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Miracle? No, but Q10 has promise


By Chris Woolston, Special to The Times
November 12, 2007

http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-skept
ic12nov12,1,609599.story?track=rss



The product: Coenzyme Q10 -- it sounds like an
obscure, man-made chemical, perhaps the final
ingredient in a snack food, right behind yellow
No. 5.

Strange name aside, coenzyme Q10 is in fact a
vital nutrient for every cell in your body, not to
mention every cell in your dog and your office
ficus tree. All plant and animal cells are powered
by mitochondria, tiny structures that pump out
energy for the cells. Mitochondria, in turn, need
a steady supply of the vitamin-like antioxidant
Q10 to keep the power generators running smoothly.

"It's the quarterback of mitochondria," says Dr.
Robert Bonakdar, director of pain management at
the Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine in La
Jolla. "Levels of coenzyme Q10 determine whether
energy is being made efficiently or sluggishly."

Your body makes its own Q10, and you get a little
more from lots of different foods. But some people
have unusually meager supplies of this must-have
nutrient. Bonakdar says that he often finds low
levels in patients with migraine headaches,
fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome when he
does Q10 blood tests.

Studies have found consistently low levels of the
nutrient in people who have congestive heart
failure or take statin drugs (such as Lipitor or
Crestor) to lower cholesterol.

Anybody interested in taking Q10 won't have to
look far. Most drug stores and health food stores
sell a variety of Q10 pills and powders. Depending
on brand and dosage, the supplements can cost
anywhere from $50 to $200 a month.

The claims: Not surprisingly, this crucial
nutrient has spawned some big claims. Various
websites assert that Q10 supplements can speed
weight loss, boost energy and treat an astonishing
number of illnesses, including AIDS, Parkinson's,
cancer and heart disease. One website selling the
supplements states that "people across the world
use coenzyme Q10 with phenomenal results." Another
site claims that most people don't have nearly
enough of this "miracle antioxidant."

The bottom line: For now, the promise of coenzyme
Q10 supplements is still built largely on hope,
assumptions and just a smattering of science, says
Dr. Brent Bauer, director of complementary and
integrative medicine at the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn.

Yet Bauer believes there is promise, saying that
Q10 supplements seem extremely safe and the few
studies so far have been encouraging.

"We can be fairly confident that there's something
to it," he says. " I don't recommend it for my
patients, but for people who are interested in
trying it, using it for hypertension, heart
failure and for statin treatment makes the most
sense."

A few small, brief studies suggest that coenzyme
Q10 supplements can relieve some cases of
hypertension. As reported earlier this year in the
Journal of Human Hypertension, three randomized,
placebo-controlled studies involving a total of
120 patients have found that Q10 can reduce high
blood pressure by an average of 17/8.

A 2004 placebo-controlled Israeli study of
patients with advanced heart failure found that
Q10 supplements improved quality of life but
didn't enhance the pumping power of the heart.
"Even if the heart function doesn't improve, a lot
of people feel better," Bauer says. "They have
more energy."

The widespread popularity of statins has spurred
new interest in Q10 supplements, Bauer says.
"Boatloads of patients are very excited about
taking it along with their statins," he says. Some
experts suspect that dwindling levels of Q10 might
cause muscle pain, and a 2007 study found that
combining Q10 with statins cut pain by 40% within
one month.

Even if Q10 doesn't really prevent side effects,
Bauer says, it has done its job if it encourages
more people to stick with their life-saving
medications.

Bonakdar says that Q10 supplements have helped
many of his patients with migraines, fibromyalgia
and chronic fatigue syndrome. Many -- but not all.
"Some people respond really well to small doses,
while others don't respond to even high doses," he
says.

The supplements seem to have a strong effect only
in patients who have low levels of Q10, Bonakdar
says. But because few physicians ever test Q10
levels, most patients who try the supplement are
taking a shot in the dark. Still, "if someone is
at wit's end, it's not a bad idea to give it a
try," he says.

As for healthy people, there's no reason to
believe that the supplement does anything -- and
that includes speeding weight loss and boosting
energy, Bonakdar says. "A lot of advertising is
geared toward people who don't need it," he says.

Coenzyme Q10 is very fragile, and only a small
percentage survives the trip from supplement to
bloodstream. Products labeled "crystal free" are
good choices because crystals can block
absorption, he says. He also recommends patience.
"You have to give it three to four months to see
any effect," he says.

Nobody knows which dose works best, and the
effects on any particular patient are completely
unpredictable, says Dr. Domenic Sica, professor of
medicine and pharmacology at Virginia Commonwealth
University and a board member of the American
Society of Hypertension.

"It's probably going to reduce blood pressure in
some people, but for the life of me nobody knows
why," he says. "There are a lot of unknowns, too
many to recommend it with regularity. It
definitely can't be a substitute for seeing a
doctor or taking medications."

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