Page 5 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 4, 1985 HEALTH & FITNESS Experts question value of vitamin supplements By KYSA CONNETT Health officials and health store employees disagree over the value of vitamin and mineral supplements as a means of maintaining good health. Professors from the University's School of Public Health questioned the value of such supplements, saying that a well-balanced diet is the key to health. However, an employee of the General Nutrition Center in Briar- wood said she believes vitamins are a way of making up for poor eating habits. DR. JOEL Grinker, director of human nutrition for the School of Public Health, said she doesn't "see any reason why someone with a good diet needs to take a supplement." ."Most people don't need them (vitamin supplements)," she said. "Moderate level vitamins can't hurt anybody, and I guess you could say it's not a bad idea," Grinker said, "but I'm not saying that it's necessarily a good idea either. I really think the emphasis should be put on eating a balanced diet." But Linda DeeVee, an employee for the General Nutrition Center, said she believes that because of the high number of processed foods on the grocery store shelves, Americans, and college students in particular, are not getting the proper vitamins and minerals from the foods they consume. "I THINK we need them," she said. "Most of the foods we eat today are so nutritionally poor - processed. It's almost impossible to get what we need." "In addition, some people just don't take the time to eat well," she con- tinued. "They rely on fast food." "I know how students eat - I was one once. Being a student, I wish I would have taken vitamins then. It's very stressful, and vitamins can help you deal with the stress." But Dr. Alen Tsai, an associate professor in the School of Public Health, in addition to Grinker, said there is no way for vitamin and mineral supplments to replace eating a balanced diet. He said researchers do not know enough about the com- position of food to be able to duplicate its benefits. "IF YOU try to rely on a (vitamin or mineral) supplement, 'thenyouare assuming that you know what your 'If you try to rely on a (vitamin) supplement .. . you can create a deficiency the wouldn't be there if you didn't try to rely on a supplement.' -Dr. Alen Tsai, School of Public Health associate professor Taking higher than normal amounts of C and E can in fact have an un- desirable effect, said Tsai. "The more you take, the more your body uses, and then if you stop taking it you can develop a deficiency easier than someone who had not been taking large amounts of the vitamin." DeeVee takes vitamins every day. "I tend to go by what's going on in my life. If I get flus or colds I take extra B, C and Zinc. I also take extra if I'm feeling a lot of stress," she said. "I try to take at least 1000 mg of C a day." The amount of the vitamin C that Tsai considers desirable to take a day is only 100 mg. Much publicity has been given to calcium supplements recently. Calcium is a mineral, not a vitamin. Osteoporosis, a condition related to a lack of calcium intake, involves the loss of bone tissue and can lead to fractures of many bones. Women are especially susceptible - 30 percent over age 60 develop it, Grinker said. In this case, calcium supplements might be important for older women, but Grinker said that " . . . 18-to-21- year-olds don't need to worry about these sort of things." She added: "Getting calcium from milk is the best way to get it, and if you want to know the cheapest way, just take Tumms (antacid)." body needs - and no one can know everything there is to know," Tsai said. "You can create a deficiency that wouldn't be there if you didn't try to rely on a supplement." "Food can give you all the items you need," Tsai continued. "You have to try and mix the food, and try to eat as many kinds (of food) as you can." If a person consumes too much of one vitamin, such as A or D, then 'it can have a toxic effect, Tsai said. "At high levels, some vitamins can act as a drug. .. people take large amounts as a precaution sometimes. They figure that more is better, but this is not always true." After two time Nobel Prize winner Dr. Linus Pauling released his book Vitamin C and the Common Cold, many people began taking large doses of it daily to try and prevent and com- bat colds. "There just isn't very good scientific evidence supporting his fin- dings," said Grinker. TSAR RECENTLY did a study com- paring people who received normal amounts of the vitamins C and E with a group of people who received a higher amount than normal. He found that the people who received high amounts of vitamin E and C did not show any benefits from them. He tested things such as alertness, productivity, and the ability to com- bat a common cold. We have Canfield Pop - The only place in town! RESTAURANT ARIEL RESTAURANT '& DELI r I Students suffer from mono-like sickness All You Can Eat Specials: " Soup & Salad Bar $2.79 " Health Food, Soup, and SaladdBar $3.75 Middle East Food Specials Every Day We guarantee you'll LOVE our food-or your money backI GROCERY AND HEALTH FOOD STORE Open Mon., Sat. 8 am. -12 am. Sundays 8 a.m. -10 p.m. ARIEL RESTAURANT Open Mon Sat .a.m 8pm By ANNIE WEST For Susan, it started with sinusitis, aches, and a fever. Then bronchitis set in, bringing on chills, severe back pain, fatigue, and a hacking cough. Currently she is suffering from the flu and excessive fatigue. Susan, who asked that her real name not be used, said doctors have given her over 20 tests, including blood tests, kidney stones tests, and tests for mononucleosis. But they still cannot determine exactly what she has contracted, simply calling it something similar to mono. ALTHOUGH University Health Service officials say they haven't received any cases of a mono-like illness, several University students with symptoms similar to Susan's say their family doctors have diagnosed them with this ailment. Dr. Mark Zervous of the infectious diseases department within the University's Department of Internal Medicine, said similar symptoms 'My illness inhibits my personal freedom to such an extent that I cannot even walk a block without worrying and becoming fatigued.' -Susan, victim of mono-like illness could be caused by one of the several types of flu prevalent in Ann Arbor this year - parainfluenza. Although he said it may not be the same illness. Parainfluenza is a respiratory virus which causes cold symptoms, such as upper respiratory, sinus congestion, sore throat, body aches, and fever. It usually lasts five to seven days, but it can reappear if the proper rest and care are not followed to eradicate it completely, Zervous said. Many college students have dif- ficulty recovering from the flu because they do not allow themselves enough rest, and they continue their daily functions as if nothing were wrong, he said. WHEN THEY refuse to slow down, they may suffer from continual fatigue, Zervous said, and in extreme cases might even fall victims to a lingering course of illness which sometimes resembles mono - an in- fection which also causes fatigue. Zervous defines this type of flu as 'a number of different diseases which infect an individual either simultaneously or sequentially." As a result, he said, the body's defenses are weakened and are then less able to overcome the invading viruses. In many cases, this type of flu begins: as sinusitis, accompanied by swollen glands, fever, and body aches. It then develops into bronchitis. Susan, an LSA senior, said she has been sick with a similar illness for lit- tle over two months. She said the sickness has completely altered her ability to function on a daily basis, being physically unable to attend classes and forced to give up her job. "My illness inhibits my personal freedom to such an extent that I can- not even walk a block without worrying and becoming fatigued," she explained. Although Zervous said that this particular flu that parallels mono is rather uncommon, he said the treat- ment for it is simple: Get lots of rest and take proper care of yourself (i.e. eat properly) to insure a more rapid recovery. FDA may delay artificial heart implants 330 Maynard - Directly Across From Nickel's Arcade FEMALE STUDENTS Don't you deserve your own private Gynecologist? Bernard S. 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(at Hewitt) Ypsilanti Mon.- Fri. 9 - 9 Sat. 9 - 5 Sun. 12 - 8 434-1500 THE #5 PACKARD AATA BUS STOPS AT OUR DOOR WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Food and Drug Administration advisory group is considering whether to ask Dr. William DeVries to delay three more artificial heart implants the agency earlier authorized, a panel member says. DeVries, based at the Humana Heart Institute of Louisville, Ky., is the only U.S. surgeon licensed to im- plant permanent artificial blood pumps in humans. Seven Jarvik-7 hearts have been implanted since late 1982 and most of the recipients have suffered strokes blamed on blood clots from the devices. TWO OF the four U.S. patients to receive the artificial hearts on a per- manent basis are still alive but both are disabled to some extent by stroke complications. A patient who received a Jarvik-7 in Sweden died. Jarvik 7 hearts were also implanted in two other patients until permanent natural hearts could be found. Dr. Charles McIntosh, advisory board chairman, said Monday the panel wil meet Dec. 20 to review all available data on the artificial heart and figure out how to eliminate some of the complications. DeVries was ex- pected to testify, he said. "We're not at this time saying they ought to generate a new heart, or the current heart is not safe and effec- tive," McIntosh said. "This is not to decide whether the program is to go ahead or not." HOWEVER, one of the questions raised will be whether to impose a temporary moratorium on artificial heart implants until ways to minimize complications are developed, he said. McIntosh, an attending cardiac surgeon at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, said the panel will send its recommendations to the FDA commissioner, who will decide what action to take. The Boston Globe reported that Dr. Abhi Acharya, acting director of the FDA's dvision of cardiovascular devices, said the advisers would be £ asked if DeVries should be permitted known adverse results." FDA spokesman David Duarte said the FDA advisory panel, which requested the Dec. 20 meeting, is made up of non-government physicians and scientists specializing in cardiovascular issues. Donna Hazle, a spokeswoman for DeVries and Humana Hospital Audubon in Louisville, said DeVries would withhold comment until hearing directly from the agency. The surviving Jarvik-7 recipients A r p-4 What's Happening are William Schroeder, who has been disabled by a series of strokes and Murray Haydon, who requires a respirator to aid his breathing most of the time. 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