Saturday, February 28, 2015

Vitamin K2 restores elasticity of blood vessels

Maastricht University. Netherlands: Researchers at the R&D Group VitaK (100% subsidiary of UM Holding) have provided definitive proof that vitamin K2 not only prevents atherosclerosis, but can also restore arterial stiffness. This breakthrough in the link between nutrition and cardiovascular disease was made following a large-scale intervention study in which hundreds of patients received either vitamin K2 or a placebo over the course of three years. The study was published in the leading scientific journal Thrombosis and Haemostasis and is the first to confirm a causal relationship between vitamin K2 and cardiovascular disease.


The most striking result of the study is that not only was the development of atherosclerosis stopped, the stiffened blood vessels started to regain their elasticity. This improvement had previously been demonstrated in laboratory animals, but never before in humans.

In 2013, the same cohort study showed that vitamin K2 also had a positive effect on bone strength and bone loss in post-menopausal women. The same team of researchers, in collaboration with Erasmus University Rotterdam, demonstrated in 2004 that people who ate a diet rich in vitamin K2 were fifty percent less likely to die from cardiovascular disease. Research conducted in collaboration with the University of Leuven showed that low vitamin K levels in the blood vessel wall was a significant risk factor for cardiovascular mortality, similar to that of smoking. In the recently published study, a purified form of vitamin K2 was administered in low doses (roughly equivalent to the recommended daily intake) as a dietary supplement for women between the ages of 55 and 65.

Note for the press:
The full title of the publication: Knapen, M.H.J., Braam, L.A.J.L.M., Drummen, N.E.A., Bekers, O., Hoeks, A.P.G., Theuwissen, E., Vermeer, C. Low-dose menaquinone-7 supplementation improves vascular properties in healthy postmenopausal women. Thromb. Haemostas. 113 (2015):
http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH14-08-0675. For further information, please contact head researcher Cees Vermeer by phone on +31 43 388 5865 or +31 6 4101 1772 or by email at c.vermeer@maastrichtuniversity.nl.
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