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Coenzyme Q-10: Good For What Ails You?
UC BERKELEY WELLNESS LETTER

August 3, 2004

Coenzyme Q-10 (CoQ-10) has been the focus of scientific study for years and has
become one of the most popular dietary supplements. This vitamin-like compound,
it has been proposed, may help treat, or possibly even prevent, many disorders,
including heart disease, hypertension, AIDS, asthma, Parkinson's and Huntington's
disease, certain cancers, lung disease, gum disease, chronic fatigue syndrome,
migraines and allergies. It's supposed to improve memory, boost immunity and
energy, enhance exercise performance and combat aging. Such sweeping claims
should always arouse suspicion. Though in recent years scientists have learned a
lot about CoQ-10, the clinical research is still in its infancy - and thus the marketing
claims remain overblown.

Discovered in 1957, CoQ-10 is also called ubiquinone because it belongs to a class
of compounds called quinones, and because it's ubiquitous in living organisms,
especially in the heart, liver and kidneys. It plays a crucial role in producing energy
in cells. And it acts as a powerful antioxidant, meaning that it helps neutralize cell-
damaging molecules called free radicals. Manufactured by all cells in the body,
CoQ-10 is also found in small amounts in foods, notably meat and fish.

CoQ-10 is one of many substances in the body that tend to decline as people age
or develop certain diseases (such as some cardiac conditions, Parkinson's disease
and asthma). But that doesn't mean that lower levels of CoQ-10 cause disease or
that supplemental CoQ-10 will combat disease or reverse the effects of aging.
Some drugs, including certain cholesterol-lowering statins, beta-blockers and
antidepressants, can reduce CoQ-10 levels in the body, but there has been no
evidence that this causes any adverse effects.

What the studies show

Interest in CoQ-10 grew in the early 1970s, when researchers found that patients
with congestive heart failure had much lower levels of it in their hearts and
suggested that CoQ-10 supplements could help improve their heart function. Since
then studies have yielded inconsistent results, and many have been poorly
designed. Two good studies on CoQ-10 and heart failure, one in Australia and one
in Maryland, found no benefit. The research on CoQ-10 and hypertension remains
sketchy, though one small study in 2001 did find it could significantly lower blood
pressure in half of older people with hypertension. While not approved for any
therapeutic use in the U.S., CoQ-10 is an accepted treatment for cardiovascular
disease in Japan.

In a promising study on CoQ-10 and early-stage Parkinson's disease published in
2002, researchers at the University of California, San Diego, found that very large
doses of CoQ-10 (along with vitamin E) appeared to slow the progression of the
disease. It reduced the decline in neurological function and improved daily life. The
study was small, however, and the researchers said that its findings would have to
be confirmed by a larger trial before they would recommend CoQ-10.

Research into other potential benefits of CoQ-10 supplements - for HIV, cancer or
other diseases - is more theoretical and/or preliminary. So far studies suggest that
CoQ-10 does not improve exercise performance or fight gum disease.

Practical matters

If you have heart disease or Parkinson's, discuss CoQ-10 with your physician,
preferably a specialist. If you're already taking CoQ-10 on your own, make sure
your doctor knows. If you have heart failure, there are effective drugs available. At
best, CoQ-10 would be adjunct therapy.

If you have other diseases, we can't recommend CoQ-10 to treat them. Much more
research is needed. Again, if you wish to take it, you should discuss it with your
doctor. CoQ-10 can't take the place of proven medical treatments.

If you're healthy, there's no evidence CoQ-10 can help keep you healthy or prevent
the effects of aging.

If you do take CoQ-10, or are considering it, keep these points in mind:

The supplements seem to be safe. No serious side effects have been reported,
though some users experience heartburn, nausea, abdominal pain, dizziness and
headache.

CoQ-10 supplements may interact with medications, however, including some anti-
clotting drugs and diabetes drugs.

Also take vitamin E if you take CoQ-10. These two substances work together, at
least in lab studies.

No one knows how much CoQ-10 to take. Most studies have used doses of 50 to
200 milligrams a day. But the new study on Parkinson's tested 300, 600 and 1,200
milligrams, with the largest dose having the greatest effect.

It's expensive - usually $15 to $45 a month. The larger doses some people
recommend for heart patients cost $3 a day, and a 1,200-milligram dose could cost
you $10 a day or more at the health-food store.

Since CoQ-10 is fat-soluble, it's probably best to take it with meals containing at
least a little fat.

CoQ-10 comes as soft-gel caps, wafers, tablets and hard capsules containing
powder. Despite the claims made by various CoQ-10 proponents and
manufacturers, it is impossible to know which form is best absorbed and utilized. In
addition, since dietary supplements are not regulated, you have no idea if brands of
CoQ-10 contain the amounts listed on the labels or even if any of it is absorbed by
your cells.

Remember this: There's no reason to take CoQ-10 if you are healthy, "just to be
safe." The long-term effects are unknown, and the price is high. If you try CoQ-10 to
treat a disease, get medical advice about doses and formulations - even though it's
just guesswork at this point - as well as about potential drug interactions.

Coenzyme Q-10

Claims, benefits: Prevents and treats heart disease, Parkinson's disease and many
other disorders.

Bottom line: This interesting antioxidant may be effective against heart failure and
Parkinson's. If you try it to treat a disease, get medical advice about doses and
formulations - even though it's just guesswork at this point - as well as about
potential drug interactions. There's no reason to take it if you are healthy. The long-
term effects are unknown, and the price is high.

SOURCE: Newsday, NY
http://tinyurl.com/5ngy3

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