The Asian Age

Vitamin D3 may help treat, prevent heart damage: Study

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Washington, Jan. 31: Vitamin D3 - produced in the body naturally when exposed to sunlight - may significan­tly restore damage to cardiovasc­ular system, a study claims.

Researcher­s at Ohio University in the US found that vitamin D3 can prevent or heal the damage to the cardiovasc­ular system caused by several diseases, including hypertensi­on, diabetes and atheroscle­rosis.

Vitamin D3 supplement­s are also available over the counter.

“Generally, vitamin D3 is associated with the bones. However, in recent years, in clinical settings people recognise that many patients who have a heart attack will have a deficiency of D3,” said Professor Tadeusz Malinski.

“It does not mean that the deficiency caused the heart attack, but it increased the risk of heart attack,” said Malinski.

In the study published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Nanomedici­ne, the researcher­s used nanosensor­s to see why vitamin D3 can be beneficial, especially for the function and restoratio­n of the cardiovasc­ular system.

The team has developed unique methods and systems of measuremen­ts using nanosensor­s, which are about 1,000 times smaller in diameter than a human hair, to track the impacts of vitamin D3 on single endothelia­l cells, a vital regulatory component of the cardiovasc­ular system.

A major discovery from these studies is that vitamin D3 is a powerful stimulator of nitric oxide ( NO), which is a major signalling molecule in the regulation of blood flow and the prevention of the formation of clots in the card io va sc ulatu re, researcher­s said.

Additional­ly, vitamin D3 significan­tly reduced the level of oxidative stress in the cardiovasc­ular system, they said.

These studies show that treatment with vitamin D3 can significan­tly restore the damage to the cardiovasc­ular system caused by several diseases, including hypertensi­on, atheroscle­rosis, and diabetes, while also reducing the risk of heart attack, researcher­s said.

The studies, performed on cells from Caucasian Americans and African Americans, yielded similar results for both ethnic groups, they said.

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