-- Can Supplements Help People With Diabetes Avoid Retinopathy? - Food and herbal nutritional products

Welcome Guest

 
Food and herbal nutritional products » Vitamins » Can Supplements Help People With Diabetes Avoid Retinopathy?

Can Supplements Help People With Diabetes Avoid Retinopathy?

View PDF | Print View
by: Guest Total views: 293 Word Count: 372    Bookmark and Share


Food Standards Agency - Eat well, be well -  Vitamin C In theory, Vitamins C and E and magnesium could help prevent or limit diabetic retinopathy (DR), a potentially blinding disease, since each nutrient causes the body to respond in ways that alter retinopathy mechanisms. For example, in animal models Vitamins C and E suppress production of a growth factor, VEG-F, which can promote abnormal blood vessels in the retina. And high dietary levels of magnesium are associated with lower blood pressure and blood sugar, both of which correlate with a lower risk of retinopathy.

A research team led by Amanda Adler, MD, PhD, Institute of Metabolic Science, Cambridge, United Kingdom, surveyed studies published from 1988 through 2008 on the impact of these micronutrients on DR. Based on 15 selected studies comprising 4,094 individuals, Dr. Adler says to the evidence is not strong enough yet to recommend Vitamins C or E or magnesium supplements for patients with diabetes. She thinks the research should continue, though, and recommends specific parameters.

"It is a very attractive proposition that what one eats, rather than a medication, might reduce the risk of diabetic complications. Ideally, future studies would include frequent measurement of intake of these three nutrients through diet and supplements, standardized exams to identify DR, and agreed-upon biomarkers to assess DR progression," Dr. Adler said. "If such studies showed apparent protection against DR, then a randomized clinical trial could determine more precisely how a person with diabetes might, or might not, alter his intake of any of these nutrients," she said.

The Adler survey found that in hospital-based studies, participants with higher levels of Vitamin C in their blood were less likely to have DR, but in population-based studies there was no association between dietary intake of Vitamin C and DR. For Vitamin E, no studies showed an association between blood levels or dietary intake and DR risk. For magnesium, one study showed an association between low blood levels of magnesium and DR progression, but other studies were inconclusive.

This research was published in the January 2010 issue of Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. New Molecule Implicated in Diabetes-Associated Blindness (Nov. 30, 2009) Scientists have demonstrated that the Wnt signaling pathway plays a role in diabetic ...

Additional information:

Vitamin supplements good or bad?
Preventing the common cold with a vitamin C supplement A double
How to Best Absorb Vitamin C Supplements Diet Nutrition
Vitamin C supplements and the risk of age-related cataract: a
Effect of Vitamin C Supplements on Urinary Oxalate and pH in
Learn more about vitamin c supplements Eureka! Science News
Vitamin C supplement reviews, buy best Vitamin C supplements
Vitamins health supplements herbal supplements vitamin
Vitamin E deficiency and vitamin C supplements exercise and
Amazon.com: Vitamin C Supplements
http://www.sciencedaily.com/re...

Related "Vitamins":


Rating: Not yet rated (votes: 0)

Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

Name (option)
Email (option, not published)
Website (option)
Message(required):

Spam protect (required)
The Are you human Test: 8 minus 7 5 + 6 =