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Coenzyme Q10: A Miracle Vitamin
Coenzyme Q should be called vitamin Q because the amount
that the body can make is insufficient for the best of health
and extra amounts of Q must be obtained from food. That
makes CoQ fit the definition of vitamin: a natural, organic
substance in food that is required for health and survival.
However the abbreviation, CoQ, has caught on and since it
is concise it will continue in use.
CoQ was discovered in 1957 by Dr. Frederick Crane at University
of Wisconsin and methods of synthesis were soon developed
by Dr. Karl Folkers, then a chief researcher at Merck &
Co. However Merck chose not to undertake commercial production
and Dr. Folkers eventually became a consultant to pharmaceutical
companies in Japan where his research in diseases of muscle,
such as muscular dystrophy and heart failure, earned him
the Priestley medal of the American Chemical Society in
1986. However, despite hundreds of research reports on CoQ,
American physicians still resist the idea that a natural
vitamin can be as powerful as a pharmacological drug.
One of my patients was given the very best of conventional
care for congestive heart failure at a university hospital.
After 16 years of Sarcoid lung disease he had developed
severe fibrosis, which caused increased resistance to blood
flow in the lungs. This increased the load on the right
ventricle of his heart, which eventually became depleted
and weakened so that edema fluid backed up in his abdomen,
liver and lower extremities. His legs were hugely swollen
from the toes to the hips. Diuretics, digitalis and prednisone
failed and a heart transplant was considered but ruled out
due to his weakened condition. He was literally sent home
to die!
However once at home he could be treated with megadoses
of Coenzyme Q. A miracle! In ten days he lost over 20 pounds,
about 10 quarts of fluid, the edema cleared and he was able
to walk and breathe comfortably for the first time in months.
Not cured entirely, of course, but well enough so that six
months later he was still out of his wheel chair and able
to climb the stairs to the Opera House balcony, resulting
in a medical emergency when he fainted due to the acute
load on his heart. He felt so well he pushed himself too
far. This was the case that made a believer out of this
doctor!
CoQ has a chemical name, Ubiquinone, which derives from
the fact that it is ubiquitous, found in almost all plant
and animal cells that use oxygen to power their chemistry.
Ubiquinone is a co-enzyme, a substance that teams up with
an otherwise inactive enzyme complex to make it complete--and
active. The energy of oxidation in cells depends on CoQ
in partnership with niacinamide (vitamin B3), riboflavin
(vitamin B2), and minerals such as iron and copper to effect
the movement of electrons and hydrogen protons in the power
plant of cell, the mitochondrion.
Mitochondria are the specialized microscopic cell bodies
that oxidize the carbohydrates and fats from food, separate
off the negatively charged electrons and pump out the positively
charged hydrogen protons to create a miniature battery in
each cell of the body. This mechanism is literally the life
force. CoQ acts as a transporter to safely carry these electrical
charges from the inner membrane of the mitochondrion to
the matrix where the electrons participate in the manufacture
of ATP, thus converting electrical to chemical energy.
Because CoQ can donate protons, it serves as an antioxidant
to prevent a leak of electrons that could oxidize and damage
the cell membranes. This is all to the good unless under
highly oxidative conditions, such as physical or mental
stress or infection, it can be depleted. It is ironic that
starvation, which lowers metabolic activity and reduces
the production of peroxides and free radicals, spares CoQ
which is then more available for energy. On the other hand,
over-eating, especially fried foods and salad oils (except
olive oil) presents the tissues with toxic free radicals,
electronically unbalanced by-products that damage cell membranes
and use up CoQ.
A low calorie, low fat diet promotes higher CoQ levels
and a sense of energy and well-being thereby. Or one might
use supplements of CoQ as an antidote to the dietary and
lifestyle hazards that cause CoQ deficiency to be so common.
In addition vitamin E protects against depletion of CoQ
by fatty acid peroxidation. By increasing tissue levels
of CoQ there is a boost in mental and physical energy and
a decreased requirement for sleep, a pleasant surprise for
many who try supplementing for the first time. It works!
It is possible to stimulate your body to produce more CoQ
by increasing intake of certain nutrients, such as the amino
acid, tyrosine, and the mineral, magnesium. CoQ is manufactured
by our own cells from the amino acid, tyrosine and farnesyl,
an intermediate in the production of cholesterol. Magnesium
is a required catalyst for CoQ synthesis and that is one
reason why many people feel more energetic after magnesium
supplementation.
On the other hand, some medications can interfere with
CoQ. Lovastatin, which blocks cholesterol synthesis by preventing
the production of farnesyl, can induce a state of chronic
fatigue. Anti-hypertensive beta-blocker medications, such
as propanolal, also interfere with CoQ and the fatigue and
weakened heart-beat caused by these medications can be reversed
by supplemental CoQ. Doxorubicin (Adriamycin), an anti-cancer
antibiotic, blocks CoQ so completely that some patients
suffer heart damage--which is preventable by taking CoQ.
Tetracycline antibiotics, such as doxycycline, also block
CoQ and cause fatigue and weakness, which responds to CoQ
supplements. Barbiturates also block CoQ and so do the common
phenothiazine tranquilizers and tricyclic anti-depressants.
Pesticides (especially rotenone) and toxic chemicals, including
ozone and solvents, also deplete CoQ. With so many hazards
in the environment, it is more important than ever to get
extra CoQ in food or in supplements. It appears that as
little as 30 milligrams per day is adequate for everyday
use. For significant medical symptoms, however, doses of
60 to 120 milligrams per day for at least two months may
be required. It is unlikely that these megadose intakes
can be obtained through food. What are the best dietary
sources?
Cells that contain mitochondria for oxidation are the best
souce of CoQ. The more mitochondria, the more energy production,
the more CoQ. Heart is the richest food source of CoQ because
it is the most active muscle in our body, contracting once
a second, day and night. It contains about 6 milligrams
of CoQ per 3 ounce portion. Liver contains a quarter as
much and body muscle meats a fifth to a tenth as much. Spinach
has about 2/3 as much as heart but portions are smaller,
usually only an ounce and that cuts the actual intake to
about 1.5 milligrams.
Seeds contain coenzyme Q and unrefined corn oil and rice
oil actually contain 3 to 5 times more CoQ than does heart!
On average a tablespoonful of unrefined salad oil contains
between a half milligram and 6 milligrams. If these natural
foods are eaten regularly the Co Q intake might come up
to 12 or 15 mg daily. Incidentally, tobacco leaf is the
champion source, containing 184 mg in a quarter pound. In
fact, the Japanese companies make their CoQ from tobacco,
however it is only released by means of bacterial fermentation
not by smoking.
CoQ is required for cell energy. This translates into increased
cell activity, greater production of cellular products,
such as proteins for faster healing of wounds and hormones,
for adaptation. There are impressive reports of improved
blood sugar in diabetes, for instance. CoQ strengthens the
immune system, conferring greater resistance to infection,
not due to increased numbers of white blood cells but greater
potency of the existing cells. This has obvious applications
in AIDS.
Red blood cells also thrive with CoQ and some cases of
anemia respond very well. Skin cells are responsive and
psoriasis, in particular, may improve. Bleeding gums due
to periodontal disease often clear up after a time on CoQ--even
when the blood level is normal. Nerve tissue is sensitive
to CoQ and it is a useful treatment of retinal diseases,
including optic atrophy. It is also beneficial in peripheral
nerve disease.
But it is in the treatment of heart conditions that CoQ
is most impressive, especially in patients with cardiomyopathy
and congestive heart failure. In one major study 75 percent
of those on CoQ survived 6 years while 75 percent not on
CoQ died in 3 years or less. High blood pressure often improves
on CoQ and mitral valve prolapse is very responsive. Even
in normal conditions, large doses of CoQ increase muscle
strength and cardiac output: this is especially noticeable
amongst athletes and long distance runners, where performance
is more obvious and measurable.
Tissue levels of CoQ decline as much as 80% in old age
and this single fact appears to explain some of the increased
risk of heart failure, immune dysfunction, delayed healing
and general weakening of energy and strength that are stereotypical
of growing old. By simply taking supplements of CoQ, this
age-related drop in vitality can be reversed to an amazing
extent.
Finally, in the research laboratory, treatment with CoQ
extends the life span of mice by about 50 percent. Compare
this to the low calorie life extension diet, which yields
a 30 percent increase in lifespan in mice. CoQ is certainly
more pleasant than a life of semi-starvation. If this is
verified for humans, vitamin Q should become a household
word. It should already be prized as a powerful treatment
in medical practice. For those of us in orthomolecular medicine
it is.
Richard A. Kunin, M.D. ©2000
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