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Vitamin B May Not Reduce Stroke Risk
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
By: Steven Reinberg
Business Week
Jury still out on the vascular benefits of supplementation, experts say
Stroke patients who take vitamin B supplements to lower their
homocysteine levels may not be protected from second strokes or heart
attacks, a new study finds.
Earlier studies found an association between homocysteine, an amino
acid, in the blood, and an increased risk for stroke and heart attack.
Vitamin B supplements lower homocysteine levels, but whether this
really has an effect on stroke and heart attack risk has been unclear,
the Australian researchers noted.
"B vitamins are safe, but they were not, statistically,
significantly more effective than placebo in preventing major vascular
events among stroke and TIA [transient ischemic attack] patients," said
lead researcher Dr. Graeme J. Hankey, head of the stroke unit at Royal
Perth Hospital in Western Australia. "B vitamins have not been proven
to have a role in secondary stroke prevention."
The report is published in the Aug. 4 online edition of The Lancet Neurology, and will appear in the September print issue of the journal.
For the study, Hankey and his colleagues in the Vitamins to Prevent
Stroke (VITATOPS) trial tested whether lowering homocysteine with a
combination of folic acid, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12 would lower the
risk of a second stroke or heart attack in patients who had a recent
stroke or transient ischemic attack.
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