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Two New Studies Debunk Benefits of Multivitamins

Lauran Neergaard – The Associated Press

There’s more disappointing news about multivitamins: Two  major studies found popping the pills didn’t protect aging men’s brains or help  heart attack survivors.

Millions of Americans spend billions of dollars  on vitamin combinations, presumably to boost their health and fill gaps in their  diets. But while people who don’t eat enough of certain nutrients may be urged  to get them in pill form, the government doesn’t recommend routine vitamin  supplementation as a way to prevent chronic diseases.

The studies  released Monday are the latest to test if multivitamins might go that extra step  and concluded they don’t.

“Evidence is sufficient to advise against  routine supplementation,” said a sharply worded editorial that accompanied  Monday’s findings in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

After all,  most people who buy multivitamins and other supplements are generally healthy,  said journal deputy editor Dr. Cynthia Mulrow. Even junk foods often are  fortified with vitamins, while the main nutrition problem in the U.S. is too  much fat and calories, she added.

But other researchers say the jury’s  still out, especially for the country’s most commonly used dietary supplement —  multivitamins that are taken by about a third of U.S. adults, and even more by  people over the age of 50.

Indeed, the U.S. Preventive Services Task  Force is deliberating whether vitamin supplements make any difference in the  average person’s risk of heart disease or cancer. In a draft proposal last  month, the government advisory group said for standard multivitamins and certain  other nutrients, there’s not enough evidence to tell. (It did caution that two  single supplements, beta-carotene and vitamin E, didn’t work). A final decision  is expected next year.

“For better or for worse, supplementation’s not  going to go away,” said Dr. Howard Sesso of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in  Boston. He helps lead a large multivitamin study that has had mixed results —  suggesting small benefits for some health conditions but not others — and says  more research is needed, especially among the less healthy.

Still,  “there’s no substitute for preaching a healthy diet and good behaviors” such as  exercise, Sesso cautioned.

As scientists debate, here are some questions  and answers to consider in the vitamin aisle:

Q: Why the new focus on  multivitamins?

A: Multivitamins have grown more popular in recent years  as research showed that taking high doses of single supplements could be risky,  such as beta-carotene.

Multivitamins typically contain no more than 100  percent of the daily recommended amount of various nutrients. They’re marketed  as sort of a safety net for nutrition gaps; the industry’s Council for  Responsible Nutrition says they’re taken largely for general wellness.

Q: What are the latest findings?

A: With Alzheimer’s on the rise  as the population ages, Harvard researchers wondered if long-term multivitamin  use might help keep older brains agile. They examined a subset of nearly 6,000  male doctors, age 65 or older, who were part of a larger study. The men were  given either multivitamins or dummy pills, without knowing which they were  taking.

After a decade of pill use, the vitamin-takers fared no better  on memory or other cognitive tests, Sesso’s team reported Monday in the journal  Annals of Internal Medicine.

Q: Did that Harvard study find any other  benefit from multivitamins?

A: The results of the Physicians Health  Study II have been mixed. Overall it enrolled about 15,000 health male doctors  age 50 and older, and the vitamin-takers had a slightly lower risk of cancer — 8  percent. Diet and exercise are more protective. They also had a similarly lower  risk of developing cataracts, common to aging eyes. But the vitamins had no  effect the risk for heart disease or another eye condition, Sesso said.

Q: Might vitamins have a different effect on people who already have  heart disease?

A: As part of a broader treatment study, a separate  research team asked that question. They examined 1,700 heart attack survivors,  mostly men, who were given either a special multivitamin containing  higher-than-usual doses of 28 ingredients or dummy pills. But the vitamins  didn’t reduce the chances of another heart attack, other cardiovascular  problems, or death.

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