The Safety
of Nutrient Supplements
Melissa Diane Smith, Dipl Nutr.
Generally
speaking, nutrient supplements are safer (and less expensive)
than pharmaceutical drugs, which often can have serious side
effects (and can be pricey). Therefore, nutrient supplements
usually can be tried first before medications in beginning or
mild cases of diabetes. Many nutrients can also be used together
with prescription medications to support patients in later stages
of the disease.
However, some nutrient supplements
are safer than others. This article will cover the safe doses
and uses of nutrient supplements, so you can use them thoughtfully
and carefully to improve your patients’ health.
Nutrients That Have Low-Dose
Limits
We need more than a dozen nutrients--vitamins
and minerals from A to zinc--on a daily basis for health. But
we need to be more careful in supplementing with some nutrients
than others.
Selenium is one of those nutrients
that has low-dose limits. It is a powerful antioxidant mineral
that works in concert with vitamin E, another antioxidant, reducing
the free radical stress that is part and parcel of diabetes.
It also helps boost immunity and protects against the development
of heart disease and cancer—all good reasons to recommend
that people with diabetes supplement with it. But supplemental
selenium should not be overdone. A daily dosage of 200 mcg is
considered safe and adequate for the average American adult.
Taking more than 800 mcg daily, on the other hand, could be
hazardous. This is a good example of when more definitely is
not better. Make sure your patients follow the recommended intakes
to reap the benefits of selenium without any risk to their health.
Copper is another essential mineral
with a low-dose limit. Along with zinc, copper is part of an
antioxidant enzyme called superoxide dismutase, or SOD, which
keeps free radicals in the body in check. However, an excess
of copper can increase free radical activity in the body. Research
shows that people who have diabetes tend to have higher copper
levels and lower zinc levels than people who don’t have
diabetes. Also, people with diabetic complications such as retinopathy,
hypertension, or microvascular disease tend to have higher copper
levels than people without diabetic complications. For these
reasons, I generally recommend that people who have diabetes
or prediabetes get adequate copper from the food they eat (from
nuts and seeds especially) and avoid supplementing with copper
unless they have been diagnosed with a documented copper deficiency.
Even for people who take high doses of zinc between 30 to 50
mg per day, doses of copper generally should not exceed 2 mg
per day. Possible symptoms of excessive copper intake include
greater susceptibility to infection, insomnia, and feelings
of depression or anxiety.
Iron in excess also can increase
free radical activity, thereby oxidizing and damaging tissues,
aging the body, and greatly increasing the risk of degenerative
diseases. To be on the safe side, I believe it’s best
to avoid recommending supplements with iron unless your patients
have been diagnosed with a legitimate iron deficiency by means
of a serum ferritin test.
Nutrients with Cautions
As
mentioned in Part 1, vitamin E is the principal fat-soluble
antioxidant in the body and a key protector against cardiovascular
disease. It, therefore, is quite beneficial for those with diabetes
and prediabetes. For most people, natural vitamin E (as indicated
as d-alpha tocopherol on the bottle label) also is quite safe
in doses of 400-800 IU. But some caution is required in those
with diabetes or other health conditions.
First, if your patients are taking
insulin or hypoglycemic drugs, you may have to work with their
physicians to reduce the dosage of these drugs. Second, people
with high blood pressure should regularly monitor their blood
pressure, starting with lower doses of vitamin E and gradually
building up to 400 IU. Third, people with rheumatic heart disease,
in which half the heart is damaged, should start taking only
50-100 IU of vitamin E under a physician’s supervision.
And lastly, people with “leaky” blood vessels, such
as in some types of diabetic retinopathy (eye disease)—or
people who take prescription anti-coagulants (blood-thinning
drugs)—could develop problems with vitamin E supplements,
due to the nutrient’s mild (and normally beneficial) anti-clotting
properties. While such problems are not common, caution is warranted.
Magnesium, a mineral that helps
protect against cardiovascular disease and hypertension, is
safe for most people at a dose of 200-400 mg per day. However,
there is an important caveat: Too much supplemental magnesium
can be dangerous for a patient who has diabetic kidney disease
or other serious kidney dysfunction. If a patient of yours has
one of these conditions, do not recommend magnesium supplements
unless you consult and work closely with his or her physician.
Supplementing with niacin, or
vitamin B-3, can be extremely therapeutic for control of blood
fats, reducing high LDL cholesterol levels and blood triglycerides
and raising HDL cholesterol levels. But niacin generally isn’t
a good therapy for people with diabetes. That’s because
it impairs glucose control, sometimes raising fasting blood
sugar levels above 200 mg/dL. For most people with diabetes
or prediabetes, it’s best to avoid supplementation with
niacin alone and take low to moderate doses of niacin (or niacinamide)
in a balanced B-complex or multivitamin/mineral supplement that
contains all the B vitamins.
Nutrients with Far Greater
Safety
Chromium
and alpha-lipoic acid, which I think should be essential components
of a nutrient supplement program for those with diabetes or
prediabetes, require far less caution. In animal experiments,
chromium has demonstrated a lack of toxicity at extremely high
levels—levels several thousand times the estimated safe
and adequate daily dietary intake (ESADDI) limit of 200 mcg
per day. There also is no evidence of toxic effects related
to chromium supplementation in humans or animals. In fact, research
shows that rats deprived of chromium have shorter life spans,
while rats supplemented with chromium picolinate live 37 percent
longer than they do in their natural habitat. And type 2 diabetic
patients who have taken 1,000 mcg chromium (as chromium picolinate)
per day have experienced spectacular improvements in their condition
without any adverse side effects.
No upper limit for chromium has
been established, but the highest dose used in studies with
humans has been 1,000 mcg per day. Some doctors have noticed
an energizing effect that may keep people up if chromium is
supplemented in the evening, but that can be remedied by taking
supplemental chromium earlier in the day.
The form of chromium is particularly
important as it relates to efficacy and safety. As I discussed
in
Part 1 of this series, chromium picolinate is the preferred
form due to its superior bioavailability, safety record, and
extensive clinical data in people with diabetes.
Animal and human studies also
provide compelling and consistent evidence that alpha-lipoic
acid supplementation is exceptionally safe for the general population
in amounts of 50 to 100 mg per day. Serious side effects have
also not been shown, even at high doses. The minor side effects
that have been experienced in humans include skin reactions
and gastrointestinal effects such as nausea and vomiting. However,
these effects have generally been noted in a small percentage
of subjects who received intravenous infusions of 1200 mg or
more of alpha-lipoic acid per day—amounts more than 12
times the typical amount for use as a daily antioxidant supplement.
Alpha-lipoic acid is currently approved in Germany as a drug
for use in the treatment of diabetic polyneuropathy at a dose
of 600 mg per day.
As with vitamin E, the main caution
in recommending supplementation with chromium picolinate or
alpha-lipoic acid is with your diabetic patients who take insulin
or hypoglycemic drugs. Both chromium picolinate and alpha-lipoic
acid supplementation help insulin work more efficiently and
may reduce drug requirements. So people with diabetes who take
these drugs should work with you or their physician to gradually
increase their doses of these nutrients while you or their doctor
monitor their condition and adjust their drug requirements.
This is a good thing, of course: it indicates an improvement,
or reversal, of the insulin resistance at the root of their
disease, but it does require some caution to help prevent your
patients from overmedicating.
In Part 3 of this article
series, I’ll cover new nutritional agents that are proving
helpful for those with diabetes and prediabetes.
Parts of this article were excerpted
and adapted from Chapters 5 and 6 in User’s Guide to Preventing
and Reversing Diabetes Naturally (Basic Health Books, June 2003)
by Melissa Diane Smith.
Melissa Diane Smith is a leading
nutritionist, health writer and educator who counsels clients
across the country and specializes in sugar- and grain-related
health conditions. She’s the author of User’s Guide
to Preventing and Reversing Diabetes Naturally (Basic Health
Books, 2003), Going Against the Grain (McGraw-Hill/Contemporary
Books, 2002), and User’s Guide to Chromium (Basic Health
Books, 2002) as well as coauthor of the national bestseller,
Syndrome X: The Complete Nutritional Program to Prevent and
Reverse Insulin Resistance (John Wiley & Sons, 2000). For
more information on her books or her practice, visit www.melissadianesmith.com.
To be notified when her new book will be ready please email
info@melissadianesmith.com
with a subject line of “Diabetes Guide Notification.”
Selected References
1. Anderson RA, Chen N, Bryden
NA, et al. Elevated intakes of supplemental chromium improve
glucose and insulin variables in individuals with type 2 diabetes.
Diabetes, 1997;46:1786-1791.
2. Challem J, Smith, MD. User’s Guide to VitaminE. North
Bergen, NJ: Basic Health Publications, 2002.
3. Cheng N, Zhu X, Shi H, et al. Follow-up survey of people
in China with type 2 diabetes mellitus consuming supplemental
chromium. The Journal of Trace Elements in Experimental Medicine,
1999; 12:55-60.
4. Konrad T, Vivina P, Kusterer K, et al. a-lipoic acid treatment
decreases serum lactate and pyruvate concentrations and improves
glucose effectiveness in lean and obese patients with type 2
diabetes. Diabetes Care, 1999;22:280-287.
5. Rindone JP, Aachacoso S. Effect of low-dose niacin on glucose
control in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
and hyperlipidemia. American Journal of Therapies, 1996; 3:637-639.
6. Walter RM, Uriu-Hare JY, Olin KS, et al. Copper, zinc, manganese
and magnesium status and complications of diabetes mellitus.
Diabetes Care, 1991;14:1050-1056.
7. Ziegler, et al. Treatment of symptomatic diabetic peripheral
neuropathy with the anti-oxidant a-lipoic acid. A 3-week multicentre
randomized controlled trial (ALADIN Study). Diabetologia, 1995;20:369-373.
8. Ziegler D, Gries FA. a-Lipoic acid in the treatment of diabetic
peripheral and cardiac autonomic neuropathy. Diabetes, 1997;46
(Suppl. 2): 62-66.
Melissa Diane Smith is a leading nutritionist and health
writer who counsels clients across the country and specializes
in sugar- and grain-related health conditions. She’s the
author of User’s Guide to Preventing and Reversing Diabetes
Naturally (Basic Health Books, 2003), Going Against the Grain
(McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Books, 2002), and User’s Guide
to Chromium (Basic Health Books, 2002) as well as coauthor of
the national bestseller, Syndrome X: The Complete Nutritional
Program to Prevent and Reverse Insulin Resistance (John Wiley
& Sons, 2000). For more information on her books or her
practice, click here
www.melissadianesmith.com.
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