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Special Articles |
1 From the Division of Geriatric Medicine, St Louis University School of Medicine.
2 Submitted shortly before the death of MK Horwitt.
3 Address reprint requests to JE Morley, Division of Geriatric Medicine, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 S Grand Boulevard, Room M238, St Louis, MO 63104. E-mail: morley{at}slu.edu.
See corresponding editorial on page997
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: Vitamin E requirement Food and Nutrition Board Elgin Project oxidized lipids Institute of Medicine antioxidants platelet adhesion aspirin
| INTRODUCTION |
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The new dietary reference intake for vitamin E of 15 mg (35 µmol)
-tocopherol/d for both men and women (1) is, by recent interpretation (3, 4), not much different from the 1968 recommended dietary allowance (RDA; 5) of 30 IU (30 mg), which was halved by the next RDA Committee, who based their recommendation on the same published data (6).
Having been a member of 3 other RDA committees, I am aware of the extensive debate that occurs at each meeting. It is my judgment that more attention should have been paid to the amount of vitamin E consumed by millions of healthy individuals. When supplements that provide more than the RDA are desirable, the amount greater than the RDA is a pharmacologic dose, not a nutritional requirement. Based on a representative report (7), the mean consumption of vitamin E by American men and women is 21.4 ± 7.2 and 16.5 ± 7.0 µmol/d, respectively. Accordingly, the average unsupplemented consumption of vitamin E for many individuals is about one-half that of the 1989 RDA (8) without any known apparent harm to the subjects evaluated. Data on consumption of vitamin E can be complicated by the relation of plasma tocopherol with plasma lipid concentrations (9), a relation that should be evaluated in studies of vitamin E.
Many of the data presented here are from experiments conducted at the LB Mendel Research Laboratory during the tenure of the last committee of the FNB that cooperated with the Elgin State Hospital. As shown by the examples in the following sections, nature has provided living organisms with many antioxidants to counter the action of some of the free radicals that normally occur. Thus, when lipids can be absorbed, the tissues have to be overwhelmed with the products of oxidized lipids to study vitamin E deficiency.
| ANIMAL STUDIES |
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Then a serendipitous observation was made by Bailey, a distinguished neurosurgeon who was a member of one of the FNB Elgin Project committees and had excellent histologic facilities nearby in Chicago. Bailey conducted histologic studies on the brains of the chicks we were studying at the time (13). At the same time, he studied the brain of an infant who had been fed intravenously for 19 d with a sterilized commercial emulsion that contained no tocopherol. He concluded that the cerebral hemorrhage and absence of Purkinje cells noted in the infant's brain and in the chick's brain were identical. The sterilized commercial emulsion contained 15% coconut oil. Although 15% coconut oil fed to chicks produced no encephalomalacia in 13 chicks, 12% coconut oil plus 3% safflower oil produced encephalomalacia in all 11 of the chicks studied (12). With the development of gas chromatography, we learned that the brain contains little linoleic acid (12) but contains high amounts of fatty acids with 4, 5, and 6 double bonds (13). This means that the brain mitochondria are more susceptible to oxidation in the absence of vitamin E (14, 15).
Evaluation of the appearance of muscular dystrophy in rats (16) made it apparent that unless the diet contains liberal amounts of peroxidized lipids, creatinuria does not develop. Although vitamin Edeficient diets containing 15% coconut oil or 0.2% corn oil produce no significant increase in creatinuria, consumption of 15% stripped corn oil or 7% stripped linseed oil results in creatinuria and decreased growth. The amount of vitamin E added to the diet to achieve normal growth and prevent increases in creatinuria is related to the amount of peroxidized lipids in the diet and in the tissues (1618). Thus, for the study of vitamin E deficiency in animals, it is necessary to add oxidized lipids to their diets.
| STUDIES IN INFANTS |
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| STUDIES IN MEN |
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Briefly, one group of 19 subjects was fed a basal diet containing 34 mg tocopherol/d, another group of 9 subjects received the same diet plus a supplement of 15 mg RRR-
-tocopheryl acetate/d, and a third group of 10 subjects was fed the regular hospital diet. (The plan was similar to 3 previous long-term studies of thiamine, riboflavin, and niacin plus tryptophan.)
The critical component of the basal diet was 30 g stripped lard/d. After 2.5 y the lard was replaced by 30 g stripped corn oil to increase the unsaturation of the lipids in the basal diet. Nine months later, the amount of corn oil was increased to 60 g/d. The effects of oxidized lipids on serum tocopherol concentrations and on the results of the peroxide hemolysis test were similar to those observed in the animals. In subjects who consumed the depleted basal diet for 54 mo, who presumably had high concentrations of polyunsaturated lipids in their tissues, low serum concentrations returned to reference concentrations after consumption of either 7.5 or 15 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d. Greater than reference serum tocopherol concentrations were observed at all times in subjects in the control group, who had consumed supplements providing 15 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d. In addition, the diet of the control subjects provided 34 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d. The results of the peroxide hemolysis test were normal until 60 mo, when the 15-mg supplement was discontinued. In evaluations of the data from these long-term studies it should be emphasized that the experimental diets contained large amounts of oxidized unsaturated fats not found in habitual diets.
The subjects who were fed the uncontrolled hospital diet, who ate in a separate dining room, always had reference serum tocopherol concentrations and normal results of hemolysis tests. Their diet, which was low in fruit and vegetables, provided <8 mg vitamin E/d. The average plasma tocopherol concentrations were similar to those found in population surveys,
18.5 mmol/L, and varied greatly from month to month for 7 y. Many of the plasma tocopherol concentrations were <2 mmol/L (0.8 mg/dL). No pathologic changes were ever noted in this group, who received the same clinical supervision as did the other groups.
A larger difference in the potency of RRR-
-tocopherol than of all-rac-
-tocopherol was first recorded after 2 subjects in the supplemented group received 105 mg RRR-
-tocopheryl acetate and 140 mg all-rac-
-tocopheryl acetate, respectively, for 7 mo (Table 1 of reference 2). The natural vitamin E seemed to be more potent than expected. After 54 mo, 6 of the depleted subjects were supplemented with what was then considered equal potencies of the natural compared with the synthetic vitamin E preparation (Table 3 of reference 2). [There is an error in patient identification in this table that was corrected in a later publication (20)]. These data also showed that RRR-
-tocopherol had at least twice the physiologic potency of all-rac-
-tocopherol in men. Years later, studies of the different relative potencies of synthetic and natural forms of vitamin E were confirmed (3, 4, 21). It is hoped that these relations will be recognized officially to avoid further confusion by consumers.
On the basis of the information described above, the 1989 RDA committee concluded that the requirement for men should be 10 mg tocopherol equivalents vitamin E/d, although it was known that millions of persons have lived long lives while consuming much less. An increasing in this requirement to 15 mg/d benefits only the commercial interests involved in the sale of vitamin E. To help consumers, the distinction between nutritional requirements and the possible pharmacologic benefits of an antioxidant should be emphasized. Because of common knowledge that I have been involved in the field of vitamin E research for >65 y, "I am frequently asked by both professionals and laymen how much I take." The answer is 200 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d, but often with the proviso that I am not completely certain of the benefit of such a pharmacologic dose of an antioxidant.
| TOXICITY |
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-tocopherol on platelets combined with the antiaggregatory effects of aspirin reduce platelet adhesion by a highly significant 40% (22, 23). This effect on platelets, which is dependent on many variables, could be considered either beneficial or undesirable in the prevention of stroke. However, inhibition of platelet function could lead to an increased tendency to bleed (24). Accordingly, it is my judgment that a tolerable upper intake level of 1000 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d for adults is too high. The daily intake of less than one-half that amount produces high concentrations of vitamin E in the tissues.
Many people who supplement their diet believe that if a little is good, more is better. An official statement that 1000 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d is safe may encourage some consumers to take the maximum amount of vitamin E recommended regardless of their consumption of other antithrombotic compounds. The precautionary principle should be applied in this situation.
| SUMMARY |
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-tocopherol/d for men (8). It is reasonable that the requirement for women be the same. To produce diets that provide 15 mg vitamin E/d (1), large amounts of foods that contain large amounts of unsaturated lipids are required. Paradoxically, the more unsaturated lipids in a food, the higher the requirement for vitamin E, especially if the lipid is oxidized.
Choosing an upper limit for a vitamin E supplement is tough. A recommendation of <1000 mg RRR-
-tocopherol/d is suggested to account for the additive effect of aspirin on platelet adhesion and aggregation in inducing bleeding. Persons with high blood pressure are more susceptible to hemorrhagic stroke and they are among those who consume aspirin.
| REFERENCES |
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-tocopherol after ingestion of various vitamin E preparations. Am J Clin Nutr 1984;40:2405.
-tocopherol concentrations in response to supplementation with deuterated natural and synthetic vitamin E. Am J Clin Nutr 1998; 67:66984.[Abstract]
-tocopheryl and all-rac-
-tocopheryl acetate. Am J Clin Nutr 1999;69:3412 (letter).
-tocopherol administration on platelet function in man. Thromb Haemost 1983;49:737.[Medline]
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