- Oct 14, 2005
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Couldn't it also be that people who take supplements are less likely to get things from a healthy diet and working out? I work out, eat right, AND I take a multi vitamin. I would have loved to know how many of those people with an increased risk of lung cancer from taking vitamin E worked out, ate right, didn't smoke, etc.
The researchers followed people aged between 50 and 76 for four years and looked at their average daily use of vitamin C and folic acid, and vitamin E supplements.
Over the course of the study, 521 people developed lung cancer.
Smoking, family history and age all had unsurprisingly strong links to cancer risk.
And while neither vitamin C or folic acid use had any effect on lung cancer risk, vitamin E use did.
The researchers extrapolated their findings, and concluded that over a decade, there was an additional 7% increase in risk for every 100 milligrams taken per day.
The vitamin E trend was most prominent among smokers, but was not confined to them.
Vitamin E is known to be an antioxidant - protecting cells from molecules called free radicals.
But the US researchers speculate that, in high doses, it may also act as a pro-oxidant - causing oxidation and therefore damage to cells.
Couldn't it also be that people who take supplements are less likely to get things from a healthy diet and working out? I work out, eat right, AND I take a multi vitamin. I would have loved to know how many of those people with an increased risk of lung cancer from taking vitamin E worked out, ate right, didn't smoke, etc.
