A new study shows people with heart disease
and low levels of vitamin D in their blood have a great risk of dying from different
causes and particularly from cardiovascular disease. According to health
authorities, lack of vitamin D has been blamed for everything from weakened
bones to rickets, but now Harald Dobnig, M.D., of the Medical University of Gaz
here, and colleagues concluded in the study published in the June 23 isssue of
the Archives of Internal Medicine that it increases the risk of a heart attack.
The study found people with the lowest
levels of vitamin D – which is produced when the body is exposed to sunlight –
were two times more likely to suffer heart failure, heart attack or stroke or
to die of any cause than those with higher levels, even after adjusting for
risk factors such as high cholesterol and high blood pressure. The “sunshine
vitamin” helps the body absorb calcium and is considered important for bone
health.
The study looked at 3,258 men and women who
had been referred for an angiogram of their heart arteries. The patients were followed
for about eight years. During this period 737 died, including 463 from
heart-related problems.
A previous research study has linked low
levels of vitamin D with high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity, which can
contribute to heart disease. Another study, published in the Journal of
Cardiovascular Pharmacology, showed that vitamin D could prevent heart failure
from developing in rats.
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, Dr.
Edward Giovannucci of the Harvard School of Public Health said in a previous
study.
It was estimated that 50% to 60% of people
do not have the satisfactory vitamin-D status.
“Apart from the proved effects that vitamin
D has on bone metabolism and neuromuscular function, appropriate serum levels
are associated with a decrease in mortality,” the researchers wrote.