| May 17,
2004
Folic acid may cut bone fracture risk
Taking supplements of folic acid and other B vitamins, already
known to prevent severe birth defects and shown to lower risk
of death from heart disease, could also help to prevent broken
bones in the elderly, suggest two major studies.
The studies – one from the Netherlands and the other carried
out in the United States – show that increased homocysteine
levels significantly raise the risk of both hip fracture and other
broken bones resulting from osteoporosis.
B vitamins including folic acid have been shown to lower levels
of the amino acid homocysteine, reducing its potential damage
to the arteries and atherosclerosis. High homocysteine levels
in the blood have also been linked to risk of dementia in the
elderly.
But until now, the only vitamins related to bone health have
been vitamin D and vitamin K. The latest findings, published in
the 13 May issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, could
offer a new boost to bread and cereal makers fortifying their
products with folate and supplement makers targeting the elderly.
The World Health Organisation has defined osteoporosis as the
second leading health care problem after cardiovascular disease
and its growing incidence and future impact is strongly related
to our ageing populations.
In the UK market alone, functional foods to target bone health,
such as those fortified with calcium, were worth 88.27 euros in
2002 and this is set to increase by 7.6 per cent yearly to 2007,
according to Datamonitor research.
The Dutch study (vol 350:2033-2041), from researchers at the
Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, Wageningen University and
the Vrije Universiteit Medical Center in Amsterdam, found that
in 2406 subjects, aged 55 or older, those with the highest homocysteine
levels almost doubled their risk of fracture.
The associations between homocysteine levels and the risk of
fracture appeared to be independent of bone mineral density and
other potential risk factors for fracture, they said.
Such findings are confirmed by Boston team (pp2042-2049) who
found the risk of hip fracture nearly quadrupled in men in the
top quartile of homocysteine levels and nearly doubled in the
top 25 per cent of women.
”These findings suggest that the homocysteine concentration,
which is easily modifiable by means of dietary intervention, is
an important risk factor for hip fracture in older persons,”
concluded the US researchers.
Source: http://www.nutraingredients.com/
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