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Vitamin K: No Help for Bone Density

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Vitamin K: No Help for Bone Density Oct. 14, 2008 -- Though often touted as a way to strengthen bones, taking vitamin K for osteopenia does not protect postmenopausal women from age-related declines in bone density, a new study shows.

But it may help them avoid fractures or cancers.

The findings relating to fracture and cancer avoidance were "unexpected," says Angela Cheung, MD, of Toronto's University Health Network and lead author of the study. "It is intriguing and gives us reason for additional research."

The study, published in the journal PLoS Medicine, involved 440 postmenopausal women diagnosed with osteopenia, a "warning" condition of bone loss that can be a precursor to osteoporosis. The disease causes bones to become more fragile and likely to break.

Cheung says the women were either given a vitamin K supplement or a placebo for two years, with 261 continuing for two more years.

"Bone density scans after two years and after four years revealed there were no differences in bone density between the two groups, and that bone density had decreased by similar amounts," Cheung says. "But fewer women over the four-year period had fractures, and fewer had cancer."

Vitamin K and Osteoporosis


Low-dose vitamin K for osteoporosis has been "promoted by the lay media for increasing bone mass" and is widely available in health food stores and over the Internet, according to study researchers.

In Japan, Cheung tells WebMD, vitamin K is an approved treatment for osteoporosis.

But the study researchers say the value of vitamin K to lower risk of bone loss or fractures "remains controversial." The study, whose participants were chosen because they had been diagnosed with osteopenia, concludes that 5 milligrams of vitamin K supplementation daily did not protect them against age-related declines in bone mineral density "at the lumbar spine, total hip, femoral neck, or ultradistal radius" even if they had plenty of vitamin D.

Roberto Pacifici, MD, director of the division of endocrinology at Emory University in Atlanta, says he was unimpressed with the study because it's "been known for some time that there really is no connection between osteoporosis and vitamin K. If you have enough vitamin K deficiency to cause bone weakness, you bleed to death."
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