FROM:
Alternative Medicine Review 1996 (Sep); 1 (3): 168–175 ~ FULL TEXT
Alan R. Gaby, M.D.
Part I of this two-part article reviewed the relationship
between coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) and immune function, periodontal disease,
gastric ulceration, obesity, physical performance, allergy, and muscular
dystrophy. Part II discusses the effect of CoQ10 on cardiovascular disease,
hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and infertility, as well as reviewing
drug interactions with CoQ10.
Cardiovascular Disease - General
Aspects
Enhancing myocardial function is an important, though
frequently overlooked component of the overall prevention and treatment
of cardiovascular disease. CoQ10 plays a key role in energy production,
and is therefore essential for all energy-dependent processes, including
heart-muscle contraction. CoQ10 deficiency has been documented in patients
with various types of cardiovascular disease. It is not clear whether a
decline in CoQ10 levels is a primary cause or a consequence of heart disease.
However, given the fundamental involvement of CoQ10 in myocardial function,
it is not unlikely that CoQ10 deficiency would exacerbate heart disease
and that correction of such a deficiency would have therapeutic value.
In addition, CoQ10 has been shown to be a potent antioxidant.
In one study, ubiquinol-10, the reduced form of CoQ10, protected human
low density lipoproteins (LDL) more efficiently against lipid peroxidation
than did vitamin E. [1] Since oxidation of LDL is believed to be an initiating
factor in the development of atherosclerosis, CoQ10 appears to be a preventive
factor.
CoQ10 Deficiency in Cardiac Disease
Circulating levels of CoQ10 were significantly lower in
patients with ischemic heart disease [2] and in those with dilated cardiomyopathy
(mostly New York Heart Association [NYHA] functional class III or IV) than
in healthy controls. [3] In another study, CoQ10 levels in myocardial tissue
(estimated by enzymatic methods) were low in approximately 75% of patients
undergoing cardiac surgery. Concentrations of CoQ10 declined progressively
in both blood and myocardial tissue with increasing severity of heart disease. [4]
Myocardial deficiencies of CoQ10 were also found in the majority of patients
with aortic stenosis or insufficiency, mitral stenosis or insufficiency,
diabetic cardiomyopathy, tetralogy of Fallot, atrial septal defects and
ventricular septal defects. [5] In patients with cardiomyopathy and myocardial
deficiency of CoQ10, oral administration of 100 mg/day of CoQ10 for 2-8
months resulted in an increase in myocardial CoQ10 levels ranging from
20-85%. [6] These findings suggest that CoQ10 deficiency is common in patients
with various types of cardiovascular disease, and that oral administration
of CoQ10 can increase tissue levels of this nutrient.
Treatment of Cardiomyopathy
In one study, 126 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy
(98% of whom were in NYHA functional class III or IV) received 100 mg/day
of CoQ10 for periods of up to 66 months. After 6 months of treatment, the
mean ejection fraction increased from 41% to 59% (p < 0.001), and remained
stable thereafter with continued treatment. After 2 years, 84% of the patients
were still alive and at 5.5 years, 52% were alive. [7] These survival rates
are considerably better than the published survival statistics of patients
given conventional therapy (i.e., 2-year survival rate of 50% for symptomatic
cardiomyopathy and 1-year survival rate of 50% for decompensated cardiomyopathy).
In another study, 88 patients with cardiomyopathy received
100 mg/day of CoQ10 for periods of 1-24 months. Significant improvements
in at least two of three cardiac parameters (ejection fraction, cardiac
output and NYHA class) were seen in 75-85% of the patients. Approximately
80% of the patients improved to a lower (i.e., more favorable) NYHA functional
class. [8]
In a double-blind, crossover trial, 19 patients with cardiomyopathy
(NYHA classes III and IV) received 100 mg/day of CoQ10 or a placebo, each
for 12 weeks. Compared with placebo, CoQ10 treatment significantly increased
cardiac stroke volume and ejection fraction. Eighteen patients reported
subjective improvement in tolerance for physical activity while taking
CoQ10. [9]
Congestive Heart Failure
The potential of CoQ10 as a treatment for congestive heart
failure (CHF) was suggested as early as 1967 by Japanese researchers. [10]
In 1976, these same investigators administered 30 mg/day of CoQ10 to 17
patients with CHF. All of the patients improved, and 9 (53%) became asymptomatic
after 4 weeks of treatment. [11]
In an open trial of 34 patients with refractory NYHA class
IV CHF, administration of 100 mg/day of CoQ10 resulted in sustained improvement
in cardiac function in 28 cases (82%). The survival rate after two years
was 62%, compared with an expected two-year survival rate of less than
25% for similar patients. [12]
In another study, 12 patients with advanced CHF who had
failed to respond adequately to digitalis and diuretics received 100 mg/day
of coenzyme Q10 for 7 months. Two-thirds of the patients showed definite
clinical improvement after a mean treatment period of 30 days. In these
patients, dyspnea at rest disappeared and energy level and tolerance for
activity increased. Objective improvements included decreased hepatic congestion,
reductions in heart rate and heart volume, and a decline in systolic time
intervals (suggesting improved myocardial performance). Withdrawal of coenzyme
Q10 was followed by severe clinical relapse, with subsequent improvement
upon resumption of treatment. [13]
In a large multicenter trial of 1,113 CHF patients, 50-150
mg/day of CoQ10 was given for 3 months (78% of the patients received 100
mg/day). The proportion of patients with improvements in clinical signs
and symptoms were as follows: sweating, 82.4%; jugular reflux, 81.5%; cyanosis,
81%; pulmonary rales, 78.4%; edema, 76.9%; palpitations, 75.7%; vertigo,
73%; arrhythmia, 62%; insomnia, 60.2%; dyspnea, 54.2%; nocturia, 50.7%;
and enlargement of the liver area, 49.3%. [14]
The results of these uncontrolled studies were confirmed
more recently in a double-blind trial. Some 641 patients with CHF (NYHA
classes III or IV) were randomly assigned to receive placebo or CoQ10 (2
mg/kg/day) for one year. Conventional therapy was continued in both groups.
The number of patients requiring hospitalization during the study for worsening
heart failure was 38% less in the CoQ10 group than in the placebo group
(p < 0.001). Episodes of pulmonary edema were reduced by about 60% in
the CoQ10 group, compared with the placebo group (p < 0.001). [15]
Angina
Twelve patients with stable angina pectoris were randomly
assigned to receive 150 mg/day of CoQ10 or a placebo, each for 4 weeks,
in a double-blind crossover trial. CoQ10 treatment significantly increased
exercise tolerance on a treadmill (time before onset of chest pain), and
significantly increased the time until ST-segment depression occurred.
Compared with placebo, there was a 53% reduction in the frequency of anginal
episodes and a 54% reduction in the number of nitroglycerin tablets needed
during CoQ10 treatment; however, these differences were not statistically
significant. [16]
These results suggest that CoQ10 is a safe and effective
treatment for angina pectoris. Although the amelioration of anginal attacks
was not statistically significant, the magnitude of the effect was large.
It would therefore be worthwhile to perform a similar study with a larger
number of patients.
Arrhythmias
Twenty-seven patients with ventricular premature beats
(VPB's) and no evidence of organic heart disease received a placebo for
3-4 weeks, followed by 60 mg/day of coenzyme Q10 for 4-5 weeks. The reduction
in VPB's was significantly greater after CoQ10 than after placebo. The
beneficial effect of CoQ10 was seen primarily in diabetics, in whom the
mean reduction in VPB frequency was 85.7%. A significant reduction in VPB's
also occurred in 1 (11%) of 9 otherwise healthy patients and in 4 (36%)
of 11 patients with hypertension. [17]
Prevention of Adriamycin Toxicity
The clinical value of adriamycin as anti-cancer agent
is limited by its toxicity, which includes cardiomyopathy and irreversible
heart failure. Adriamycin-induced cardiotoxicity is believed to be caused,
at least in part, by a reduction in CoQ10 levels and by inhibition of CoQ10-dependent
enzymes. In rats treated with adriamycin, administration of CoQ10 restored
the levels of this nutrient to normal and prevented adriamycin-induced
morphologic changes in the heart. [18] Treatment with CoQ10 also prevented
adriamycin-induced cardiotoxicity in rabbits. [19]
Cancer patients receiving adriamycin had lower myocardial
levels of coenzyme Q10 than did controls. The magnitude of CoQ10 depletion
was directly related to the severity of cardiac impairment. [20] To determine
the effect of CoQ10 supplementation on adriamycin cardiotoxicity, 7 patients
receiving adriamycin were also given 100 mg/day of CoQ10, beginning 3-5
days before adriamycin was started. Another 7 patients (control group)
received adriamycin without CoQ10. Cardiac function deteriorated significantly
in the control group, whereas patients given CoQ10 had little or no cardiotoxicity,
even though the cumulative dose of adriamycin in the CoQ10 group was 50%
greater than that in the control group. [21] Despite the small number of patients
in this study, the results are highly encouraging. Since administration
of CoQ10 does not appear to affect the antitumor activity of adriamycin, [22
]
CoQ10 prophylaxis seems appropriate for all patients receiving adriamycin.
Protection During Cardiac Surgery
Postoperative low cardiac output is a major cause of early
death following cardiac surgery. Fifty patients undergoing cardiac surgery
for acquired valvular lesions were randomly assigned to receive 30-60 mg/day
of CoQ10 for 6 days prior to surgery or to a control group that did not
receive CoQ10. Postoperatively, a state of severe low-cardiac output developed
in 48% of the patients in the control group, compared with only 12% of
those in the CoQ10 group. These results suggest that preoperative administration
of CoQ10 increases the tolerance of the heart to ischemia during aortic
cross-clamping. [23]
Mitral Valve Prolapse
Cardiac performance was evaluated using an isometric hand
grip test in 194 children with symptomatic mitral valve prolapse. Prior
to treatment, all patients had an abnormal hand-grip test. Sixteen children
received 2 mg/kg/day of CoQ10 or a placebo for 6 weeks, in a single-blind
trial. Hand grip strength became normal in 7 children receiving CoQ10 and
in none of the placebo-treated patients. [24]
Note that the relevance of this study to the treatment
of mitral valve prolapse in adults is questionable, and hand grip may not
be a reliable test of cardiac function. Furthermore, impaired cardiac function
is not typical of mitral valve prolapse in adults and the symptoms associated
with this condition do not appear to be caused by diminished cardiac function.
While the symptoms associated with mitral valve prolapse may respond to
magnesium supplementation, [25] the role of CoQ10 in the treatment of this
disorder is unclear.
Hypertension
Enzymatic assays revealed a deficiency of CoQ10 in 39%
of 59 patients with essential hypertension, compared with only 6% of healthy
controls. In animal models of hypertension, including spontaneously hypertensive
rats, uninephrectomized rats treated with saline and deoxycorticosterone,
and experimentally hypertensive dogs, orally administered CoQ10 significantly
lowered blood pressure. [26-29]
Twenty-six patients with essential hypertension received
coenzyme Q10, 50 mg twice a day. After 10 weeks of treatment, mean systolic
blood pressure decreased from 164.5 to 146.7 mm Hg and mean diastolic blood
pressure decreased from 98.1 to 86.1 mm Hg (p < 0.001). The fall in
blood pressure was associated with a significant reduction in peripheral
resistance, but there were no changes in plasma renin activity, serum and
urinary sodium and potassium, and urinary aldosterone. These results suggest
that treatment with CoQ10 decreases blood pressure in patients with essential
hypertension, possibly because of a reduction in peripheral resistance. [30]
In another study, 109 patients with essential hypertension
received coenzyme Q10 (average dose, 225 mg/day) in addition to their usual
antihypertensive regimen. The dosage of CoQ10 was adjusted according to
clinical response and blood CoQ10 levels (the aim was to attain blood levels
greater than 2.0 mcg/ml). The need for antihypertensive medication declined
gradually and, after a mean treatment period of 4.4 months, about half
of the patients were able to discontinue between one and three drugs. [31]
Similar results have been reported by others. [32]
It should be noted that the effect of CoQ10 on blood pressure
was usually not seen until after 4-12 weeks of therapy. That observation
is consistent with the delayed increase in enzyme activity that results
from administration of CoQ10. Thus, CoQ10 is not a typical antihypertensive
drug; rather, it seems to correct some metabolic abnormality that is involved
in the pathogenesis of hypertension.
Diabetes Mellitus
Diabetes mellitus is a multifactorial disease that is
associated with a number of different metabolic abnormalities. The electron
transport chain, of which CoQ10 is a component, plays a major role in carbohydrate
metabolism. A deficiency of CoQ10 might therefore have an adverse effect
on glucose tolerance.
Decreased levels of CoQ10 (measured as total CoQ) were
found in rats with experimentally-induced diabetes. Administration of CoQ7
(an analog of CoQ10) partially corrected abnormal glucose metabolism in
alloxan-diabetic rats. (Before CoQ10 became commercially available, some
therapeutic trials were done with CoQ7. These two compounds are considered
to be nutritionally equivalent.)
Thirty-nine diabetics received 120 mg/day of CoQ7 for
2-18 weeks. Fasting blood sugar levels fell by at least 30% in 31% of the
patients and the concentration of ketone bodies declined by at least 30%
in 59% of the patients. One patient who was poorly controlled on 60 units/day
of insulin showed a marked fall in fasting blood sugar and ketone bodies
after receiving CoQ7. [33]
Male Infertility
Because sperm production and function are highly energy-dependent
processes, CoQ10 deficiency could presumably be a contributing factor to
infertility in men. In one study, administration of 10 mg/day of CoQ7 resulted
in a significant increase in sperm count and motility in a group of infertile
men. [34] Additional research is needed to determine whether CoQ10 therapy
has a role in the treatment of infertility.
Drug Interactions
Cholesterol-lowering drugs such as lovastatin and pravastatin
inhibit the enzyme 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl(HMG)-CoA reductase, which
is required for biosynthesis of both cholesterol and CoQ10. Thus, administration
of these drugs might compromise CoQ10 status by decreasing its synthesis.
Supplementation of the diet of rats with lovastatin (400 mg/kg of diet)
for 4 weeks reduced the concentration of CoQ10 in the heart, liver, and
blood. [35] In another study, administration of lovastatin to 5 patients receiving
CoQ10 for heart failure was followed by a reduction in blood levels of
CoQ10 and a significant deterioration of clinical status. Some of these
patients improved after the dosage of CoQ10 was increased or the lovastatin
was discontinued. [36]
These results suggest that people who have low CoQ10 levels
and suboptimal cardiac function might develop clinically significant CoQ10
depletion after taking an HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor. Although individuals
with high CoQ10 levels and good cardiac function can probably tolerate
these drugs better, a case can be made that all patients being treated
with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors should also receive CoQ10 prophylactically.
The beta blockers propranolol and metaprolol have been
shown to inhibit CoQ10-dependent enzymes. [37] The antihypertensive effect
of these drugs might therefore be compromised in the long run by the development
of CoQ10 deficiency. In one study, administration of 60 mg/day of CoQ10
reduced the incidence of drug-induced malaise in patients receiving propranolol. [38]
A number of phenothiazines and tricyclic antidepressants
have also been shown to inhibit CoQ10-dependent enzymes. It is therefore
possible that CoQ10 deficiency may be a contributing factor to the cardiac
side effects that are frequently seen with these drugs. In two clinical
studies, supplementation with CoQ10 improved electrocardiographic changes
in patients on psychotropic drugs. [39]
Return to Co-Q10
Since 5-19-2001