Jan. 8 - Heart Disease Risk May Increase With Lack of Vitamin
D
The same vitamin D deficiency that can result
in weak bones now has been associated with an increased risk
of cardiovascular disease, Framingham Heart Study researchers
report in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart
Association.
"Vitamin D deficiency is associated with
increased cardiovascular risk, above and beyond established
cardiovascular risk factors," said Thomas J. Wang, MD,
assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School in
Boston, Mass. "The higher risk associated with vitamin
D deficiency was particularly evident among individuals with
high blood pressure."
In a study of 1,739 offspring from Framingham
Heart Study participants (average age 59, all Caucasian), researchers
found that those with blood levels of vitamin D below15 nanograms
per milliliter (ng/mL) had twice the risk of a cardiovascular
event such as a heart attack, heart failure or stroke in the
next five years compared to those with higher levels of vitamin
D.
When researchers adjusted for traditional cardiovascular
risk factors such as high cholesterol, diabetes and high blood
pressure, the risk remained significant with a 62% higher
risk of a cardiovascular event in participants with low levels
of vitamin D compared to those with higher levels.
Researchers observed the highest rate of cardiovascular
disease events in subset analyses dividing 688 participants
according to high blood pressure status. After researchers adjusted
for conventional cardiovascular risk factors, participants with
hypertension and a vitamin D deficiency had about 2 times the
risk of having a cardiovascular disease event in five years.
Researchers also found an increase in cardiovascular
risk with each level of vitamin D deficiency.
"We found that people with low vitamin
D levels had a higher rate of cardiovascular events over the
five-year follow-up period," Wang said. "These results
are intriguing and suggestive but need to be followed up with
further study."
Study participants had no prior cardiovascular
disease and were tested for vitamin D status and then followed
for an average of 5.4 years.
The participants attended the offspring examinations
between 1996 and 2001. Researchers obtained medical history,
physical examinations and laboratory assessments of vascular
risk factors. They also obtained medical records related to
cardiovascular disease.
Overall, 28% of individuals had levels
of vitamin D below15 ng/mL and 9% had levels below10
ng/mL. Although levels above 30 ng/mL are considered optimal
for bone metabolism, only 10% of the study sample had
levels in this range, researchers said.
During follow-up:
* 120 participants developed a first cardiovascular
event including fatal and nonfatal coronary heart disease;
* 28 participants had fatal or nonfatal cerebrovascular
events such as nonhemorrhagic stroke;
* 19 participants were diagnosed with heart
failure; and
* 8 had occurrences of claudication, fatigue
in the legs during activity.
"Low levels of vitamin D are highly prevalent
in the United States, especially in areas without much sunshine,"
Wang said. "Twenty to 30% of the population in many
areas has moderate to severe vitamin D deficiency."
Most of this is attributed to lack of sun exposure,
pigmented skin that prevents penetration of the sun's rays and
inadequate dietary intake of vitamin D enriched foods, researchers
said.
"A growing body of evidence suggests that
low levels of vitamin D may adversely affect the cardiovascular
system," Wang said. "Vitamin D receptors have a broad
tissue distribution that includes vascular smooth muscle and
endothelium, the inner lining of the body's vessels. Our data
raise the possibility that treating vitamin D deficiency, via
supplementation or lifestyle measures, could reduce cardiovascular
risk.
"What hasn't been proven yet is that vitamin
D deficiency actually causes increased risk of cardiovascular
disease. This would require a large randomized trial to show
whether correcting the vitamin D deficiency would result in
a reduction in cardiovascular risk."
Therefore, Wang doesn't recommend physicians
check for vitamin D deficiency or that those with a known vitamin
D deficiency be treated to prevent heart disease at this time.
During the past decade, researchers have studied
several other vitamins that initially showed promise in reducing
heart disease. But the vitamins didn't reduce heart disease
in subsequent large randomized trials.
"On the flip side, just because other vitamins
haven't succeeded doesn't preclude the possibility of finding
vitamins that might prevent cardiovascular disease," Wang
said. "This is always an area of great interest. Vitamins
are easy to administer and in general have few toxic effects."
The American Heart Association recommends that
healthy people get adequate nutrients by eating a variety of
foods in moderation, rather than by taking supplements. Food
sources of vitamin D include milk, salmon, mackerel, sardines,
cod liver oil and some fortified cereals. Vitamin or mineral
supplements aren't a substitute for a balanced, nutritious diet
that limits excess calories, saturated fat, trans fat, sodium
and dietary cholesterol. This dietary approach has been shown
to reduce coronary heart disease risk in healthy people and
those with coronary disease.
Source: American Heart Association
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