Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Cardiovascular Risk Declines When Vitamin D Is Normalized

by Shelley Wood

Adding heft to the hypothesis that vitamin-D deficiency is linked to cardiovascular disease, a new study has found that people with low vitamin-D levels who managed to normalize their levels were significantly less likely to develop cardiovascular events over up to six years of follow-up.

The study was presented as a poster by Dr Tami L Bair (Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute, Murray, UT) earlier this week at the American College of Cardiology (ACC) 2010 Scientific Sessions.

According to coauthor Dr Joseph B Muhlestein (Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute), the study looked at baseline and subsequent vitamin-D levels in 9491 subjects with known vitamin-D deficiency, rechecked their vitamin D, then compared subsequent rates of death, coronary artery disease, MI, heart failure, stroke, and renal failure among those who managed to bring up their vitamin-D levels with those who remained vitamin-D deficient. A cut point of <30 ng/mL was used to define vitamin-D deficiency.
Continue Reading
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

No comments:

Post a Comment