Vitamins C and E, green tea, red wine, blueberries, pomegranates…. Just mention “antioxidants” and aging Baby Boomers perk up, intrigued by the notion that a simple food source could help fend off disease and slow aging. But recent headlines about the inefficacy of single-antioxidant supplements, such as vitamin E, have fueled doubts about these miracle compounds. With consumers spending $3.3 billion annually on antioxidant supplements, according to Nutrition Business Journal, the question looms: Do they work, or not?
Absolutely, say researchers: Just not the way we thought they did. “The evidence is very strong that dietary antioxidants can promote health and reduce risk for chronic disease,” says Jeffrey Blumberg, PhD, director of the Antioxidants Research Laboratory at Tufts University. “But we now recognize they do more than quench free radicals.”
In fact, scientists say, certain “indirect antioxidants”—like sulforaphane from broccoli, curcumin from turmeric, or anthocyanins from berries—can actually prompt the body to produce more of its own antioxidants, mounting a powerful defense against oxidative stress for several days. Meanwhile, new research is showing all antioxidants—whether “direct” or “indirect”—seem to work better together. “Loading up on one antioxidant would be like sending in one fireman to put out a fire,” says Canadian nutritionist and holistic physician Bryce Wylde, author of The Antioxidant Prescription (Random House, 2008). “ [Antioxidants] work like a team.”
5 easy ways to harness antioxidant power
Antioxidants discovered
- Load up on “indirect” antioxidants, which fuel your body’s own production, including sulforaphane, found in broccoli and broccoli sprouts, brussels sprouts, and other cruciferous vegetables; curcumin, found in the curry spice turmeric and in supplements; and the antioxidants in licorice, shallots, tonka beans, and the herbs milk thistle and ashwaghanda.
- Steer clear of mega-doses of single “direct” antioxidants, like C or E. In excess, they can backfire and promote more free radical production.
- Take antioxidants in combination. They have a synergistic effect.
- Get your produce fresh and close to home. Studies show antioxidant potency fades within a few days.
- G5) Steam your vegetables: It enhances their antioxidant power.
As far back as the 1950s, scientists began to notice that Mother Nature plays a cruel joke: We need food and air to live, but as our cells metabolize nutrients and oxygen they create “free radicals” that flood our bodies and eat away at cell membranes. That “oxidative stress” is linked to everything from wrinkles to dementia to clogged arteries. In essence, experts say, oxidative stress is why we age.
When we’re young and healthy, our body churns out antioxidants to mop up those free radicals. “Like a new car, we have this remarkable array of catalytic converters to clean up the byproducts of burning fuel,” says Joe McCord, PhD, a pioneer in antioxidant research from the University of Colorado–Denver. The bad news, he says: The older we get, the weaker our catalytic converters become.
At first, test-tube studies indicated that food-derived antioxidants could significantly bolster our defenses, gobbling up those circulating cell-destroyers. “For about 20 years that was the buzz: You take Vitamin E or C and it annihilates free radicals,” says McCord. But it turns out the equation is not so simple.
Indirect vs. direct antioxidants
Scientists now believe there are two kinds of antioxidants: “Direct,” like vitamins E and C, which zap free radicals on their own, and “indirect”—prevalent in cruciferous vegetables, brightly colored berries, certain spices and traditional herbs—that jump-start the body to make its own antioxidants.
While direct antioxidants are valuable, researchers say, they are inferior in that each one is deactivated after it takes out one free radical—much like the bee that sacrifices its life with a single sting. Consider the fact that you produce millions upon millions of free radicals per day, and direct antioxidants are a bit like firemen armed with tiny buckets at a house fire, says McCord. (By some estimates, you’d have to consume 375 oranges or 120 Vitamin C tablets daily to break even).
Meanwhile, consuming indirect antioxidants (thus far, about 50 have been identified in foods and herbs) is like turning on the hose, creating an endless stream. “Indirect antioxidants are going to make a big splash in how we treat diseases,” says McCord.
Synergy unveiled
Another important recent revelation: Antioxidants work better together. For instance, says Blumberg, Vitamin C “recycles” Vitamin E, “returning it back to its active form so it can quench another free radical.” And sulforaphane is believed to work better with curcumin (curried broccoli, anyone?), because the two use different routes to ignite antioxidant defense.
According to one study, a proprietary blend of the indirect antioxidants ashwagandha, turmeric, milk thistle, green tea, and Bacopa monniera worked up to 9 times better at fueling antioxidant production than any one ingredient alone. Blumberg says that his own research has shown that when E and C are combined in the lab, their antioxidant activity more than triples.
This notion of synergy may help account for the two studies, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in December, 2008, and January, 2009, which found no benefit of taking C or E supplements. “They were single antioxidants, not combinations,” says Blumberg, who believes the studies were flawed in other ways too: “The dosage might have been off, and the cohorts were particularly healthy.”
Meanwhile, several new studies suggest that taking too much of a single antioxidant can backfire: One study of 22 patients undergoing surgery for aortic aneurysm found those who took Vitamin C tablets before the surgery had more oxidative stress afterward than those who didn’t. And a 2005 meta-analysis of 19 clinical trials found that high-dose vitamin E (400 IUs or more) was associated with greater all-cause mortality.
A new generation of antioxidant supplements
A few companies have begun to churn out proprietary blends of indirect antioxidants (Life Vantage’s Protandim, and Isocell’s GliSodin are being widely researched in clinical trials nationwide). Although research is young, it looks promising, with one trial showing that when 29 healthy men and women were given Protandim, biochemical markers of oxidative stress (called TBARS) declined by an average of 40 percent after 30 days. After 120 days, their production of antioxidant enzymes had soared by 30–54 percent.
Other studies have shown sulforaphane and curcumin, in combination with other “indirect antioxidants,” to reduce skin cancer incidence in mice. Blumberg, who has been studying antioxidants for 30 years, says the science is too young for him to endorse such products, but the concept is a “wonderful approach.” Meanwhile, he and Wylde advise consumers to stay healthy the old fashioned way: By eating at least nine servings of fresh fruits and vegetables per day, striving for variety and emphasizing cruciferous vegetables and foods with deep colors.