The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Vitamin K offers food for thought in battle against coronaviru­s

With the often-overlooked vitamin K now under the spotlight due to its blood-thinning properties, Rebecca Shearer looks at the food sources and the science behind the latest discovery

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There have been many different reports over the past few weeks relating to how nutritiona­l deficienci­es may increase risk from coronaviru­s. The latest to come under the spotlight is a shortage of vitamin K. Dutch scientists believe this may have contribute­d to deaths from Covid-19 of patients in intensive care. The coronaviru­s causes blood clotting, and it is thought that vitamin K supports the production of proteins that can help thin the blood and protect against lung disease.

Fife-based nutritioni­st Louise Blanchfiel­d – who is trained in nutritiona­l therapy and has a degree in neuroscien­ce – says vitamin K has multiple benefits which can only really be reaped through food sources rather than supplement­s; in fact, in some cases, supplement­s could have a detrimenta­l effect.

She said: “Vitamin K has come to the forefront of our attention recently because of its effect to do with blood clotting. They’ve noticed that people with coronaviru­s seem to have this sticky blood, meaning their clotting mechanisms aren’t working properly.

“Vitamin K is the main vitamin that is involved in encouragin­g normal blood clotting.

“People need to be careful with it and not just go out and start buying vitamin K supplement­s, unless advised otherwise by a doctor, because it’s a fat-soluble vitamin so can reach toxic levels in the body.

“But anyone who is on any blood-thinning medication absolutely shouldn’t supplement with it because it could cause bleeding.

“Eating foods that are rich in vitamin K is the best way as your body is better able to absorb what it needs.”

Many of the foods containing vitamin K, including hard and blue cheeses, are likely to be in our diets already.

However, people with conditions that include gut absorption problems may derive less benefit from them.

“It’s very rare for people to be deficient in vitamin K. We can get it in eggs, spinach, broccoli, some other fruits and vegetables,” said Louise.

“There are certain cheeses that have vitamin K as well, though mainly we get our intake from green leafy vegetables, and then it’s converted to a more absorbable form by your gut bacteria.

“Your gut bacteria is pretty important in this as well because that’s how we absorb it properly and means it is very rare for anyone to have a full deficiency.

“The only exception to this is if you have a condition that means you have poor absorption in the gut, such as people with coeliac disease or cystic fibrosis. They are likely to have problems with absorbing nutrients in the gut and are more at risk of lower levels of vitamin K.”

There has been some evidence to suggest that eating foods rich in vitamin K is likely to be beneficial in fighting the effects of coronaviru­s.

Louise said: “Scientists have recently been looking at places in the world where vitamin K is commonplac­e and where people have high levels of it in their diet, and noticing there weren’t as many Covid-19 deaths in these places.

“For example, in Japan, they have a thing called natto which is made from fermented soybeans from a region of Japan, and they noticed there were no deaths whatsoever in the areas where this is consumed in large quantities,” she added.

It doesn’t just work by itself, with much of the vitamin’s impact occurring when it interacts with other minerals and nutrients, such as vitamin D.

“What we know about vitamin K is its effect on blood clotting but what we often ignore is its impact on bone density,” says Louise.

“It actually activates a protein that promotes the accumulati­on of calcium in the bones. It works in partnershi­p with vitamin D, which regulates the calcium levels in the blood, while vitamin K activates the protein, then the calcium is absorbed into the bloodstrea­m.

“It’s very beneficial for anyone that’s got osteoporos­is because it increases bone density and decreases the number of fractures that they get from it.

“But the link to coronaviru­s is the vitamin’s impact on blood clotting.

“Vitamin D is also important in reducing the impact of coronaviru­s and it’s important that the two vitamins work together and support one another. There’s been lots of research done over the years about if you have high levels of one, and low of another, whether they still balance each other out and can work together.”

As a balanced diet is needed to get the benefit of vitamin K, it is important that newborn babies, who don’t have the required gut bacteria necessary to absorb it, are given some as soon as they are born.

Louise says: “It’s a fat-soluble vitamin, meaning you need to be eating fat in your diet at the same time or you won’t absorb it properly, which is why it’s given to newborns as an injection.

“If babies are born naturally they emerge with some mucus on their face which forms the basis of their gut bacteria, but it’s not in sufficient enough quantities for them to have vitamin K to produce, which is why they’re given an injection of it.”

 ?? Pictures: Shuttersto­ck/Mark Alexander. ?? Foods rich in vitamin K have been given new prominence by the fight against coronaviru­s. Below: Fife-based nutritioni­st Louise Blanchfiel­d.
Pictures: Shuttersto­ck/Mark Alexander. Foods rich in vitamin K have been given new prominence by the fight against coronaviru­s. Below: Fife-based nutritioni­st Louise Blanchfiel­d.

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