Folic acid vitamins
Lung Cancer ~ Lung Cancer ~ Breast Cancer ~ Heart attack
Home / Health News / 2008 / May 2008 / May 7, 2008
Folic acid, B vitamins dont reduce cardiovascular risk in women
Harvard Medical School

Indian origin scientist identifies new gene trigger for preeclampsia

Videogames dont make boys violent

Virus mimics human protein to capture cell growth machinery

Folic acid, B vitamins dont reduce cardiovascular risk in women

More on Harvard Medical School

Heart attack

Bacon masterpiece sets auction record with 43m pounds

Stable Stroke Patients More Likely to Die From a Nonstroke Cardiovascular Event Than a Further Stroke

Two doner kebabs a week could cause heart attack within 10 years

XIENCE™ V Drug Eluting Stent from Abbott Outperforms Market-Leading Stent in Reducing Major Adverse Cardiac Events at Two Years

Scientists uncover how smoking causes cancer

ThromboGenics N.V. - Business Update

Marijuana may boost heart attack, stroke risk

Study confirms childhood, adolescent obesity influence cardiac health

More on Heart attack

Top News

Andhra Pradesh SSC 2008 Results

Rededication Day marks Congress Government's fourth year in office

60 per cent voting recorded in second phase of Karnataka polls

BRIC nations join chorus for Security Council reforms

Bollywood film Aashayein all set for release

Chidambaram blames Inflation on soaring global oil prices

Manchester bans big screens for Champion League Final fearing violence

Body clock cog finding could end jet lag

Bird flu spreads in Darjeeling

Folic acid, B vitamins dont reduce cardiovascular risk in women

A new study has found that long-term supplementation of folic acid and vitamin B supplements do not protect women against heart disease and stroke.

Washington, May 7 : A new study has found that long-term supplementation of folic acid and vitamin B supplements do not protect women against heart disease and stroke.

Randomised, controlled trials by Christine M. Albert, M.D., M.P.H., of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues, showed that women at high-risk of cardiovascular disease who took a daily supplement of folic acid and vitamin B6 and B12 for seven years did not have an overall reduced rate of cardiovascular events, despite a significant lowering of homocysteine levels.

"Homocysteine [an amino acid produced by the body] levels have been directly associated with cardiovascular risk in observational studies; and daily supplementation with folic acid, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, or a combination have been shown to reduce homocysteine levels to varying degrees in intervention studies," the authors said.bservational data suggest cardiovascular benefits from B-vitamin supplementation may be greater among women, yet women have been underrepresented in published randomized trials.

"Given the paucity of data on women and the known influences of estrogen on homocysteine levels, adequately powered randomized trials of homocysteine lowering in women are still needed," the authors said.

The researchers tested whether a combination of folic acid, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12 would reduce total cardiovascular events among women at high risk for the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD) over 7 years of follow-up.

Within an ongoing randomized trial of antioxidant vitamins, 5,442 women who were U.S. health professionals age 42 years or older, with either a history of CVD or three or more coronary risk factors, were enrolled in a randomized trial to receive a combination pill containing folic acid (2.5 mg), vitamin B6 (50 mg), and vitamin B12 (1 mg) or a matching placebo.

During the 7.3 years of follow-up, 796 participants (14.6 percent) experienced a confirmed CVD event included in the primary end point (heart attack, stroke, coronary revascularization, or CVD death), with some individuals experiencing more than one event.

There was no difference in the cumulative incidence of the primary combined end point in the active vs. placebo treatment groups at any time during study follow-up. A total of 406 women (14.9 percent) in the active treatment group and 390 (14.3 percent) in the placebo group experienced at least one cardiovascular event included in the primary end point.

When analyzed separately, there were no significant differences for each of the components of the primary outcome including heart attack, stroke, and CVD death, between the active treatment and placebo groups. Also, the risk of death from any cause was similar between the active and placebo treatment groups.

The researchers also found that the average plasma homocysteine level was 18.5 percent lower in the active group than that observed in the placebo group.

"Our results are consistent with prior randomized trials performed primarily among men with established vascular disease and do not support the use of folic acid and B vitamin supplements as preventive interventions for CVD in these high-risk fortified populations," the authors said.

The study appears in the May 7 issue of JAMA.

ANI

May 17, 2008

May 16, 2008

May 15, 2008

May 14, 2008

May 13, 2008

May 12, 2008