FROM:
Alternative Medicine Review 2001 (Apr); 6 (2): 141–166 ~ FULL TEXT
Kathleen A. Head, ND
Introduction
Part one of this article was published in the October 1999 issue of
Alternative Medicine Review and discussed nutritional and botanical approaches
to conditions of the retina. This second part covers alternative treatments
for nonretinal disorders: senile cataracts, diabetic cataracts, and chronic
open-angle glaucoma.
A large percentage of blindness in the world is nutritionally preventable. [1]
The author of this comment was referring primarily to the use of vitamin
A to prevent corneal degeneration associated with a vitamin A deficiency;
however, there is considerable evidence that many other eye conditions,
which are leading causes of vision impairment and blindness, also may be
preventable with nutritional supplementation, botanical medicines, diet,
and other lifestyle changes. In addition, a number of nutrients hold promise
for the treatment of already existing cataracts and glaucoma.
Senile Cataracts
Senile cataracts are the leading cause of impaired vision in the United
States, with a large percentage of the geriatric population exhibiting
some signs of the lesion. Over one million cataract surgeries are performed
yearly in this country alone. [2] Cataracts
are developmental or degenerative opacities of the lens of the eye, generally
characterized by a gradual painless loss of vision. The extent of the vision
loss depends on the size and location of the cataract. Cataracts may be
located in the center of the lens (nuclear), in the superficial cortex
(cortical), or in the posterior subcapsular area. Cataracts are also classified
according to their color, which is consistent with location and density
of the cataract. Pale yellow cataracts are typically slight opacities of
the cortex, subcapsular region, or both; yellow or light brown cataracts
are consistent with moderate to intense opacities of the cortex, nucleus,
or both; and brown cataracts are associated with dense nuclear cataracts. [3]
Diagnosis
Symptoms include near vision image blur, abnormal color perception,
monocular diplopia, glare, and impaired visual acuity, and may vary depending
on location of the cataract. For example, if the opacity is located in
the center of the lens (nuclear cataract), myopia is often a symptom, whereas
posterior subcapsular cataracts tend to be most noticeable in bright light. [4]
Ophthalmoscopic examination is best conducted on a dilated pupil, holding
the scope approximately one foot away. Small cataracts appear as dark defects
against the red reflex, whereas a large cataract may completely obliterate
the red reflex. Once a cataract has been established, a referral for slit-lamp
examination, which provides more detail on location and extent of opacity,
is recommended.
Etiological/Risk Factors
Factors contributing to cataract formation include aging, smoking, [5] exposure to UVB and ionizing radiation, [6] oxidative stress (secondary to other risk factors such as aging or
smoking), [7] dietary factors, [8] increased body
weight (above 22-percent body fat), central obesity, [9] and family history. Medications and
environmental exposures which may contribute to cataract formation include steroids, gout medications, and heavy metal exposure. Cadmium, copper, lead,10 iron, and nickel11 have all been found in cataractous lenses. A high level of cadmium in the lens is associated with
smoking and can contribute to accumulation of other heavy metals. [10] Conditions which predispose to cataracts include diabetes, galactosemia, neurofibromatosis, hypothyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, hypervitaminosis D, infectious diseases such as toxoplasmosis, and several syndromes caused by chromosomal disorders. [2]
Mechanisms Involved in the Pathophysiology of Cataracts
Cataracts are characterized by electrolyte disturbances resulting in osmotic imbalances. Derangements in the function of the
membrane resulting in ion imbalance may be due to increased membrane permeability or to a depression of the Na+/K+ pump because of
interference with the enzyme Na+/K+ ATPase. [12]
Cataracts are also characterized by aggregates of insoluble proteins. [12] Oxidative insult appears to be involved as a precipitating factor in all cataracts. Lens proteins typically remain in their reduced form. However, in cataractous lenses, the proteins are found in an insoluble, oxidized form. Oxidation may occur as a result of many factors (see Etiological Factors). Higher levels of hydrogen peroxide have been found in cataractous lenses when compared to normal controls. [13] Normally the lens contains significant levels of reduced glutathione (GSH), which keeps the proteins in their reduced form. However, there are significantly lower levels of GSH in cataractous lenses. Advanced glycation end products (AGE) appear to play a role in cataract formation. Researchers have tested the hypothesis that the major AGE formed in the lens has an EDTA-like structure, capable of
binding to copper. They found copper binding was 20-30 percent greater in the older, cataractous lens protein fractions than in young, non-cataractous fractions. The prooxidant copper precipitates further oxidation, creating a vicious cycle. The researchers hypothesized that, “chelation therapy could be beneficial in delaying cataractogenesis.” [14] Other researchers
have confirmed the involvement of transition metals, copper and iron, as instigators of ascorbyl and hydroxyl radical formation in cataracts. [15]
The Role of Glutathione in Lens Metabolism
In order to fully understand the mechanisms involved in cataract formation and the link to nutritional prevention, it is important
to understand the role glutathione and its enzyme co-factors play in metabolism within the lens. In vitro studies of incubated lenses from
animals as well as humans have helped elucidate the mechanisms involved.
The lens of the eye is avascular, depending entirely on passive diffusion, active transport, and intra-lens synthesis for nutrients
and other substances important for metabolism. As a result, the content of the surrounding intraocular fluids (aqueous humor) is relevant. While levels of GSH are high in the lens, they are relatively low in the aqueous humor; thus, glutathione appears to be synthesized
within the lens. Glutathione is composed of the amino acids cysteine, glutamic acid, and glycine, and its synthesis within the lens takes
place in two steps (Figure 1). Cataractous lenses can demonstrate dramatic decreases in GSH, as much as 81 percent, when compared
to normal lenses. [3] Researchers have examined this phenomenon in an attempt to determine
whether low GSH is due to decreased synthesis or increased degradation. Decreases in the enzymes involved in both synthesis (?glutamyl transferase) and recycling (glutathione reductase) of GSH from oxidized glutathione (GSSG) lend credence to the theory that synthesis is diminished in cataractous lenses. [3]
These same researchers found a decrease in the activity of enzymes of GSH degradation (glutathione peroxidase and glutathione s-transferase) which should result in an increased rather than a decreased accumulation of GSH. They therefore concluded that the loss of activity of these enzymes was not enough to offset the losses associated with decreased synthesis. They also did not rule out the possible loss of GSH from the lens via membrane leakage.
There are several ways in which glutathione or its depletion can affect the opacity of the lens. A review by primary researchers
on glutathione metabolism and its relationship to cataract formation outlines three possible mechanisms of cataract prevention by glutathione: [16] (1) maintaining sulfhydryl (SH) groups on proteins in their reduced form preventing disulfide cross-linkage; (2) protecting SH groups on proteins important for active transport and membrane permeability; and (3)
preventing oxidative damage from hydrogen peroxide (
H2O2
).
Considering the first mechanism by which GSH can protect lenses from opacities, there is an increase in high molecular weight (HMW) proteins in cataractous lenses. These protein aggregates contribute to lens opacity and are found particularly in dense cataracts.
Reddy and Giblin examined x-ray-induced cataracts in rabbits and found increased levels of disulfide bonds, confirming their assertion
that oxidation of SH groups resulted in disulfide bond formation and HMW proteins. They also found that SH groups on proteins only
become oxidized when levels of GSH drop below some critical level. [16] Other researchers have found an increase in disulfide bonds in human cataractous lenses. [17]
Maintaining normal cell volume and transport of electrolytes are important factors in lens transparency. Glutathione may play a
role in maintaining normal lens permeability and active cation transport by protecting sulfhydryl groups in the cell membrane from oxidation. Oxidation of SH groups on the surface of the cell membrane results in increased permeability, and oxidation of important SH
groups of Na+/K+ ATPase impedes active transport. Reddy et al examined the effect of GSH depletion on rabbit lenses and found it directly
led to increased membrane permeability. [18] While GSH depletion did not directly impair
active transport, it resulted in increased susceptibility of the Na+/K+ pump to oxidative damage by H2O2
. Oxidation of GSH resulted in a 70-percent decrease in active transport and a two-fold increase in membrane permeability. Other experiments have found that lensepithelial-GSH needs to be depleted by about 60 percent for these changes to occur. The authors point out that, “the lens has a remarkable ability to regenerate reduced glutathione.” However, they found that, although the change
in membrane permeability was reversible with the regeneration of GSH, the decrease in pump activity was irreversibly affected. [16]
H2O2 is found in the aqueous humor in humans as well as other species. GSH is involved in detoxifying this reactive oxygen species to water in a coupled reaction involving NADPH (Figure 2). Without detoxification the peroxide radicals would damage the lens membranes and susceptible protein groups. The researchers found both normal human and rabbit lenses with high GSH content were apidly able to detoxify H2O2 in culture medium. [16] Lenses pretreated with methyl mercury, which decreased the concentration of GSH by 75 percent, were less able to detoxify the peroxide radicals.
Other researchers have postulated a possible diffusion problem. Normally GSH is synthesized and regenerated in the lens cortex and then diffuses to other areas of the lens. Cataracts of the elderly are primarily in the nucleus. Researchers examined normal human lenses in vitro and found the older ones appeared to have a barrier to diffusion of GSH from the cortex to the nucleus. [19]
Specific Nutrients and Prevention of Cataracts
Oxidation of lens proteins is part of the pathophysiology of cataracts.
Therefore, it is no surprise that antioxidants may help prevent the formation
of cataracts.
Carotenes and Vitamin A: Epidemiological Evidence
Levels of nutrients, including carotenoids, have been examined in human
cataractous lenses after extraction using high performance liquid chromatography.
Vitamins A and E and the carotenoids lutein and zeaxanthin were found.
The newer, epithelial/outer cortex layer had more carotenoids, tocopherol,
and retinol (approximately 3-, 1.8-, and 1.3-fold higher, respectively)
than the older, inner cortex/nuclear portion.20 Other studies have quantified
significant levels of lutein, zeaxanthin, and alpha- and gamma-tocopherol
in the lens. [21]
A prospective study of the effect of carotenes and vitamin A on the
risk of cataract formation was conducted as part of the Nurses' Health
Study. A total of 77,466 female nurses, ages 45-71 years, were included
in the study, which involved food-frequency questionnaires over a 12-year
period. After other risk factors were controlled for, including smoking
and age, those in the highest quintile for consumption of lutein and zeaxanthin
had a 22-percent decreased risk of cataract extraction compared with those
in the lowest quintile. [22]
Another cohort of the Nurses' Health Study followed 50,823 women, ages
45-67, for eight years and found women in the highest quintile of vitamin
A consumption had a 39-percent lower risk of developing cataracts compared
to women in the lowest quintile. [23]
In a similar study of male health professionals in the United States,
36,644 participants, ages 45-75 years, were followed for eight years with
periodic dietary questionnaires. Men in the highest quintile for lutein
and zeaxanthin intake had a 19-percent decreased risk of cataract extraction
when smoking, age, and other risk factors were controlled for. [24]
Neither the women nor the men demonstrated a decreased risk of cataract
with intakes of other carotenoids (a-carotene, b-carotene, lycopene, or
beta-cryptoxanthin). It is hypothesized the protective effect of the carotenoids
may be due to quenching reactive oxygen species generated by exposure to
ultraviolet light. [25]
The Beaver Dam Eye Study examined risk for developing nuclear cataracts
in 252 subjects who were followed over a five-year period. Only a trend
toward an inverse relationship between serum lutein and cryptoxanthin and
risk of cataract development was noted. [26]
Vitamin E: Animal, Epidemiological, and Clinical Studies
As a fat-soluble antioxidant, it is reasonable to predict a positive
role for vitamin E as a cataract preventive in the lens cell membrane.
Animal, epidemiological, and clinical studies help confirm this hypothesis.
A placebo-controlled animal study found 100 IU d-alpha-tocopherol injected
subcutaneously prevented ionizing radiation damage to the lens, which did
occur in rats not supplemented with vitamin E. [27]
Two other animal studies using vitamin E instilled in the eyes as drops
confirmed the preventive effect of vitamin E, at least when used topically. [28,29]
Several human studies have found low levels of vitamin E intake are
associated with increased risk for cataract development. An epidemiological
investigation examined self-reported supplementary vitamin consumption
of 175 cataract patients compared to 175 matched individuals without cataracts.
The cataract-free group used significantly more vitamin E (p=0.004) and
vitamin C (p=0.01) than the cataract group, resulting in at least a 50-percent
reduction in cataract risk in the supplemented group. [30]
An Italian study compared 207 patients with cataracts to 706 control subjects
in a hospital setting. Vitamin E, in addition to a number of other nutritional
factors, was associated with a decreased risk for cataract. [8]
The Vitamin E and Cataract Prevention Study (VECAT) is a four-year,
prospective, randomized, controlled trial of vitamin E versus placebo for
cataract prevention in a population of healthy volunteers, ages 55-80 years. [31]
Although results are still pending, data was collected on prior use of
vitamin E and incidence of cataract in 1,111 participants. A statistically
significant relationship was found between past vitamin E supplementation
and prevention of cortical cataract but not nuclear cataract. [32]
The Lens Opacities Case-Control Study was designed to determine risk
factors for cataracts in 1,380 participants, ages 40-79 years. Blood chemistry
and levels of vitamin E and selenium were performed on all patients. The
risk of developing cataracts was reduced to less than one-half (odds ratio
0.44 for nuclear cataracts) in subjects with higher levels of vitamin E. [33]
Some of these same researchers examined the association between antioxidants
and the risk of cataract in the Longitudinal Study of Cataract. Dietary
intake, use of supplements, and plasma vitamin E levels were assessed on
764 participants. Lens opacities were examined on a yearly basis and the
risk of development of cataract was 30-percent less in regular users of
a multiple vitamin, 57-percent less in regular users of supplemental vitamin
E, and 42-percent less is those with higher plasma levels of vitamin E. [34]
In a randomized trial of 50 patients with early cataracts, subjects
were assigned to receive either 100 mg vitamin E twice daily or placebo
for 30 days. There was a significantly smaller increase in the size of
cortical cataracts in the vitamin E group compared to placebo. While increases
of vitamin E were found in both nuclear and cortical lens homogenates after
surgical removal, GSH levels were increased significantly only in those
with cortical cataracts receiving vitamin E. In addition, the malondialdehyde
(MDA) Ñ a measure of oxidative stress Ñ levels and glutathione
peroxidase levels were higher in cortical cataract/vitamin E users than
in the nuclear cataract/vitamin E group. [35]
Some conclusions that can be drawn from this study are:
(1) vitamin E decreases
oxidative stress in cataractous lenses;
(2) part of vitamin E's protective
effect is due to enhancement of GSH levels; and
(3) vitamin E seems to
be more protective for cortical than nuclear cataracts, at least in this
short-term study.
Vitamin C and Risk of Cataracts
Animal experimentation has shed
some light on ascorbic acid and its role in cataract
formation. Cataracts induced in chick
embryos by the application of hydrocortisone
were prevented by the introduction of vitamin
C to the developing embryo. In addition, vitamin
C slowed the decline in GSH levels, which
occurred with the cortisone treatment. [36]
Ascorbic acid is normally found in
high concentrations in the aqueous humor and
lens in humans. A group of 44 subjects were
supplemented with 2 g daily ascorbic acid.
Significant increases in vitamin C in lens,
aqueous humor, and plasma were noted. [37] In
another study, lenses were exposed in vitro to
light, which caused an increase in superoxide
radicals and subsequent damage to the Na+/
K+ pump. The damage was prevented by addition
of vitamin C in doses comparable to
what would be found in the aqueous humor. [38]
In the Nurses’ Health Study supplemental
vitamin C for a period of 10 years or
greater was associated with a 77-percent lower
incidence of early lens opacities and an 83-
percent lower incidence of moderate lens
opacities. In this study, no significant protection
was noted from vitamin C supplementation
of less than 10 years. [39]
Riboflavin
Riboflavin is a precursor to flavin adenine
dinucleotide (FAD), which is a coenzyme
for glutathione reductase. In vitro evaluations
of surgically removed cataracts have
confirmed inactivity of glutathione reductase
enzyme activity in a significant number of
cataracts examined. Furthermore, the activity
was restored by the addition of FAD. [40]
It is not surprising then that a deficiency
of riboflavin has been implicated as a
cause of cataract formation. A study of B vitamin
nutritional status of cataract patients
(n=37) compared to age-matched controls
without cataract (n=16) found that 80 percent
of those with cataracts and only 12.5 percent
of control subjects had a riboflavin deficiency.
[41] The same researcher tested for, but
did not find, a deficiency of thiamin or pyridoxine
in cataract patients. Other researchers
have found a relationship between riboflavin
deficiency and later-stage cataracts, but not in
early cataract formation. [42] The Lens Opacities
Case-Control Study found that lens opacities
were associated with lower levels of riboflavin
which were assessed by RBC enzyme assays
and dietary intake reports.
Data collected during cancer intervention
trials in Linxian, China, were assessed for
nutrient effects on other conditions, including
cataracts. Two randomized, double-blind, controlled
studies of cataract risk resulted from
the Linxian study. In the first trial 12,141 participants,
ages 45-74, were supplemented for
five to six years with either a multiple vitamin-
mineral or placebo. There was a statistically
significant 36-percent reduction in incidence
of nuclear cataract for subjects ages 65-
74 years given the multiple vitamin. In the
second trial 23,249 participants were given one
of four different vitamin/mineral combinations:
(1) retinol/zinc,
(2) riboflavin/niacin,
(3) ascorbic acid/molybdenum, or
(4) selenium/alpha-tocopherol/beta carotene.
Again, the
most significant effect was noted in people age
65-74, with a 44-percent decrease in nuclear
cataract risk in the group taking riboflavin/niacin
(3 mg riboflavin/40 mg niacin). No significant
protection was noted for the other
nutrient combinations or for protection from
cortical cataracts. [43]
A series of case reports from the University
of Georgia treated 24 cataract patients
(18 with lens opacities and six with fully-developed
cataracts) with 15 mg riboflavin daily.
Dramatic improvement was reported within
24-48 hours, and after nine months all lens
opacities disappeared. [44] Larger, double-blind,
placebo-controlled trials are needed to confirm
these seemingly dramatic improvements.
Other B Vitamins
Pantethine is the active coenzyme form
of pantothenic acid (vitamin B5). Several animal
studies have found pantethine can prevent
chemically-induced cataracts if given within
eight hours of exposure to lens insult. [45-47] The
proposed mechanism of action was the prevention
of the formation of insoluble proteins
in the lens. [45]
Folic acid has been found to be low in
those prone to cataracts. An Italian epidemiological
survey found those in the highest
quintile for folic acid consumption were only
40 percent as likely to develop cataracts than
those in the lowest quintile. [8]
Selenium and Cataracts
A decrease in glutathione peroxidase
activity has been found in the lenses of selenium-
deficient rats. Concomitantly, an increase
in MDA and free radicals was also noted
in both the selenium-deficient and vitamin-E
deficient groups. [48] Evaluation of selenium levels
in humans has found lower than normal
levels of selenium in sera and aqueous humor
in cataract patients. [49] The significance of low
serum levels is unclear and the relationship
between selenium and cataract risk demands
further evaluation.
Dietary Factors in Cataract Risk
Several epidemiological studies have
found dietary links to increased or decreased
risk of cataract. An Italian in-hospital study
examined dietary patterns and incidence of
cataract extraction. Significant inverse relationships
were seen between meat, spinach,
cheese, cruciferous vegetables, tomatoes, peppers,
citrus fruits, and melon. An increased risk
was found in those with the highest intakes of
butter, total fat, salt, and oil (except olive oil). [8]
The Nurses’ Health Study found regular consumption
of spinach and kale was moderately
protective for cataracts in women. [22] The Health
Professionals Follow-up Study found spinach
and broccoli decreased risk of cataract in
men. [24]
Read the FULL TEXT Article
Return to LYCOPENE
Return to BLINDNESS
Return to CAROTENOIDS
Return to ANTIOXIDANTS
Since 5-01-2001
|