| February
20, 2007
Selenium may protect against artery furring
By staff reporter
20/02/2007 - Selenium supplements may reduce the risk
of heart disease by inhibiting
the oxidation of LDL ("bad") cholesterol, suggests a small study
from Italy. Writing in the journal Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases the Italian researchers report that 14 healthy subjects taking a daily selenium
supplement
did not experience significant increases in oxidatively modified LDL, compared
to a two per cent increase observed prior to supplementation.
Such results could
favourably reduce the risk of heart disease as oxidative modification of LDL
has been reported to be a major part of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis,
and subsequently cardiovascular disease (CVD).
"According to the most widely accepted theory of atherogenesis, oxidatively
modified LDL activates a series of cellular events in the arterial wall ultimately
leading
to plaque formation," explained lead researcher Fausta Natella from
the Free Radical Research Group at the National Research Institute for Food
and Nutrition. "The principal result of our study is that a 10-day supplementation with
selenium
is able to prevent the postprandial increase in both LDL minus and susceptibility
to oxidative modification of LDL in a group of subjects adequately supplied with
selenium, without modifying plasma selenium concentration," said Natella.
Natella
and collaborators from the University of Udine and the University of Padova
assigned the 14 volunteers (age range 25-40, eight men) and assigned them
to receive 110 micrograms of selenium per day as selenium yeast (Body Spring
Bio Seleno). Blood samples were taken before and after eating an experimental
meal both at the start of the intervention, and after ten days of supplementation.
The
European recommended daily intake (RDI) is 65 micrograms.
The researchers
report that, compared to pre-supplementation, ten days of selenium supplementation
was associated with inhibition of after-meal increases in oxidatively
modified LDL (no significant increase).
Moreover, levels of malondialdehyde (MDA),
a reactive carbonyl compound and a major end product of lipid oxidation, also
did not increase significantly post-prandially
after selenium supplementation, while prior to supplementation MDA plasma levels
increased by about 10 per cent. "Our results, obtained on subjects adequately supplied with selenium, suggest
that a non-limiting selenium availability counteracts the postprandial formation
of the atherogenic form of LDL and provide a rationale for the epidemiological
evidence of the inverse correlation between selenium intake and the incidence
of chronic and degenerative diseases," said Natella.
The study does have
an obvious limitation in that no placebo group was used for comparison, and
further studies are required to confirm the benefits of improved
selenium status for a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease.
European selenium
levels have been falling since the EU imposed levies on wheat imports from
the US, where soil selenium levels are high. As a result, average
intake of selenium in the UK has fallen from 60 to 34 micrograms per day, leading
to calls from some to enrich soil and fertilizers with selenium to boost public
consumption. Source: Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases
Published on-line ahead of print, doi: 10.1016/j.numecd.2006.05.002
"Selenium supplementation prevents the increase in atherogenic
electronegative
LDL (LDL minus) in the postprandial phase"
Authors: F. Natella, M. Fidale, F. Tubaro, F. Ursini and C. Scaccini Source: www.nutraingredients.com
| Comment: This
study published in the journal Nutrition, Metabolism and
Cardiovascular Diseases shows that daily selenium supplementation
can reduce the risk of development of heart disease because
selenium prevents the oxidation of LDL. . Oxidatively modified
LDL activates a series of cellular events in the arterial
wall ultimately leading, to plaque that lead to blockages
in the arteries and development of heart disease. Dr.Rath
has shown in his research and clinical studies that the root
cause of atherosclerosis or plaques is a weak arterial wall
structure due to chronic deficiency of cellular nutrients
like VitaminC, lysine and proline. We have shown in clinical
study that the synergistic combinations of these nutrients
can not only lower cholesterol, LDL, and triglycerides, but
they can also lower the lipoprotein (a) levels, which more
and more research is emphasizing as a great risk factor for
development of cardiovascular events like heart attacks and
strokes. Please visit www.drrathresearch.org to
read more on this topic. |
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