Vitamin D findings point to new treatment for heart failure |
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June 11, 2008 | Ann Arbor, Mich. – Strong bones, a healthy immune system, protection against some types of cancer: Recent studies suggest there’s yet another item for the expanding list of Vitamin D benefits. |
Vitamin D, “the sunshine vitamin,” keeps the
heart, the body’s long-distance runner, fit for life’s demands.
University of Michigan pharmacologist Robert U.
Simpson, Ph.D., thinks it’s apt to call vitamin D “the heart tranquilizer.” In studies in rats, Simpson and his team report
the first concrete evidence that treatment with activated vitamin D can protect
against heart failure. Their results appear in the July issue of the
Journal of Cardiovascular
Pharmacology. |
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In the study, treatments with activated vitamin
D prevented heart muscle cells from growing bigger – the condition, called
hypertrophy, in which the heart becomes enlarged and overworked in people with
heart failure. The treatments prevented heart muscle cells from the
over-stimulation and increased contractions associated with the progression of
heart failure. About 5.3 million Americans have
heart failure, a progressive, disabling condition in which the heart becomes
enlarged as it is forced to work harder and harder, making it a challenge even
to perform normal daily activities. Many people with heart disease or poorly
controlled high blood pressure go on to experience a form of heart failure
called congestive heart failure, in which the heart’s inability to pump blood
around the body causes weakness and fluid build-up in lungs and limbs. Many
people with heart failure, who tend to be older, have been found to be deficient
in vitamin D. “Heart failure will progress despite the best
medications,” says Simpson, a professor of pharmacology at the
U-M Medical School. “We think
vitamin D retards that progression and protects the heart." The U-M researchers wanted to show whether a
form of vitamin D could have beneficial effects on hearts that have developed or
are at risk of developing heart failure. They used a breed of laboratory rats
predisposed to develop human-like heart failure. The researchers measured the effects of
activated Vitamin D (1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3, a form called calcitriol) in rats
given a normal diet or a high-salt diet, compared to control group rats given
either of the same two diets, but no vitamin D treatment. The rats on the
high-salt diet were likely to develop heart failure within months. The rats on the high-salt diet, comparable to
the fast food that many humans feast on, quickly revealed the difference vitamin
D could make. “From these animals, we have obtained exciting
and very important results,” Simpson says. After 13 weeks, the researchers found that the
heart failure-prone rats on the high-salt diet that were given the calcitriol
treatment had significantly lower levels of several key indicators of heart
failure than the untreated high-salt diet rats in the study. The treated rats
had lower heart weight. Also, the left ventricles of the treated rats’ hearts
were smaller and their hearts worked less for each beat while blood pressure was
maintained, indicating that their heart function did not deteriorate as it did
in the untreated rats. Decreased heart weight, meaning that enlargement was not
occurring, also showed up in the treated rats fed a normal diet, compared to
their untreated counterparts. Simpson and his colleagues have explored vitamin
D’s effects on heart muscle and the cardiovascular system for more than 20
years. In 1987, when Simpson showed the link between vitamin D and heart health,
the idea seemed far-fetched and research funding was scarce. Now, a number of
studies worldwide attest to the vitamin D-heart health link (see citations
below). The new heart insights add to the growing
awareness that widespread vitamin D deficiency—thought to affect one-third to
one-half of U.S. adults middle-aged and older—may be putting people at greater
risk of many common diseases. Pharmaceutical companies are developing
anti-cancer drugs using vitamin D analogs, which are synthetic compounds that
produce vitamin D’s effects. There’s also increasing interest in using vitamin D
or its analogs to treat autoimmune disorders. In more than a dozen types of tissues and
cells in the body, activated vitamin D acts as a powerful hormone, regulating
expression of essential genes and rapidly activating already expressed enzymes
and proteins. In the heart, Simpson’s team has revealed precisely how activated
vitamin D connects with specific vitamin D receptors and produces its calming,
protective effects. Those results appeared in the February issue of
Endocrinology. Sunlight causes the skin to make activated
vitamin D. People also get vitamin D from certain foods and vitamin D
supplements. Taking vitamin D supplements and for many people, getting sun
exposure in safe ways, are certainly good options for people who want to keep
their hearts healthy. But people with heart failure or at risk of heart failure
will likely need a drug made of a compound or analog of vitamin D that will more
powerfully produce vitamin D’s effects in the heart if they are to see
improvement in their symptoms, Simpson says. Vitamin D analogs already are on the market for
some conditions. One present drawback of these compounds is that they tend to
increase blood calcium to undesirable levels. Simpson’s lab is conducting
studies of a specific analog which may be less toxic, so efforts to develop a
vitamin D-based drug to treat heart failure are moving a step closer to initial
trials in people. In addition to Simpson, other U-M authors
include Peter Mancuso, Ph.D., of the U-M Department of Environmental Health
Sciences; Ayesha Rahman, Ph.D., Stephen D. Hershey, M.D., Loredana Dandu and
Karl A. Nibbelink, M.D. of the Department of Pharmacology in the U-M Medical
School. Patents related to this research have been
applied for by the U-M Office of Technology Transfer. Citations: Journal of Cardiovascular
Pharmacology, |
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| Source: http://www.med.umich.edu/ | |
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