Vitamin E may help Alzheimer's patients live longer, finds a new study by researchers at Baylor College of Medicine's Alzheimer's Disease and Memory Disorders Center in Houston.
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine's Alzheimer's Disease and Memory Disorders Center in Houston have found that vitamin E could help Alzheimer's patients prolong their lives.
As a part of the study, lead author Valory Pavlik, PhD, and colleagues followed 847 people with Alzheimer's disease for an average of five years.About two-thirds of the group took 1,000 international units of vitamin E twice a day along with an Alzheimer's drug (a cholinesterase inhibitor). Less than 10 percent of the group took vitamin E alone and approximately 15 percent did not take vitamin E.
The researchers found that Alzheimer's patients who took vitamin E, with or without a cholinesterase inhibitor, were 26 percent less likely to die than people who didn't take vitamin E.
"Vitamin E has previously been shown to delay the progression of moderately severe Alzheimer's disease. Now, we've been able to show that vitamin E appears to increase the survival time of Alzheimer's patients as well," Pavlik said.
"This is particularly important because recent studies in heart disease patients have questioned whether vitamin E is beneficial for survival."
It was also found that vitamin E plus a cholinesterase inhibitor may be more beneficial than taking either agent alone.
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In addition to vitamin E supplements, some vegetables oils, nuts, and green leafy vegetables are main food sources of vitamin E. Some fortified cereals in the United States also contain vitamin E.
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Source-ANI
RAS/L