October 22, 2002
ST. PAUL, MN (American Academy of Neurology) -- Previous research has
implicated oxidative damage (cell degradation) in the development of Parkinson's
disease. Because vitamins E, C and carotenoids are antioxidants, researchers
recently studied the associations between their intake and risk of Parkinson's
disease. Their conclusions point not to supplements, but to dietary intake of
vitamin E (from the foods we eat) as having a protective factor in the risk of
developing Parkinson's disease. The study is reported in the October 22 issue
of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Using repeated and validated dietary assessments of two large study cohorts,
researchers from Harvard School of Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital,
and Harvard Medical School examined the associations between dietary intakes of
vitamin E, C, and carotenoids, vitamin supplements, and risk of Parkinson's
disease. After exclusions, 76,890 women from the Nurses' Health Study (NHS) and
47,331 men from the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) were included in
the study analyses.
Dietary data was collected from the women's cohort since 1984 and from the
men's since 1986. The food frequency questionnaires used in the NHS and HPFS have
been validated and shown to reflect reasonably the long-term nutrient intakes of
study participants. In addition to dietary assessments, questions on the use of
specific vitamins and brand and type of multivitamins were asked. By 1998, the end
of the study term, a total of 371 new cases of Parkinson's disease (161 in women
and 210 in men) were documented.
"In these two large cohorts, we found no evidence that use of vitamin E
or C supplements or multivitamins reduced the risk of Parkinson's," says
study author Shumin Zhang, MD, ScD, Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard
Medical School. "In contrast, however, higher intake of dietary vitamin E
was associated with a significantly lower risk of Parkinson's."
Dr. Zhang notes, however, that the participants in both the NHS and HPFS are a
self-selected group of individuals who may have healthier diets and lifestyles
than average Americans. Therefore, the lower risk of Parkinson's associated in
this study with high dietary vitamin E intake may also be attributable to other
unidentified dietary or lifestyle factors.