May 24, 2012EMBARGOED UNTIL 3 pm CT/4 pm ET, Thursday, May 24, 2012DALLAS,
May 24, 2012 – Japanese-American men who did not eat foods rich in vitamin D
had a higher risk of stroke later in
life, according to results of a 34-year study reported in Stroke, an American
Heart Association journal. “Our study confirms
that eating foods rich in vitamin D might be beneficial for stroke prevention,”
said Gotaro Kojima, M.D., lead author of the study and geriatric medicine
fellow at the John A. Burns School of Medicine at the University
of Hawaii in Honolulu . Vitamin D is an essential nutrient
that helps prevent rickets in children and severe bone loss in adults, and
researchers believe it has the potential to lower the risk of a host of
diseases including cancer and diabetes. Sunlight is generally the greatest source,
but synthesizing vitamin D from the sun gets more difficult as we age, Kojima
said, so older people are advised to eat more foods rich in vitamin D or take
supplements. Good sources include fortified milk and breakfast cereals, fatty
fish and egg yolks. Study participants included 7,385 Japanese-American men
living on Oahu , Hawaii . All were participants of the Kuakini
Honolulu Heart Program, a study of stroke and coronary heart disease in
Japanese-American men that began in 1965 which was conducted at the Kuakini Medical Center .
Participants were 45 to 68 years old in the mid- to late-1960s when they were
first examined and interviewed about what they had eaten in the previous 24
hours. Food models and serving utensils were used to help participants determine
their portions accurately. Researchers separated the participants into four
groups of approximately 1,845 each depending on how much vitamin D they had
consumed. They then analyzed their records through 1999, roughly 34 years after
the initial exams, to determine the incidence of stroke. New strokes occurred
in 960 men during the follow up period. Researchers calculated risk while
adjusting for age, total calorie intake, body-mass index , hypertension ,
diabetes , cigarette smoking, physical activity, cholesterol levels and alcohol intake. Men who consumed the
least dietary vitamin D had a 22 percent higher risk of stroke and a 27 percent
increase risk of ischemic (blood-clot related) stroke compared to those consuming
the highest levels of vitamin D. There was no difference for hemorrhagic stroke. Stroke ranks fourth among the leading
causes of death in the United
States . New or recurrent strokes strike
about 795,000 Americans annually. Ischemic
strokes account for 87 percent of all strokes, and 10 percent are from
an intracranial hemorrhage (bleeding in the brain). The remaining 3 percent
result from bleeding in the subarachnoid space between the brain and the
tissues covering it. Kojima said it is unclear whether the study results could
be applied to different ethnic groups or to women. While previous studies
focused on blood concentrations of vitamin D, this investigation used dietary
intake.
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