Heart Beat: Play it safe, avoid L-arginine supplements
Heart Beat: Play it safe, avoid L-arginine supplements
Heart Beat
Play it safe, avoid L-arginine supplements
L-arginine, touted as a supplement that prevents and treats heart and circulation problems, doesn't help heart attack survivors — and it may even harm them.
L-arginine provides the raw material from which the body makes nitric oxide, a tiny, transient molecule that helps relax and open blood vessels. Johns Hopkins researchers put it to the test in a rigorous, two-year clinical trial of 153 heart attack survivors. Neither the volunteers nor their doctors knew who was taking three grams of the amino acid three times a day and who was taking a placebo. After just six months the researchers stopped the trial when a peek at the data showed six deaths among volunteers assigned to L-arginine compared with none in the placebo group. In a report in the January 4, 2006, Journal of the American Medical Association, they noted that L-arginine didn't reduce artery stiffness or improve the pumping power of the heart's left ventricle.
The six deaths in the L-arginine group could have happened by chance, or because of the L-arginine supplements. Until other work delineates the benefits and risks of this supplement, be wary of taking L-arginine pills.
| Last updated: | September 05, 2008 |
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Medical content reviewed by the Faculty of the Harvard Medical School. Harvard Health Publications, Copyright © 2007 by President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved. Used with permission of StayWell.
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