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Antioxidants + heart drugs = bad medicine?


Many adults take medicine to control their cholesterol--usually statin drugs and sometimes the vitamin niacin niacin: see coenzyme; vitamin.
niacin
 or nicotinic acid or vitamin B3

Water-soluble vitamin of the vitamin B complex, essential to growth and health in animals, including humans.
. Adding antioxidant antioxidant, substance that prevents or slows the breakdown of another substance by oxygen. Synthetic and natural antioxidants are used to slow the deterioration of gasoline and rubber, and such antioxidants as vitamin C (ascorbic acid), butylated hydroxytoluene  supplements to such a daily drug regimen may not be a good idea--at least for people with low concentrations of the so-called good cholesterol, a new study concludes.

Two major classes of lipoproteins shuttle cholesterol around in blood. Low-density lipoproteins, or LDLs, deliver cholesterol to vessel walls, where it can foster artery-clogging plaque. High-density lipoproteins, or HDLs, appear to remove cholesterol from the vascular system.

As a rule of thumb, each 1 percent rise in LDL LDL - ["LDL: A Logic-Based Data-Language", S. Tsur et al, Proc VLDB 1986, Kyoto Japan, Aug 1986, pp.33-41].  concentration in the blood or 1 percent decrease in HDL (Hardware Description Language) A language used to describe the functions of an electronic circuit for documentation, simulation or logic synthesis (or all three). Although many proprietary HDLs have been developed, Verilog and VHDL are the major standards.  concentration increases a person's risk of coronary heart disease coronary heart disease: see coronary artery disease.
coronary heart disease
 or ischemic heart disease

Progressive reduction of blood supply to the heart muscle due to narrowing or blocking of a coronary artery (see atherosclerosis).
 by 1 percent, explains B. Greg Brown of the University of Washington School of Medicine The University of Washington School of Medicine (UWSOM) is a public medical school located in Seattle, Washington. It is a graduate school affiliated with the University of Washington, and is the only medical school in the states of Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and Idaho.  in Seattle.

Of the two concentrations, HDL's is far harder for people to modify through drugs or diet. Brown's group therefore focused on HDL. The researchers recruited 153 heart patients with especially low HDL concentrations. Each participant also had plaque deposits significantly narrowing the interior of at least one artery.

One-quarter of the volunteers received a statin drug and niacin in doses at which it's considered a drug. Another quarter got a daily combination of the antioxidants Antioxidants
Substances that reduce the damage of the highly reactive free radicals that are the byproducts of the cells.

Mentioned in: Aging, Nutritional Supplements

antioxidants,
n.
 beta-carotene, vitamin C, vitamin E, and selenium selenium (səlē`nēəm), nonmetallic chemical element; symbol Se; at. no. 34; at. wt. 78.96; m.p. 217°C;; b.p. about 685°C;; sp. gr. 4.81 at 20°C;; valence −2, +4, or +6. . A third group received placebos, while the fourth got both drugs and antioxidants.

After a year, the drug therapy had triggered big benefits, including a 34 percent drop in LDL and 25 percent rise in HDL concentrations. Participants who had received the placebos or just antioxidants showed minimal improvements in their blood-lipid concentrations. Those getting the drug-antioxidant combo experienced about the same drop in LDL concentration as those receiving only the drugs did, though they showed only an 18 percent increase in HDL values.

Among the HDLs, however, concentrations of [HDL.sub.2]--the one most predictive of heart attack risk---climbed a whopping 42 percent in the participants who took the drugs only, but they didn't rise at all in those also getting antioxidants. Observes Brown, this lack of [HDL.sub.2] improvement is disturbing, especially since participants in this trial started with "strikingly low" [HDL.sub.2] values.

Brown's team reports its findings in the August ATHEROSCLEROSIS, THROMBOSIS, AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY.

In an accompanying editorial, Lewis H. Kuller of the University of Pittsburgh notes that the Seattle researchers presented findings at a March meeting linking the lipoprotein changes observed in the study to buildup of fatty plaque. The drug-antioxidant group had a 7 percent plaque increase, compared with a 4 percent decrease in the drug-only group, he notes.

Kuller concludes that physicians should advise heart patients that taking antioxidant supplements could be hazardous.

The other result is that "these patients do benefit from a statin--and perhaps a niacin," says Charles H. Hennekens of the University of Miami This article is about the university in Coral Gables, Florida. For the university in Oxford, Ohio, see Miami University.

The University of Miami (also known as Miami of Florida,[2] UM,[3] or just The U
 School of Medicine. Most doctors are aware of studies finding little heart benefit from antioxidants, he says, so few prescribe them.

But Ishwarlal Jialal's group at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas (also known as “UT Southwestern”) is a medical research center in Texas, USA.

It is one of the leading academic medical centers in the world.
 does. In the February CURRENT OPINION IN LIPIDOLOGY, the team cited several major studies reporting heart benefits from large supplements of vitamin E and other antioxidants.

Earlier this week, Jialal conferred with researchers at the University of Oxford in England who are testing a statin-antioxidant combo. He reports that in heart patients getting this therapy, the British team didn't see a negative effect on HDL concentrations, nor has his own team over the years. Jialal therefore suspects that any HDL risk may trace to pairing niacin with antioxidants.
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Article Details
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Author:Raloff, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 11, 2001
Words:592
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