Vitamin K may slash the risk of diabetes
October
07,
2013
Researchers in Spain analyzed data obtained from over a thousand older men and
women covering a 5.5 year time period. They found that the higher the intake of
vitamin K1 the lower the risk of diabetes. For every 100mcg per day increase in
the intake of Vitamin K1 there was a corresponding 17% drop in the risk of
developing type 2 diabetes.
The researchers
wrote “Moreover, an increase in the amount of phylloquinone (K1) intake during
the follow-up (the 5.5 year period) was associated with a 51% lower risk of
diabetes in elderly subjects at high cardiovascular (disease) risk”. Recently
the researchers have shown that increased activation of Vitamin K linked enzymes
such as osteocalcin is linked to improved sugar metabolism, reduced insulin
resistance and improved beta-cell function (cells in the pancreas that release
insulin) in the PREDIMED Study. The new study is published in the October 2012
issue of the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition.