Abstract
We designed the present study to examine the cross-sectional relation between age-related lens opacities and vitamin C supplement use over a 10- 12-y period before assessment of lens status in women without diagnosed cataract or diabetes. This design avoids biased measurement of nutrient intake that results when knowledge of lens opacities influences nutrition- related behavior or its reporting. The participants were 247 Boston-area women aged 56-71 y selected from the Nurses' Health Study cohort with oversampling of women with high or low vitamin C intakes. Lens opacities were graded with the Lens Opacification Classification System II. Use of vitamin C supplements for ≤ 10 y (n = 26) was associated with a 77% lower prevalence of early lens opacities (odds ratio: 0.23: 95% CI: 0.09. 0.60) at any lens site and a 83% lower prevalence of moderate lens opacities (odds ratio: 0.17: 95% CI: 0.03, 0.85) at any lens site compared with women who did not use vitamin C supplements (n = 141) after adjustment for age and other potentially confounding variables. Women who consumed vitamin, C supplements for < 10 y showed no evidence of a reduced prevalence of early opacities. These data, together with data from earlier experimental and epidemiologic studies, suggest that long-term consumption of vitamin C supplements may substantially reduce the development of age-related lens opacities.
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Jacques, P. F., Taylor, A., Hankinson, S. E., Willett, W. C., Mahnken, B., Lee, Y., … Lahav, M. (1997). Long-term vitamin C supplement use and prevalence of early age-related lens opacities. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 66(4), 911–916. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/66.4.911
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