Vitamin K may be the key to osteoporosis prevention(NaturalNews) Vitamin K - a nutrient associated with green, leafy
vegetables - may play a critical role in bone health and the prevention
of osteoporosis, according to a study conducted by researchers from
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York,
Yale University, Villanova University, and published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The
researchers discovered that a poorly understood protein called
osteocalcin appears to be essential to protecting bones from fractures,
but that it can only be absorbed by bones through the action of vitamin
K.
"This study is important because it implicates, for the first
time, the role of osteocalcin in giving bone the ability to resist
fracture," lead researcher Deepak Vashishth said. "Since osteocalcin is
always the point of fracture, we believe that strengthening it could
lead to a strengthening of the overall bone."
The study, funded by the
National Institutes of Health,
is the first to show that bones can fracture on the nanostructural
scale. The researchers found that when a person trips, falls or
otherwise causes a blow to a bone, a pair of jointed proteins
(osteopontin and osteocalcin) are deformed, causing the formation of a
hole only 500 atoms across. These holes, known as dilational bands,
appear to be a way to absorb the force of the impact without causing a
larger break. Only when the impact is too large for the dilational bands
to absorb; do noticeable fractures occur.
Focus on calcium is misleadingScientists
have known of osteocalcin's existence for a long time, but they still
know very little about its function. Only recently have studies
suggested, for instance, that abnormal osteocalcin production is
associated with reproductive problems and a greater risk of Type II
diabetes. The new study is the first to link osteocalcin to bone
fractures.
The researchers hope that this knowledge could lead to new therapies and prevention strategies for fractures and
osteoporosis.
For example, if researchers could find ways to strengthen the
osteocalcin-osteopontin bonds, such as by increasing the body's supply
of the proteins, that might make bones more resilient.
Notably,
osteocalcin must undergo a process called carboxylation before it can be
absorbed into bones. This process is performed by
vitamin K.
Our
bodies synthesize vitamin K2 from a precursor (vitamin K1) found in
green, leafy vegetables. Prior studies have linked higher vitamin K
levels to improved bone health. The Rotterdam Study, a long-term study
of risk factors for chronic disease in old age, found that over a
10-year period, people who consumed the most vitamin K2 had 50 percent
less arterial calcification and cardiovascular death than average. This
effect may be explained by the vitamin's role in moving vitamin K from
the blood - where it can eventually accumulate in arteries, leading to
calcification - and into the
bones.
"Currently,
all of the advice for treating osteoporosis is related to calcium,"
Vashishth said. "We believe there's more to the story than just calcium,
and the results of this new study raise an important question about
vitamin K."
Source:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/038362_vitamin_K_osteoporosis_prevention.html