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More than ju=
st
vitamins? (Tony Ce=
nicola/The New York Times)
Is there more to a carrot than beta carotene? Is ly=
copene
the best we get from tomatoes? And when we heap our plates with salmon, are=
we
serving up something other than omega-3s?
For years the scientific community has viewed individual vitamins and
nutrients as the best that food has to offer. Nutrition studies have isolat=
ed
beta carotene, calcium, vitamin E and lycopene,=
among
other nutrients, in order to study their health benefits in the body.
But now, after several vitamin studies have produced disappointing resul=
ts,
there’s a growing belief that food is more than just a sum of its
nutrient parts. In a recent commentary for the j=
ournal
Nutrition Reviews,
Dr. Jacobs believes that nutrition science needs to consider the effects=
of
“food synergy,” the notion that the health benefits of certain
foods aren’t likely to come from a single nutrient but rather
combinations of compounds that work better together than apart. “Every
food is much more complicated than any drug,’’ said Dr. Jacobs.
“It makes sense to want to break it down. But you get a lot of people
talking in the popular press about carbohydrates and fats in particular as =
if
they were unified entities. They’re not. They’re extremely
complicated.’’
The narrow focus on the health effects of single nutrients stems from the
earliest days of nutrition research. In 1937, two scientists won a Nobel Pr=
ize
for identifying vitamin C as the essential component in citrus fruit that
prevents scurvy. The finding spurred interest by the scientific community to
study other biologically active nutrients in foods.
For as long as observational studies have shown that diets rich in fruits
and vegetables, unsaturated fat and fish, among other things, are associated
with better health, nutrition researchers have been busily deconstructing t=
hese
foods to identify the most potent nutrients. For example, vitamin E has been
widely studied as a heart protector.
But attributing the broad health benefits of a diet to a single compound=
has
proven to be misguided. Several studies have suggested an association betwe=
en
diets rich in beta carotene and vitamin A, for instance, and lower risk for
many types of cancer. But in a well-known 1994 Finnish study, smokers who t=
ook
beta carotene were found to have an 18 percent higher incidence of lung can=
cer.
In 1996, researchers gave beta carotene and vitamin A to smokers and workers
exposed to asbestos. But the trial had to be stopped because the people tak=
ing
the combined therapy showed markedly higher risks for lung cancer and heart
attacks.
Since then, studies of other vitamins, notably vitamins E and B, have al=
so
failed to show a benefit. Manufacturers say the problem is that vitamins are
too often examined in sick people while the real benefit may be in preventi=
ng
disease. But Dr. Jacobs notes that the better
explanation may simply be that food synergy, rather than the biological
activity of a few key nutrients, is the real reason that certain diets, like
those consumed in the parts of the Mediterranean and
“People ask me what vitamins they should take,’’ said =
Dr.
Jacobs. “I say ‘Don’t take any. Just make sure you have a
nutrient-rich diet.’ ’’