Leg Cramps and Vitamin E Before Chelation
Leg cramps is the subject of this letter to the editor of JAMA by
Robert Cathcart MD. Dr Cathcart is well known in the study of Vitamin E
as well as the field of chelation therapy and antioxidants. The studies
I show on these pages is here to show that there is a great deal of
research with positive findings about chelation therapy and the use of
antioxidants and anti aging nutrients to solve circulation problems.
Many of these studies are over ten years old and have still not found
there way into the mainstream. You will note that in the second to last
paragraph the need for chelation therapy in some cases of leg cramps.
Here is a physian who believes in the natural way before the use of
drugs or surgery.
As you will find Vitamin E can prevent cramps of the calf and leg. I
have used it as far back as 1989 for this very thing. I now find with my
exercise programs and nutrition intake that I no longer have leg cramps.
However I will say that my good nutrition levels are way up and I feel
that the nutrition and my high intake of all antioxidants that this is
the main reason for my optimal health and well being.
Vitamin E and Leg CrampsRobert F. Cathcart, III, M.D. The Journal of
the American Medical Association, Jan. 10, 1972, Vol. 219, No. 2.
To the editor: - The increasing interest in vitamin E (tocopherol) in
California has led to tremendous public self-experimentation. Health
food stores sell massive amounts of concentrated vitamin E.
Ayres and Mihan ("Leg Cramps [Systremma] and 'Restless Legs'
Syndrome") observed a reference to vitamin E (Calif. Med. 111:87, 1969).
In the practice of orthopedics, idiopathic leg cramp and other types of
muscle cramps are common complaints. Because of this article, I casually
began to prescribe the vitamin in the doses recommended - 300
international units (I.U.) a day - first to patients complaining of leg
cramps and other types of idiopathic cramps, and then sometimes to
patients with pain in the neck and lower part of the back. I have now
prescribed the medication to almost 100 patients.
I would agree with Ayres and Mihan that the medication is almost
universally effective on idiopathic nocturnal leg cramps. In my opinion,
it is more effective and safer to use than quinine or quinine-aminophylline
combination's. Certainly, the dosages we have been prescribing and the
dosages taken by the health food advocates are in excess of anything
conceived of being a minimum daily requirement for the vitamin. The
amount is also far in excess of what could possibly be obtained through
any reasonable normal diet.
The body may make some compensatory adjustments to these massive
doses. In support of this idea has been the observation that some
patients who take the medication irregularly or who stop the medication
are bothered by leg cramps in excess of those first complained of for a
few days. After several days, however, this problem seems to cease. As
we all know, patients who suffer from leg cramps may either have them
quite regularly or have them come and go. Therefore, some patients find
that they want to keep taking the medication on a permanent basis.
Others find that it helps them over a crisis.
Ayres and Mihan warn against using the medication in patients with
hypertension or diabetes, about which I have no experience. Eventually,
all patients seem to be able to tolerate the medication without
difficulty. Patients who have tried to reduce the medication down to 100
I.U. per day have often found that this amount of the medication no
longer is effective. Others who have settled at a dosage of about 200
I.U. may find, after several months, that they also must increase the
dosage to obtain the benefits they wish. It has not been my experience
that the medication needs to be taken in doses of excess of 300 I.U.
There does seem to be a mild amount of tachyphylaxis exhibited by the
medication.
This problem of defining all of the multiple interdependent variables
may thwart efforts at double-blind studies. Most frustrating may be a
real or imagined effect of the central nervous system.
Some of my own observations but point up factors which may have
caused difficulties. I would second Ayres and Mihan's observations that
massive doses of tocopherol are extremely effective in the control of
idiopathic night leg cramps.
Robert F. Cathcart, III, M.D., San Mateo, CaliforniaComment February
22, 1997:
This letter to the editor of JAMA may be of minor importance in the
history of vitamin E. I believe it was the first favorable report on
vitamin E in JAMA.
In retrospect, I believe that the mechanism of action is to reduce
free radicals and increase circulation to the legs. There may be a mild
anti-coagulant effect where there is a tendency toward
hyper-coagulation. In severe cases, magnesium, calcium, potassium,
vitamin C, and the elimination of food and chemical sensitivities may be
necessary. Additionally, chelation therapy may be necessary and of
benefit in the elderly or diabetic patients with poor circulation to
their extremities.
We must never forget as vitamin E becomes accepted medical practice,
especially in the prevention and treatment of heart disease, that the
honor for most of the major discoveries about the clinical usefulness of
large doses of vitamin E must be given to Wilfrid E. Shute, M.D.
Leg cramps may also be helped by L-Arginine
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