Bone Health Specialist Washington DC

There’s a new role for an old star of the supplement world. B vitamins, used to combat many ailments, are favored for heart disease patients because they decrease levels of homocysteine, an amino acid thought to be a risk factor for the killer condition. But a new study suggests B vitamins are also good for your bones.

Vicki Lee Star, MD
2021 K Street North West South
Washington, DC
Werner Franklin Barth
(202) 293-1470
2021 K St Nw
Washington, DC
David Gilbert Borenstein
(202) 293-1470
2021 K St Nw
Washington, DC
Dr.Shari Diamnond
202-293-1470
2021 K St NW # 300
Washington, DC
John Leo Lawson, MD
301-942-7600
2021 K St NW Ste 300
Washington, DC
David Peter Wolfe
(202) 293-1470
2021 K St Nw
Washington, DC
Cynthia Ramona Morgan
(202) 547-7797
650 Pennsylvania Ave Se
Washington, DC
Werner F Barth, MD
202-293-1470
2021 K St NW Ste 300
Washington, DC
Zada Mason Sanders
(202) 806-7540
2139 Georgia Ave Nw
Washington, DC
Shari B Diamond
(202) 293-1470
2021 K St Nw
Washington, DC
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B is for Bones

There’s a new role for an old star of the supplement world. B vitamins, used to combat many ailments, are favored for heart disease patients because they decrease levels of homocysteine, an amino acid thought to be a risk factor for the killer condition. But a new study suggests B vitamins are also good for your bones.

The study followed 559 elderly stroke patients, who tend to have higher levels of homocysteine and are two to four times more likely to suffer hip fractures than their healthy counterparts. For two years, half the participants took a daily dose of 5 milligrams of the B vitamin called folic acid and 1,500 micrograms of B-12, while the rest took placebos. Even though both groups sustained roughly the same number of falls during that time, the treatment group suffered 80 percent fewer fractures. They also saw their homocysteine levels drop, whereas in the patients taking placebos, levels of the amino acid increased.

Just how homocysteine weakens bones isn’t clear, but the scientists think it may interfere with how strands of collagen, bones’ chief protein, connect with each other.

If you’d like to get some of your B vitamins from food, you’ll find lots of folic acid in beans and leafy green veggies; vitamin B-12 is plentiful in meat, seafood, and fortified cereals.

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