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Optimizing Neurovascular Aging With Nutritional & Weight Management Techniques
1. Optimized Neurovascular Aging
With Nutritional & Weight
Management Techniques
presented for….
Ottawa, Ontario ~ 15-16 October, 2016
Louis B. Cady, M.D., FAPA
CEO, Founder – Cady Wellness Institute
Newburgh, Indiana (USA)
2. H - 2
“There are two objects of medical education: to heal
the sick and to advance the science.”
- Dr. Charles H. Mayo, MD
“The glory of medicine is that it is always moving
forward, that there is always more to learn.”
- Dr. William J. Mayo
3. “If some real disaster impends in the city, it is not because
parking spaces are hard to find, because architecture is
bad, because department store sales are declining, or even
because taxes are rising. If there is a genuine
crisis, it has to do with the essential welfare
of individuals or with the good health of the
society, not merely with comfort, convenience,
amenity, and business advantage, important as these
are.”
from The Unheavenly City, Edward C. Banfield, 1968, 1970
Disaster awaits.
4. Theses for this presentation:
• What we eat is important.
– Micronutrient adequacy
– Macronutrient reasonableness
• Neurovascular health issues are related to
type, amount, and quantity consumed, as
well as micronutrient adequacy, physical
exercise and hormonal stability.
• Our functioning as we age and our freedom
from disease and depression is a function of
our diet and behavior.
5. Human nutritional physiology in one slide
• Macronutrients – provide calories:
– Carbs (can be made from proteins by gluconeogenisis)
• C,H, O atoms
– fat – some are essential and cannot be synthesized
– (large amounts of processed vegetable oils skew Omega 6:3 ratio)
– protein – (C, H, O, and N – nitrogen containing
essential & non-essential amino acids)
– fiber, water
• Micronutrients:
– Minerals – both essential and trace
– Vitamins
• Less well established: antioxidants /phytochemicals
7. North America 85%
South America 76%
Asia 76%
Africa 74%
Europe 72%
Australia 55%
% Mineral depletion from the soil
during the past 100 years, by continent
Source: UN Earth Summit Report 1992
8. % of US Resident >/= 2 years of age
who are deficient
• Vitamin A 34% deficient
• Vitamin C 25% deficient
• Vitamin D 70% deficient
• Vitamin E 60% deficient
• Calcium 38% deficient
• Magnesium 45% deficient
“Without enrichment and/or fortification and
supplementation, many Americans did not achieve
the recommended [bare minimum] micronutrient
intake levels…”
[Fulgoni, V, et al. J Nutr. 2011 Oct]
9. “Pending strong evidence …from randomized trials, it
appears prudent for all adults to take vitamin
supplements.” Fletcher & Fairfield, JAMA 2002
10. Bruce Ames, Ph.D.
395 citations in
PubMed, May 1952-
June 2014.
Most recent is
“Enough is Enough”
Ann Intern Med
2014 Jun 3, with
Frei, Blumberg and
Willett
November 2, 2012
11.
12. Ames & Micronutrient Triage -
deconstructed
1. Inadequate dietary intakes of vitamins/minerals are
widespread.
– Excessive consumption of energy-rich, micronutrient-poor, refined
food
1. Deficiencies in many micronutrients cause DNA damage
in cultured or living human cells.
2. Proposal: DNA damage and late onset disease are
consequences of a triage allocation based on
micronutrient scarcity.
– Natural selection favors short-term survival at expense of long-
term health.
Ames B. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Nov
21;103(47):17589-94. Epub 2006 Nov 13.
13. Ames & Micronutrient Triage -
deconstructed
4. If proposal is correct, “micronutrient deficiencies
that trigger the triage response would accelerate
cancer, aging, and neural decay but would leave
critical metabolic functions, such as ATP
production, intact.”
5. “A multivitamin-mineral supplement is one low-
cost way to ensure intake of the Recommended
Dietary Allowance of micronutrients throughout
life.”
Ames B. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Nov
21;103(47):17589-94. Epub 2006 Nov 13.
14. 44 million inpatients, 460 sites, 2000-2010 = 20%
of all US inpatient episodes (1.6% were on ONS
during the inpatient episode.)
44 million inpatients, 460 sites, 2000-2010 = 20%
of all US inpatient episodes (1.6% were on ONS
during the inpatient episode.)
>/= 18 years. No terminal patients, tube feedings.>/= 18 years. No terminal patients, tube feedings.
RESULTS for “ONS”:
•2.3 day shorter length of stay
•Decreased cost of $4,734 / episode
•2.3% reduced probability of early readmission.
RESULTS for “ONS”:
•2.3 day shorter length of stay
•Decreased cost of $4,734 / episode
•2.3% reduced probability of early readmission.
CONCLUSIONS: “Use of ONS decreases length of
stay, episode cost, and 30 day readmission risk in the
inpatient population.”
CONCLUSIONS: “Use of ONS decreases length of
stay, episode cost, and 30 day readmission risk in the
inpatient population.”
Tomas J, et al. Am J Manag Care. 2013;19(2):121-
15. Magnesium mementos
• One of the first minerals to disappear with:
– Processed food
– Stress
• Decreased by EtOH, caffeine, sodas, meds
• Considered “anti-stress” mineral
– Decreases cortisol (rel to sleep disruption)
– Relaxes muscles, prevents cramps (sleep
disruption)
– Decreases anxiety; improves sleep
16. Symptoms of Magnesium Deficiency
PSYCHIATRIC ISSUES:
•Difficulty with memory
and concentration
•Depression, apathy
•Emotional lability
•Irritability, nervousness,
anxiety
•Insomnia
Autism
ADHD
Migraine headaches
PMS
Dysmenorrhea
Fibromyalgia
Fatigue
CONSTIPATION
Health Conditions Associated
with Magnesium Deficiency
17. SELENIUM DEFICIENCY in FASEB:
• “Adaptive dysfunction of
selenoproteins from the
perspective of the ‘triage’
theory: why modest
selenium deficiency
may increase risk
of diseases of
aging.”
Foundation of American
Societies for Experimental
Biology
McCann, J, Ames BM. FASEB J.
2011 Jun;25(6):1793-814.
19. “The concomitant evolution between plasma Se
decrease over a 9-year period and cognitive decline
suggested that optimal Se status is potentially
important to maintain neuropsychological
functions in aging people.”
“The concomitant evolution between plasma Se
decrease over a 9-year period and cognitive decline
suggested that optimal Se status is potentially
important to maintain neuropsychological
functions in aging people.”
20. Negative downstream effects from
selenium deficiency:
“…cancer, heart disease, and
immune dysfunction are prospectively
associated with modest selenium
deficiency…. suggesting that
Se deficiency could be a
CAUSATIVE factor.”
McCann, J, Ames BM. FASEB J. 2011 Jun;25(6):1793-814.
21. November 2009
“Alpha Male” issue
Observational study of randomly selected men –
Boston
3 cohorts of men: 1987-1989; 1995-1997; 2002
-2004.
1374, 906, and 489 men, respectively.
“Age independent decline in T that does not appear to
be attributable to observed changes in explanatory
factors, including lifestyle characteristics such as
smoking and obesity.”
“Recent years have seen a SUBSTANTIAL, and as
yet UNRECOGNIZED age-independent population-
level decrease in T in American men.”
Travison, Araujo, et al. Jrnl of Clin. Endocrinol & Metabol 92:1; 196-202.
22. Fast food (low Zn) is bad for you.
• Fast food = high energy density = low essential
micronutrient density, ESPECIALLY ZINC
• Antioxidant processes are dependent on Zinc
• Fast food = severe decrease in antioxidant
vitamins and zinc, correlating with
inflammation in testicular tissue – with
underdevelopment of testicular tissue and
decreased testosterone levels
23. Special needs - Zinc
• Low Zinc- associated with low testosterone
– Found in meat, seafood, oysters & dairy
– Vegetarians at highest risk for zinc deficiency
– Per USDA, 60% of US men between 20 – 49
years of age do not get enough.
– (N.B.: Do not supplement with > 50 mg daily
-can interfere with Cu+ metabolism)
• Tsai, E.C., Boyko, E.J., Leonetti, D.L., & Fujimoto, W.Y. (2000). Low
serum testosterone level as a predictor of increased visceral fat in
Japanese-American men.
International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic Disorders,
24, 485-491
24. T vs. Cognitive Function
• 400 independently living men, 40-80yo
– 100 in each age decade
– TT: 208-1141ng/dL; Bio-avail T 78-470ng/dL
• HIGHER T = better cognitive performance in
OLDEST AGE category
• Men with lowest 1/5 T = worse than men with
highest 1/5 T
• Highest Bio-available T more
significant than TT, age, intelligence
level, mood, smoking, and alcohol.
Muller M, et al. Neurology. 2005 Mar;64(5): 866-71
25. T vs. Mood in men
• Study: 278 men, >45yo, followed 2 years
• Compared to eugonadal patients,
hypogonadal men w/TT <200ng/dL had
– 4-fold increase risk of depression
– Significantly shorter time to depression
diagnosis
• Depression risk inversely
related to TT w/statistical significance
<280ng/dL
Shores MM, Arch Gen Psychiatry. 61(2004):162-7
26. Balanced presentation inclusive of
women…
• Oral zinc raises testosterone levels in women.
– Vecchio M, et. Al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2010 Dec 8;(12):CD007747.
doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007747.pub2.
• Transdermal testosterone improves:
– Sexual desire, arousal, orgasm frequency, and sexual
satisfaction in premenopausal and post-menopausal
women.
– Also associated with favorable effects on body
composition, bone, cardiovascular fxn, and COGNITION
• Davis SR. Androgen therapy in women, beyond libido.
Climacteric. 2013 Aug;16 Suppl 1:18-24. doi:
10.3109/13697137.2013.801736. Epub 2013 May 27.
27. SHIFT: Vitamins
• They are essential nutrients (except Vit D)
• Deficiencies result in classic/obvious
diseases:
– Goiter, scurvy, osteoporosis, pernicious anemia,
impaired immune function, disorders of cell
metabolism, some forms of cancer, premature
aging, poor psychological health (including
eating disorders)
• Shils et al. (2005). Modern Nutrition in Health and Disease. Lippincott Williams and
Wilkins. ISBN 0-7817-4133-5.
28. • Irritability
• Apathy
• Personality changes
• Depression
• Memory loss
• Dementia
• Hallucinations
• Violent behavior
• Anxiety
Symptoms of B12 Deficiency
• Diminished sense
of touch and pain
• Clumsiness
• Weakness
• Pernicious anemia
• Chronic fatigue
• Tremors
• GI problems
Mental Physical
29. The Effects of high dose B vitamins
on stress at work
• “Occupational stress is increasing in Western societies.”
• 3 month, double blind, placebo control, randomized study
• Measured: Personality, work demands, mood, anxiety, and
strain
• After variances in personality and work demands were
controlled, the vitamin B complex treated
group reported significantly lower personal
strain and a reduction in confusion and
depressed/dejected mood after 12 weeks.
Strough C et al. The effect of 90 day administration of a high dose vitamin B-
coplex on work stress. Hum Psychopharmacol. 2011 Sept 8. doi
10.1002/hup.1229 (Swinburne University of Technology – Hawhorn, Victoria,
Australia.)
30. Vitamin/mineral supplementation & cancer,
cardiovascular, and all-cause mortality
(EPIC-Heidelberg) Li K, Kaaks R., et al. Eur J Nutri July 2011
• Purpose: evaluate vitamin/mineral
supplementation with CA, CV dz, and mortality
• Methods:
– 23,943 healthy participants, followed x 11 years
– Baseline and “new-use” supplementation noted
• Results: 513 CA deaths, 264 CV deaths
– “No MVI supplement had any significant effect”
– Baseline users of antioxidant supplements
had significantly reduced risk of cancer [HR
0.52] and all cause mortality [0.58]
• “sick user” phenomenon discussed.
31. “Homocysteine lowering by B-Vitamins slows the rate of
accelerated brain atrophy in MCI”…
Smith AD, Smith SM, de Jager CA, Whitbread P, et al. (2010) Homocysteine-Lowering by B Vitamins Slows the
Rate of Accelerated Brain Atrophy in Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Randomized Controlled Trial. PLoS ONE
5(9): e12244. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012244
CONCLUSIONS: “The
accelerated rate of brain
atrophy in elderly with MCI can
be slowed by treatment with
homocysteine-lowering B-
vitamins.”
32. Regional loss of grey matter volume reduced
with B-vitamins
Douad G, et al. preventing Alzheimer’s disease-related gray matter atrophy by B-vitamin
treatment. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. Jun 4, 2013; 110(23): 9523–9528.
33. OK. It slows shrinkage. But are they sharper?
[deJager CA et al. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2012 June;27(6):592-600]
“B-vitamins appear to slow cognitive and clinical
decline in people with MCI.”
34. A combined supplementation of vitamin B12
and omega-3 fatty acid showed higher
(p < 0.01) levels of DHA and NGF in the
hippocampus, higher BDNF in both
hippocampus and cortex and improved
cognitive performance.
A combined supplementation of vitamin B12
and omega-3 fatty acid showed higher
(p < 0.01) levels of DHA and NGF in the
hippocampus, higher BDNF in both
hippocampus and cortex and improved
cognitive performance.
35. The role of antioxidants in the brain
and body
• www.pubmed.gov searches September 3, 2016
– “antioxidants neurovascular health” – 29 citations
– “antioxidants cognition” = 1705 citations
– “antioxidants brain health” – 2300 citations
36. Generation of free radicals in electron transport chain
http://www.nature.com/nm/journal/v11/n6/fig_tab/nm0605-598_F1.html
Aging; mitochondrial DNA damage
37. What causes oxidative stress?
• Environmental Toxins
– Heavy metals
– Pesticides/herbicides
– Preservatives
– PCB’s, Dioxins, Phthalates
• Toxins produced in (or injected into) the body
– Yeast and bacteria
– Products of cellular metabolism
– Dental amalgams/vaccines (Hb)
• Emotional Stress
– Anxiety/Tension
– Fear
– Anger
39. WILL an apple a day keep the doctor
away?
• Liu S, et al. Intake of vegetables rich in carotenoids and risk of coronary heart
disease in men: The Physician’s Health Study. Int. J Epidemiol. 2001
Feb;30(1):130-5.
• Findings adjusted for age, randomized treatment,
BMI, smoking, alcohol intake, physical activity, DM
history, HTN history, high cholesterol, use of
(conventional) MVI’s..
• 2.5 servings/day of vegetables had a
“RR (relative risk) of 0.77” for CAD vs.
men in lowest category
40. WILL an apple a day keep the doctor
away? (continued)
“Our results suggest an inverse
association between vegetable
intake and risk of CHD. These
prospective data support current
dietary guidelines to increase
vegetable intake for the prevention
of CHD.”
Liu S, et al. Intake of vegetables rich in carotenoids and risk of coronary heart
disease in men: The Physician’s Health Study. Int. J Epidemiol. 2001
Feb;30(1):130-5.
41. 15,318 US adults in 3rd
National Health and Nutrition Examination
Follow-up study. (Different lifestyles and health risk factors were
accounted for in the study)
“serum alpha-carotene concentrations were
inversely associated with risk of death from all
causes, CVD, cancer, and all other causes[sic].”
42.
43. • Study population:
– N=1,389; age range {59-71 yoa}
– 9 year study
• Relative risks:
– all cause mortality at 2.94X in men in lowest
quintile (95% CI, P=0.03)
– cancer 1.72X in men (95% CI, P=0.01
• “Total plasma carotenoids levels
were independently associated
with mortality risk in men.”
Epidemiology of Vascular Aging (EVA)
44. Circulating Carotenoids and Risk of Breast Cancer
• STUDY: pooled analysis of 8 cohort studies
– 80% of the world’s published prospective data on
plasma/serum carotenoids and breast cancer
• 3055 case subjects
• 3,956 matched controls.
• CONCLUSIONS: This comprehensive prospective
analysis suggests women with higher circulating
levels of α-carotene, β-carotene,
lutein+zeaxanthin, lycopene, and total carotenoids
may be at reduced risk of breast cancer.
Eliassen AH, et al. Circulating Carotenoids and Risk of Breast Cancer: Pooled Analysis of Eight Prospective
Studies. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2012 Dec 19;104(24):1905-16. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djs461.
45. Eliassen AH, et al. Circulating Carotenoids and Risk of Breast Cancer: Pooled Analysis of Eight
Prospective Studies. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2012 Dec 19;104(24):1905-16. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djs461.
46. Lipid peroxidation, antioxidant status
& survival in institutionalized elderly
• Plasma MDA
predicted mortality
independently of all
other variables.
• B-carotene and
alpha tocopherol
were independently
associated with
survival. Huerta JM et al. Free Radical Research
2006, vol 40, no 6. pp 571-578.
51. Everett Napier, an unemployed miner, said he pawned various items while he has
been looking for work, including rifles, tools, jewelry and two guitars he used to
play at church. 'I just swallowed my pride and quit playing. That's all you can do.'
David Stephenson for The Wall Street Journal. November 26, 2013
54. HUMAN study n=527, 20-87 years of age
Results indicated that cerebral white-matter volume in
overweight and obese individuals was associated with a
greater degree of atrophy, with maximal effects in
middle-age corresponding to an estimated
increase of brain age of 10 years.
Results indicated that cerebral white-matter volume in
overweight and obese individuals was associated with a
greater degree of atrophy, with maximal effects in
middle-age corresponding to an estimated
increase of brain age of 10 years.
“This study suggests that at a population level,
obesity may increase the risk of neurodegeneration.”
“This study suggests that at a population level,
obesity may increase the risk of neurodegeneration.”
55. “F as in Fat – How Obesity Threatens America’s
Future 2012” – Robert Wood Johnson foundation
2030 …
IN, IL
obesity
rates: 50-
60%
KY: >60%
http://healthyamericans.org/report/100/
56. Year 1900 2010
Sugar 5 lbs/year 200 lbs/year
Oils/fat 4 lbs/year 74.1 lbs/year
Cheese 2 lbs/year 30 lbs/year
Meat 140 lbs/year 210 lbs/year
Fruit/Veget. 131 lbs/year
homegrown
11 pounds/year
homegrown
Calories 2100 2757
Nutrient
Density
40-60%
Soft drinks 0 53 Gallons
TV 0 4 hours/day
Sources: USDA, FoodReview: Major Food Trends a Century in Review 2000
What Happened?
57. Change your DIET, change
your GENES:
Changes in prostate gene expression in
men undergoing an intensive nutrition
and lifestyle intervention. Ornish, Dean
et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
2008 June 17; 105(24):8369-8374
Pre-invention gene
expression
Post-intervention gene
expression
TRANSLATION: What you eat
talks to your genes and
CHANGES THEIR
EXPRESSION.
58. Nutraceutical resetting of mitochodnrial genes
as measured by Affmetrix gene chip
Old Gene
Expression
Young Gene
Expression
TARGET
Old Gene
Expression
RESET
1
Transcriptional Biomarkers of Mitochondrial Aging and Modulation by Cordyceps Sinensis Cs-4. Gordon Research
Conference, Biology of Aging, Determinants of Health-Span: From Cells to Humans, August 22-27, 2010. Les Diablerets
Conference Center, Les Diablerets, Switzerland.
64. To boldly age where no man has aged
before…
William Shatner as James T. Kirk,
and himself…
65. The Seven Secrets of
Optimizing Neurovascular (&Body) Health
1. Control blood sugar.
2. Eat more small meals.
3. Eat more protein.
4. Get hormones (thyroid, etc.) checked.
5. Make it idiot proof for the patient.
6. Balanced supplementation, as needed.
7. EXERCISE –it’s the “fountain of youth.”
66. Cady Wellness Institute Synergy:
The Five Point Plan
1) GET ALL THE LABS YOU
NEED.
2) Rx: Hormones, if needed.
3) MONITOR ANTIOXIDANT &
vitamins/minerals.
SUPPLEMENT AS NEEDED.
4) RATIONAL EATING
5) RATIONAL EXERCISING.
Mind
Body
Actions
69. “Probably the most interesting period of
medicine has been that of the last few
decades. So rapid has been this advance, as
new knowledge developed, that the truth
of each year was necessarily
modified by new evidence, making
the truth an ever-changing factor.”
- Charles Mayo, MD “Dr. Charlie”
70.
71. • Louis B. Cady, M.D. – citations for USI presentation
• Ames, BN. Low micronutrient intake may accelerate the degenerative diseases of aging through
allocation of scarce micronutrients by triage. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Nov 21;103(47):17589-
94.
• Bailey RL et al. Examination of vitamin intakes among US adults by dietary supplement use. J Acad
Nutr Diet. 2012 May;112(5):657-663.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2012.01.026. Epub 2012 Apr 25.
• Berr C, et al. Selenium and cognitive impairment: a brief-review based on results from the EVA stdy.
Biofactors. 2012 Mar-Apr;38(2):139-44. doi: 10.1002/biof.1003.
• deJager CA, et al. Cognitive and clinical outcomes of homocysteine-lowering B-vitamin treatment in
mild cognitive impairment: a randomized controlled trial. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2012 Jun;27(6):592-
600. doi: 10.1002/gps.2758. Epub 2011 Jul 21.
• Eliassen, AH et al. Circulating carotenoids and risk of breast cancer: pooled analysis of eight
prospective studies. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2012 Dec 19;104(24):1905-16. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djs461.
• Fletcher KM , Fairfield KM. Vitamins for chronic disease prevention in adults: clinical applications.
JAMA. 2002 Jun 19;287(23):3127-9.
• Fulgoni VL et al. Foods, fortificants, and supplements: Where do Americans get their nutrients? . J
Nutr. 2011 Oct;141(10):1847-54. doi: 10.3945/jn.111.142257. Epub 2011 Aug 24.
• Houston, M. The role of cellular micronutrient analysis, nutraceuticals, vitamins, antioxidants and
minerals in the prevention and treatment of hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Ther Adv
Cardiovasc Dis. 2010 DOI: 10.1177/1753944710368205
• (continued – next slide)
72. • Louis B. Cady, M.D. – citations for USI presentation, cont.
• Mayne ST et al. Resonance Raman spectroscopic evaluation of skin carotenoids as a biomarker of
carotenoid status for human studies. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2013 Nov 15;539(2):163-70. doi:
10.1016/j.abb.2013.06.007. Epub 2013 Jun 30.
• McCann, J, Ames BM. Adaptive dysfunction of selenoproteins from the perspective of the ‘triage’
theory: why modest selenium deficiency may increase risk of diseases of aging. FASEB J. 2011
Jun;25(6):1793-814.
• Ramirez-Velez, et al. Non-invasive assessment of β-carotene levels in the skin of Colombian adults.
Endocrinol Nutr. 2012 May;59(5):304-10. doi: 10.1016/j.endonu.2012.03.001. Epub 2012 Apr 13.
• Rathod RS et al. Effect of vitamin B12 and omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on brain
neurotrophins and cognition in rats: A multigeneration study. Biochimie. 2016 Aug 26.
• Ronan, L et al. Obesity associated with increased brain age from midlife. Neurobiol Aging. 2016 Jul
27;47:63-70.
• Smith AD et al. Homocysteine-lowering by B vitamins slows the rate of accelerated brain atrophy in
mild cognitive impairment: a randomized controlled trial. PLoS One. 2010 Sep 8;5(9):e12244. doi:
10.1371/journal.pone.0012244.
• Taube, G. Why We Get Fat. Random House, 2010.
• Transcriptional Biomarkers of Mitochondrial Aging and Modulation by Cordyceps Sinensis Cs-4.
Gordon Research Conference, Biology of Aging, Determinants of Health-Span: From Cells to
Humans, August 22-27, 2010. Les Diablerets Conference Center, Les Diablerets, Switzerland.
Notas del editor
When repleted - results pretty quickly. “If if spasms, think magnesium” – bowel, bronchial.
RIA (in-house after diethylether extraction)
Total testosterone - T (RIA)
208-1141ng/dL, average 536+/-153ng/dL
Bioavailable testosterone - BT (calculated)
78-470ng/dL, average 236+/-63ng/dL
Hypogonadal if
TT &lt;200ng/dL or
FT &lt;0.9ng/dL
METHODS:
In the Heidelberg cohort of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC-Heidelberg), which was recruited in 1994-1998, 23,943 participants without pre-existing cancer and myocardial infarction/stroke at baseline were included in the analyses. Vitamin/mineral supplementation was assessed at baseline and during follow-up. Cox regression models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
RESULTS:
After an average follow-up time of 11 years, 1,101 deaths were documented (cancer deaths = 513 and cardiovascular deaths = 264). After adjustment for potential confounders, neither any vitamin/mineral supplementation nor multivitamin supplementation at baseline was statistically significantly associated with cancer, cardiovascular, or all-cause mortality. However, baseline users of antioxidant vitamin supplements had a significantly reduced risk of cancer mortality (HR: 0.52; 95% CI: 0.28, 0.97) and all-cause mortality (HR: 0.58; 95% CI: 0.38, 0.88). In comparison with never users, baseline non-users who started taking vitamin/mineral supplements during follow-up had significantly increased risks of cancer mortality (HR: 1.74; 95% CI: 1.09, 2.77) and all-cause mortality (HR: 1.58; 95% CI: 1.17, 2.14).
CONCLUSIONS:
Based on limited numbers of users and cases, this cohort study suggests that supplementation of antioxidant vitamins might possibly reduce cancer and all-cause mortality. The significantly increased risks of cancer and all-cause mortality among baseline non-users who started taking supplements during follow-up may suggest a &quot;sick-user effect,&quot; which researchers should be cautious of in future observational studies.
Regional loss of GM volume in placebo and B-vitamin groups. Placebo- and B-vitamin–treated groups showed significant reduction of GM volume over the 2-y period in similar regions (in yellow, P &lt; 0.001 FWE-corrected for multiple comparisons, overlaid onto the average of all 156 GM volume images; Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) coordinates in mm: x = −12, y = 4, z = −18). The extent and significance of volume loss appeared markedly greater in the placebo group compared with the B-vitamin group and is confirmed by direct statistical comparison (text and Fig. 2).
We additionally show that the beneficial effect of B vitamins is confined to participants with high homocysteine (above the median, 11 µmol/L) and that, in these participants, a causal Bayesian network analysis indicates the following chain of events: B vitamins lower homocysteine, which directly leads to a decrease in GM atrophy, thereby slowing cognitive decline.
we showed that high-dose B-vitamin treatment (folic acid 0.8 mg, vitamin B6 20 mg, vitamin B12 0.5 mg) slowed shrinkage of the whole brain volume over 2 y.
Here, we go further by demonstrating that B-vitamin treatment reduces, by as much as seven fold, the cerebral atrophy in those gray matter (GM) regions specifically vulnerable to the AD process, including the medial temporal lobe.
Figure 1. Powering up lifespan.
The electron transport chain of mitochondria is the major source of free radicals in the cell. Because of electron leak, free radicals react with oxygen (O2) to generate superoxide radicals (O2 ). The major sites of generation includes the iron-sulfur clusters of complex I, coenzyme Q associated with complex III, and components of the tricarboxylic acid cycle, including -ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. Superoxide radicals are dismutated by manganese superoxide dismutase in the mitochondrial matrix to generate O2 and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). H2O2 is then converted to H2O by either catalase or glutathione peroxidase (GPx) which uses glutathione (GSH). Aging is associated with increased mitochondrial production of H2O2, leading to oxidative damage and mitochondrial DNA mutations. Schriner et al. find that they can substantially extend lifespan in mice and reduce age-associated disease by overexpressing catalase in mitochondria in mice.
Graph of change of consumption
This heatmap illustrates gene expression of three groups from a pre-clinical test with one of the ageLOC Vitality ingredients: young (column 1), old (column 2), and old with ageLOC science (column 3). Each row represents one of 52 genes comprising the mitochondrial Youth Gene Cluster (mtYGC). Columns 1 and 2 show that each of the 52 genes became more or less active during the aging process. In column 3, the YGC activity pattern of the old with ageLOC science group has been reset to a gene expression pattern similar to the young group in column 1.1