Booster Shots

Oddities, musings and some news from the world of health.

| Main |

Common preventive therapies for heart disease found ineffective

10:00 AM, November 9, 2008

Vite1Taking vitamins C or E or low-dose aspirin are common tactics to help prevent heart disease as well as heart attacks and strokes. But two studies presented today at the annual meeting of the American Heart Assn. cast doubt on aspects of those prevention strategies.

In one study of more than 14,000 male doctors, Harvard researchers found that neither vitamin E nor vitamin C supplements reduced the risk of major cardiovascular events, such as a heart attack. The study assigned the doctors to take either 400 international units of vitamin E every other day or a placebo, and 500 milligrams of vitamin C daily or a placebo. The participants were followed for an average of eight years. The supplements did not protect against cardiovascular events or deaths, although vitamin E use was linked to an increased risk of stroke.

In another study presented at the meeting, which is being held in Chicago, scientists from Japan found that taking low-dose aspirin to prevent heart attacks, strokes and peripheral vascular events in people with Type 2 diabetes was not effective. Diabetics have a much higher risk of cardiovascular disease, and the American Diabetes Assn. recommends aspirin to prevent heart disease in diabetics who are older than 40 or who have additional risk factors, such as a family history. The study, which involved more than 2,500 Japanese people with diabetes, was randomized so that participants received daily low-dose aspirin or a placebo. But no difference in events was found in the two groups. Experts note, however, that low-dose aspirin may be effective in other populations. Japanese people, in general, have low rates of cardiovascular events.

Both studies will be published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Assn.

-- Shari Roan

Photo credit: Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c630a53ef010535da5184970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that referenceCommon preventive therapies for heart disease found ineffective:

Comments

It's too bad aspirin, Vitamin C and Vitamin E are found not to be effective in warding off cardiovascular events. People have been banking on them for so long now. Since no difference was found in their use, do we then stop taking them especially Vitamin E was found to increase the risk for stroke?

Evelyn Guzman
Free Diabetes
Alert

Post a comment
If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate.
Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until they've been approved.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In





ADVERTISEMENT


Our Bloggers
Tami Dennis, who takes the word "skeptic" to previously uncharted territory, is the Times' Health and Science editor. She's adamant that pitches promoting awareness days, weeks or months are, by their nature, non-stories. And, because she's an adult, she refuses to use words like "veggies," "tummy" and "yummy."
Rosie Mestel, deputy Health and Science editor, studied genetics before abandoning flies, fungi and DNA for health/medical writing. Her hero is the biologist Ernst Haeckel, whose jellyfish paintings inspired snazzy chandeliers. Her favorite toast-spread is Marmite, a British delicacy made of yeast extract. Her least-favorite word is "millenniums."
Melissa Healy is a staff writer for the Health section reporting from Washington D.C. Healy's a veteran of The Times' National staff, having covered the Pentagon, Congress, poverty and social welfare, the environment, and the White House before shifting to Health in 2003. She writes frequently about mental health and human behavior, about federal health policy, prescription medication and ethics in medicine. More wonk than wellness freak, Healy chooses to believe in the health benefits of coffee and wine, and considers water a better work-out medium than beverage.
Karen Kaplan covers genetics, stem cells and cloning. She and colleague Thomas H. Maugh II comprise about 25% of the unofficial MIT-Alumni-in-Journalism Club, and she is proud to have taken more math (5) than English (0) courses in college. Her contributions to Booster Shots will, she hopes, appear more frequently than postings to her mommy blog.
Thomas H. Maugh II has been a science and medical writer at the Times for 23 years. Before that, he was on the staff of the journal Science for 13 years. He has bachelor's degrees in English and chemistry from MIT and a doctorate in chemistry from UC Santa Barbara.
After a brief stint as a sports writer, Shari Roan turned to health journalism and has covered the topic for The Times for 18 years. She is the author of three books and the mother of two daughters, both teenagers who refer to her as a "health freak." She likes to jog, watch baseball and is very happy that dark chocolate contains some health benefit.
Jeannine Stein writes about fitness, sports medicine and obesity for the Health section. She’s a gym rat from way back and never met an elliptical trainer she didn’t like. Well, maybe one or two. She tempers exercise with a steady diet of reality television because she believes it’s all about balance.