green Pharmacy, by James A.
Duke, Rodale Press, 1997.
- The Complete Guide to
Nutritional Supplements: Everything You Need to Make Informed Choices for
Optimum Health, by Brenda D. Adderly, Newstar Pr., 1998.
- Every Persons Guide to
Antioxidants, by John R. Smythies, Rutgers Univ. Press, 1998.
- The Tufts University Guide to
Total Nutrition, Stanley Gershoff and Catherine Whitney, 1996.
Journals and websites include:
- American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition (www.acjn.org).
- Journal of the American Medical
Association (www.jama.ama-assn.org).
- The International Bibliographic
Information on Dietary Supplements (IBIDS) database (www.ibids.com) is produced by the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Its
jointly produced by the Office of Dietary Supplements and the Food and
Nutrition Information Center. IBIDS contains over 400,000 searchable
bibliographic records about dietary supplements.
- Tufts Universitys
Nutrition Navigator (www.navigator.tufts.edu) is presented by its
Center on Nutrition Communication, School of Nutrition Science & Policy.
- The National Institutes of
Health (www.nih.gov), and its links to
www.clinicaltrials.gov and
www.medlineplus.gov.
- www.sciencedirect.com offers
more than 1,100 journals.
- The Food and Drug
Administrations Office of Consumer Affairs at
www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/supplmnt.html.
- The American Dietetic
Association (www.eatright.org).
- Quackwatch, which describes
itself as your guide to health fraud, quackery and intelligent
decisions, at www.quackwatch.com.
- The American Dietetic
Association: Food and Nutrition Misinformation (www.eatright.org/amisinfo.html).
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What
One Practice Does
Spencer T. Thornton, MD, takes this course
of action in broaching the subject with his patients:
- Patients are questioned as to
their diet, habits (such as smoking, alcohol intake, etc.) and what medications
and nutritionals they are taking (and whether this is by a doctors
recommendation or on their own).
- We do a Wellness
Assessment Profile, a form the patient fills out detailing his medical
history.
- Based on their history and
physical findings, we determine the particular patients presence or risk
of degenerative conditions (ocular and systemic) and recommend therapeutic or
preventive measures that may include nutritional supplements.
- If nutritional supplements are
indicated, I recommend specific ones. I do not just tell them to go to
the health food store or drug store and follow their recommendations. One
should always take nutritional supplements during meals (not on an empty
stomach) to avoid gastric upset from purified and concentrated vitamins and
phytochemicals, adds Dr. Thornton. He recommends powdered ingredients in
gelatin capsules for rapid dissolution in the stomach and absorption in the
small intestine. Often, coated tablets go through the entire digestive
tract without dissolving. In one nursing home study, the tablet label could
still be read in the stool.
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