Antioxidants:
An Antidote to Aging?
Reprinted from Food Insight
November/December 1993
Mom always said, "Eat your
fruits and vegetables, they'll help you grow big and strong."
Although dietary recommendations have changed over the years,
this is one bit of advice even Father Time can't ignore.
According to recent studies,
antioxidant vitamins in produce and other foods may actually
represent a modern-day "Fountain of Youth." Evidence
suggests that vitamins C and E, and beta carotene, a precursor
to vitamin A, may reduce the risk of some forms of cancer,
heart disease, strokes, cataracts, as well as slow the aging
process.
How do these compounds work and
how far are scientists willing to go in touting their health
benefits?

Antioxidants at Work
Although oxygen is vital to life,
scientists are also finding this essential element may contribute
to human aging and illness.
When oxygen is metabolized or
burned by the body, cells form byproducts called free radicals.
Free radicals travel through the cell, disrupting the structure
of other molecules and resulting in cellular damage. Such
damage is believed to contribute to aging and various health
problems.
Antioxidants protect key cell
components from damage by neutralizing the free radicals.
Antioxidants that occur naturally in the body or are consumed
through the diet may block most of the damage; however, over
time, damaged cells can accumulate and lead to age-related
diseases, researchers say.
"Antioxidant defense systems
limit [free-radical] formation and scavenge them, but antioxidant
defenses are not 100 percent efficient," said Barry Halliwell,
D.Sc., of the University of London and the University of California
at Davis, speaking at a symposium sponsored by the International
Life Sciences Institute (ILSI). Over time, "Oxidative
stress can damage proteins, lipids, DNA and carbohydrates."
In an effort to beef up bodily
defenses to combat free-radical activity, scientists are studying
the effects of increasing individuals' antioxidant levels
through the diet and dietary supplements.

Recent Research
Among the most widely-publicized
research trials on antioxidants was a five-year study published
in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute involving
approximately 30,000 residents of north-central China. Participants
were given either a placebo or a dietary supplement containing
one of seven vitamin-mineral combinations. Persons who received
a daily dose of beta carotene, vitamin E and selenium had
a reduced cancer rate of 13 percent.
Although many questions remain
as to the significance of these findings for other populations,
the study represents the first large-scale randomized, prospective,
placebo-controlled study showing the benefits of dietary supplementation
with antioxidant vitamins and minerals. Much of the previous
evidence was based on epidemiological studies of populations,
which suggested an association between antioxidants and disease
prevention but were not designed to reveal cause and effect
relationships.
In another recent study reported
at the American Heart Association (AHA) Scientific Session
in November, women who consumed high amounts of antioxidant
containing foods had a 33 percent lower risk of heart attack
and a 71 percent lower risk of stroke, than women who ate
few antioxidant-containing foods.
The study involved 1,795 female
nurses, each of whom had a history of heart attack, chest
pain due to coronary disease, or treatment for a blockage
in a coronary artery. Food intake was analyzed according to
subjects' estimated consumption of vitamins C and E, carotene
and riboflavin.
Even after controlling for other
variables that can contribute to cardiovascular risk such
as age and high blood pressure, the nurses who consumed the
most dietary antioxidants had the greatest disease reduction.
Individual foods most closely associated with the health benefits
included carrots, spinach and other greens.
"These data suggest that
people at high risk because of a history of cardiovascular
disease or events may benefit the most from increased consumption
of fruits and vegetables," said principal investigator
JoAnn Manson, M.D., of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.
"These women were at especially
high risk, and any intervention that impacts on that risk
could potentially save a large number of lives," Manson
added. Health care costs related to cardiovascular disease
are expected to exceed $117.4 billion in 1993 alone, according
to AHA.

Wait and See
Despite these and other promising
findings from antioxidant research studies, many experts are
not yet convinced there are adequate data to allow a health
claim on foods or dietary supplements. Questions still remain
on issues such as the effectiveness of individual antioxidant
vitamins to prevent which conditions, their mechanisms of
action, optimum levels of intake and their long-term effects.
Even more contentious is the
issue currently being debated by Congress and the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) over whether dietary supplements
containing antioxidants and other compounds should be regulated
as foods or drugs.
Many health groups such as AHA
and the American Cancer Society believe it is premature to
recommend dietary supplements containing antioxidants, indicating
that some other as yet unidentified substance in fruits and
vegetables may actually be responsible for reduced disease
risk.
"We can't yet say conclusively
that antioxidant vitamins, per se, as opposed to foods that
are high in antioxidants, can reduce the risk of stroke or
heart attack," Manson said. "I would support the
public health recommendation for increased fruit and vegetable
consumption among people who at high risk for cardiovascular
disease, as well as for the general public. But, at this point,
I couldn't recommend that people buy vitamin supplements."
"We're in the first wave,"
said Nancy Ernst, M.S., R.D., nutritional coordinator at the
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute who spoke at the
ILSI symposium. "We need to call for more research. We
have a lot of answers but we also have many, many questions...
We've not sufficiently addressed issues such as other nutritive
and nonnutritive compounds in the diet that may contribute
to disease prevention."
Until further studies are completed,
eating a balanced diet rich in antioxidant vitamins may be
the best way of improving your health. The following chart
outlines foods high in antioxidants. Resolve to include more
of these foods in your daily diet.

VITAMIN RICH FOODS
Vitamin A/ liver, egg yolk, fortified
milk, butter, margarine, Beta Carotene spinach, carrots, squash,
broccoli, yams, tomato, cantaloupe, peaches, fortified grain
products, Vitamin C, citrus fruit and juices (oranges, grapefruit),
strawberries, kiwi, cantaloupe, green peppers, raw cabbage,
spinach, kale, broccoli, Vitamin E, nuts, seeds, whole grains,
vegetable and fish-liver oils, fortified cereals, dried apricots
Although much of the scientific
community is still calling for further research on antioxidants
before changing public health recommendations, some consumers
aren't waiting for more data.
According to Catherine E. Woteki,
Ph.D., R.D., of the National Academy of Sciences, "Data
on supplement sources of nutrient antioxidants show that 36
percent of adults report using vitamin/mineral supplements.
Food supply data and limited data on intakes and supplement
use indicate that levels of vitamins E and C and the carotenoids
in the diet have increased among Americans."
Some nutritionists and policy
makers are concerned that individuals will take excessive
amounts of supplements, believing that if a little bit is
good, more must be better. High doses of some antioxidants
can produce adverse affects in people; for example, excessive
vitamin E can interfere with the action of warfarin, a blood-thinning
medicine often prescribed for patients with heart disease.
FDA is examining the scientific
data to determine whether there is adequate scientific data
to support a health claim on antioxidants and disease prevention
and is expected to make a decision sometime next year.
Reprinted from the International
Food Information Council Foundation, 1993
Main Nutritionals
page.
"These
statements have not been evaluated by the FDA.
This product is not intended
to diagnose, cure, prevent or treat any diseases."
The above is a Government ORDERED statement.
It is NOT based
in either reality or sanity.
Just like our Government. In
a landmark decision on Friday, Jan. 15, 1999, the US Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia ruled that the health claim rules
imposed by the FDA
unconstitutional and in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.
The court instructed the FDA to define "significant scientific agreement"
for health claims on dietary supplement labels, and instructed the FDA to allow
the use of disclaimers on labels rather than to suppress these claims outright.
The court further held that four FDA Final rules (prohibiting certain nutrient
disease relationship claims) invalid under the first Amendment to the Constitution.