In men, daily use of vitamin supplements does not cut risk of cardiovascular disease, states study.
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Vitamins Do Not Reduce Men`s Risk of Heart Trouble, States Study"
Half of them, chosen at random, took multivitamins and the other half a placebo, said the authors. They called their study the most extensive ever done on the usefulness of multivitamins for prevent chronic disease.
In the period under study, 2,757, or 18.8%, died of a cardiovascular event such as a heart attack or stroke. These included 1,345 taking vitamins and 1,412 taking the placebo.
The researchers from Harvard University concluded that taking multivitamins made no difference when it came to warding off cardiovascular illness or stroke.
The lower number of deaths among vitamin-takers was not statistically significant, they said.
In an accompanying editorial, Eva Lonn of McMaster University and Hamilton General Hospital in Ontario, Canada, wrote that "robust data from multiple trials clearly confirm that (cardiovascular disease) cannot be prevented or treated with vitamins."
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"This distraction from effective CVD prevention is the main hazard of using vitamins and other unproven supplements," Lonn added.
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