Men who have low levels of vitamin D are at
higher risk of heart attack, researchers presented their findings in an article
published in the June 9 issue of “Archives of Internal Medicine.”
It has been found that deaths related to
cardiovascular disease are more frequent in higher latitudes and during the winter
months and are less frequently at higher altitudes. The body makes vitamin D
when the skin is exposed to sunlight. Sunshine is the greatest source of
vitamin D. The “sunshine vitamin” helps the body absorb calcium and is
considered important for bone health. On a sunny day, just 10 minutes of
exposure to sun will generate enough vitamin D to reach the higher levels found
protective in the study.
“Those with low vitamin D, on top of just
being at higher risk for heart attack in general, were at particularly high risk
to have a fatal heart attack,” study author Dr. Edward Giovannucci of the
Harvard School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston said
in a telephone interview, according to Reuters. “Particularly for people who
live in the northern-most states and in the winter months, when we don't get a
lot of exposure to sunlight, 1,000 to 1,500 units a day of Vitamin D may be
warranted.”
Giovannucci and colleagues reviewed the
medical records and blood samples of 454 men between the ages of 40 to 75 who
had non-fatal heart attack or fatal heart disease, as well as 900 other men
with no history of cardiovascular disease. They collected initial data between
January 1993 and December 1995. Patients were followed until January 2004.
Vitamin D might lower blood pressure,
regulate inflammation, reduce calcification of coronary arteries, affect the
heart muscle or reduce respiratory infections during the winter time,
Giovannucci said.
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