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Study: Vitamins C, E cut Alzheimer's risk


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CHICAGO, Illinois (Reuters) -- High daily doses of vitamins E and C taken together reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease among elderly people, a new study suggests.

Taken in supplement form, and not in a lower-dose multivitamin, the vitamins' anti-oxidant properties appear to offset the buildup of so-called free radicals that are believed to damage cells and lead to the debilitating brain disease, according to a report in the Archives of Neurology.

Alzheimer's gradually robs millions of people of their memories and ultimately of their mental faculties. Roughly 5 million Americans suffer from the disease, and the risks of developing it increase markedly with age.

The 4,740 participants in the five-year study were aged 65 or older when the study began in 1995.

In the first phase of the study, 200 cases of Alzheimer's were diagnosed, and those who had been taking vitamin supplements were at a 78 percent lower risk of the disease than those who had not. At the end of the study, another 104 participants had developed the disease, and the risk factor was 64 percent lower among supplement users.

Taking a lower-dose multivitamin or one of the two vitamin supplements taken alone did not have the protective effect. A vitamin E supplement together with a multivitamin may provide some benefit, the researchers said.

Vitamin E supplements contain up to 1,000 international units and most vitamin C supplements between 500 and 1,000 milligrams. The recommended daily allowance for vitamin E is 22 international units, and for vitamin C it is 75 to 90 milligrams.

High-dose vitamin supplements are rarely toxic and could have wide-ranging health benefits, the report said.

"These results are extremely exciting," study author Peter Zandi of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health said. "Our findings suggest that vitamins E and C may offer protection against Alzheimer's disease when taken together in the higher doses available from individual supplements."

Zandi cautioned his was an observational study, and a full-scale controlled trial was needed.



Copyright 2004 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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