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Vitamin B6 may reduce Heart Disease Risk  Vitamin B6 may reduce Heart Disease Risk



Vitamin B6 appears to offer protection against heart disease, according to researchers. But their study also casts doubt on the theory that high levels of homocysteine in the blood increases heart risk.

Much attention has recently been drawn to the potential role of homocysteine in heart disease. Some researchers have reported that high blood levels of the chemical can help identify individuals at increased risk of heart disease, while others have proposed that elevated homocysteine may in fact cause heart disease.

But a report published in the July 21st issue of the journal Circulation suggests that elevated homocysteine levels "may be a consequence, not a cause" of heart disease. Dr. Aaron R. Folsom of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and colleagues at multiple sites also report that their study indicates that high blood levels of vitamin B6 may protect against heart disease.

The researchers measured levels of homocysteine and vitamin B6 in 769 individuals, aged 45 to 64 years, enrolled in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study. An average of 3.3 years later, they followed-up the patients and recorded new diagnoses of heart disease and stroke in these patients during the period.

After accounting for a variety of risk factors for coronary heart disease, Folsom and others found that only vitamin B6 was independently associated with the risk of heart disease. In fact, the risk of heart disease was 70% lower in study subjects with the highest blood levels of vitamin B6 at the start of the study compared with those with the lowest levels.

In contrast, homocysteine levels were not independently associated with the risk of heart disease, according to the investigators.

"I believe that homocysteine isn't as important as some previous research suggests and that more studies are needed to clarify how homocysteine, B vitamins and heart disease are linked," said Folsom in a statement issued by the publishers of Circulation, the journal of the American Heart Association. Folsom further stressed the importance of follow-up clinical trials in an interview with Reuters Health, noting that people should not assume that vitamin B supplements will lower their risk of heart disease. "We need first of all for people to be aware of the main risk factors -- high blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking," he said.

SOURCE: Circulation 1998;98:204-210.

NEW YORK,

Jul 20 (Reuters) –



 

 

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