Vitamin E can help non-smokers against pneumonia: study

The researchers studied whether Vitamin E supplementation might influence the risk of community-acquired pneumonia.

Update: 2016-10-06 07:35 GMT
The age when the participant started to smoke significantly modified the effect of Vitamin E on pneumonia (Photo: AFP)

Washington: A recent research conducted at the University of Helsinki states that consumption of Vitamin E may prevent the risk of pneumonia in non-smoking, middle-aged men.

The researchers studied whether Vitamin E supplementation might influence the risk of community-acquired pneumonia. They analyzed the data of the randomized trial (Alpha-Tocopherol Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention [ATBC] Study) which was conducted in Finland between 1985-1993 and included male smokers aged from 50 to 69 years.

The age when the participant started to smoke significantly modified the effect of Vitamin E on pneumonia. Vitamin E decreased the risk of pneumonia by 35 percent in 7,469 participants, who had started smoking at a later age, at 21 years or older the vitamin had no apparent effect on pneumonia for those, who had started to smoke at a younger age.

Among the 7,469 participants who started to smoke at a later age, Vitamin E supplementation reduced the incidence of pneumonia by 69 percent in a subgroup of 2,216 light smokers who exercised in their leisure time. In this subgroup, Vitamin E prevented pneumonia in 12.9 percent of the participants by the time they reached the age of 74 years, which corresponds to one in eight getting a benefit from the vitamin.

The vitamin did not have a significant effect on participants, who smoked heavily or had not been taking exercise. One-third of the 7,469 participants quit smoking for a period and 27 of them got pneumonia. These 27 cases of pneumonia can be used to estimate the effect of Vitamin E on non-smoking males.

The incidence of pneumonia was 72 percent lower in the Vitamin E participants, who had quit smoking, and this benefit from Vitamin E was also seen among those who smoked heavily or did not exercise. Although the evidence of benefit from Vitamin E against community-acquired pneumonia in elderly males is strong in this analysis, the overall findings about Vitamin E have been complex.

Furthermore, the participants of the ATBC Study had mostly been born in the 1920s and 1930s, and lived through the World War II years.

Lead author Hemila states, "Thus, even though the 72 percent decrease in pneumonia risk with vitamin E in ATBC participants who quit smoking may be a real effect, it should not be generalized to current elderly males in Western countries. Further research on vitamin E in nonsmoking elderly males is warranted."

The study was published in the journal of Clinical Interventions in Aging.

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