Heart And Bone Damage From Low Vitamin D Tied To Declines In Sex
Hormones
Main Category:
Complementary Medicine /
Alternative Medicine
Also Included In:
Bones /
Orthopaedics;
Heart
Disease;
Endocrinology
Article Date: 16 Nov 2009 - 2:00 PST
Researchers at Johns Hopkins are reporting what is believed to be the
first conclusive evidence in men that the long-term ill effects of
vitamin D deficiency are amplified by
lower levels of the key sex hormone estrogen, but not
testosterone.
In a national study in 1010 men, to be presented Nov. 15 at the American
Heart Association's (AHA) annual Scientific Sessions in Orlando,
researchers say the new findings build on previous studies showing that
deficiencies in vitamin D and low levels of estrogen, found naturally in
differing amounts in men and women, were independent risk factors for
hardened and narrowed arteries and weakened bones. Vitamin D is an
essential part to keeping the body healthy, and can be obtained from
fortified foods, such as milk and cereals, and by exposure to sunlight.
"Our results confirm a long-suspected link and suggest that vitamin
D supplements, which are already prescribed to treat
osteoporosis, may also be useful in
preventing heart disease," says lead study investigator and
cardiologist Erin Michos, M.D., M.H.S.
"All three steroid hormones - vitamin D, estrogen and testosterone -
are produced from
cholesterol, whose
blood levels are known to influence arterial and bone health," says
Michos, an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine and its Heart and Vascular Institute. "Our study gives us a
much better understanding of how the three work in concert to affect
cardiovascular and bone health."
Michos says the overall biological relationship continues to puzzle
scientists because studies of the long-term effects of adding estrogen in
the form of hormone replacement therapy in women failed to show fewer
deaths from heart disease. Indeed, results showed that in some women, an
actual increase in heart disease and
stroke rates occurred, although, bone
fractures declined.
The Hopkins team's latest data were provided by analyzing blood samples
from a subset of men participating in a study on
cancer. That study
was part of a larger, ongoing national health survey involving both men
and women and was designed to compare the risk of diseases between those
with the lowest blood levels of vitamin D to those with higher amounts.
An unhealthy deficiency, experts say, is considered blood levels of 20
nanograms per milliliter or lower.
The men in the study had their hormone levels measured for both chemical
forms of testosterone and estrogen found in blood, when each is either
unattached or circulating freely, and when each is attached to a separate
protein, known as sex hormone binding globulin, or SHBG for short.
Initial results showed no link between vitamin D deficiency and depressed
blood levels of either hormone. And despite finding a harmful
relationship between depressed testosterone levels and rates of heart
disease, stroke, and
high blood
pressure, as well as osteopenia in men, researchers found that it was
independent of deficiencies in vitamin D.
However, when researchers compared ratios of estrogen to SHBG levels,
they found that rates of both diseases, especially osteopenia, the early
stage of osteoporosis, were higher when both estrogen and vitamin D
levels were depressed.
For every single unit decrease in ratios of estrogen to SHBG (both in
nanomoles per liter), men low in vitamin D showed an 89 percent increase
in osteopenia, but men with sufficient vitamin D levels had a less
worrisome 64 percent jump.
Using the same measure of estrogen levels, men low in vitamin D were also
at heightened risk of cardiovascular diseases, at 12 percent, compared to
men with adequate levels of the vitamin, at 1 percent, numbers that
researchers say are still statistically significant.
"These results reinforce the message of how important proper
quantities of vitamin D are to good bone health, and that a man's risk of
developing osteoporosis and heart disease is heavily weighted on the
complex and combined interaction of how any such vitamin deficits
interact with both their sex hormones, in particular, estrogen,"
Michos says.
Michos and her team next plan to analyze blood samples from women to see
if the same results from men hold true.
Michos recommends that men and women boost their vitamin D levels by
eating diets rich in fatty fish, such as cod, sardines and mackerel,
consuming fortified dairy products, taking vitamin supplements, and in
warmer weather briefly exposing skin to the sun's vitamin-D producing
ultraviolet light.
She points out that clinical trials are under way to determine whether or
not vitamin D supplements can prevent incidents of or deaths from
heart attack, stroke and other signs
of cardiovascular disease.
The U.S. Institute of Medicine suggests that an adequate daily intake of
vitamin D is between 200 and 400 international units, but Michos feels
this is inadequate to achieve optimal nutrient blood levels (above 30
nanograms per milliliter). Previous results from the same nationwide
survey showed that 41 percent of men and 53 percent of women are
technically deficient in the nutrient, with vitamin D levels below 28
nanograms per milliliter.
Funding for this study was provided by the Hormone Demonstration Project,
a part of the Maryland Cigarette Restitution Fund Research Grant Program
at the Johns Hopkins University. Additional support was provided by the
American College of Cardiology Foundation and a Clinician Scientist Award
at the Johns Hopkins University.
Besides Michos, other researchers at Johns Hopkins involved in this study
were Jared Reis, Ph.D.; and Meredith Shields and Elizabeth Platz, Ph.D.,
Sc.D., at the University's School of Public Health; and Sabine Rohrmann,
now at the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg. Another
investigator in this research was Nader Rifai, Ph.D., at Children's
Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School.
Source
Johns Hopkins Medicine
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/171038.php