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Why Coenzyme Q10?
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Throughout my childhood, I was aware of the importance of eating well and taking my vitamins.
But the science of dietary supplements has come a long way since those days. And one of the
stars in this scientific progression is Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10). CoQ10 is not a drug. It is a
vitamin-like substance that is found in small amounts in a variety of foods and is
synthesized within our body tissues.
Enzymes are compounds in the body that are absolutely essential for the many processes
necessary to keep us alive and our bodies functioning properly. Mitochondrial enzymes
are those particular enzymes that are essential for the production of the high-energy
phosphate ATP (adenosine triphosphate) upon which all cellular function depends. Without
it our bodies shut down at the cellular level. Coenzyme Q10 is the cofactor upon which at
least three mitochondrial enzymes depend. By logical inference then ATP functioning
depends upon CoQ10. In short, all human cellular function depends on ATP, and ATP function
depends on CoQ10.
The production of CoQ10 occurs within our body tissues. Its biosynthesis
from the amino acid tyrosine is a complex multistage process requiring several vitamins and
trace elements. Under normal conditions we produce all we need while we are young. But there
are many factors that can contribute to CoQ10 deficiency. Among these are aging, disease,
dietary deficiency, use of statin drugs and increasing tissue demands. Before we get to
CoQ10 deficiencies, however, it is well to look at the history of CoQ10 research.
History:
CoQ10 was first isolated by Dr. Frederick Crane in 1957 from the mitochondria of beef heart.
During that same year Professor Morton, from Britain, also discovered CoQ10 in the livers of
vitamin A deficient rats. During the following year researchers at Merck, Inc. determined its
chemical structure and became the first to produce it.
It was neither the British nor the Americans that first found a practical use for the CoQ
compounds. Professor Yamamura from Japan first used a related compound (CoQ7) in the treatment
of congestive heart failure. Other practical uses then followed. CoQ6 was used as an effective
antioxidant in the mid 1960s. In 1972 (in Italy) deficiency of CoQ10 was linked to heart disease.
The Japanese, however, were the first to perfect the technology necessary to produce CoQ10 in
sizeable enough quantities to make large clinical trials a reality.
After Peter Mitchell won the Nobel Prize in 1978 for defining the biological energy transfer
that occurs at the cellular level (for which CoQ10 is essential) there was a considerable
increase in the number of clinical studies performed in relation to CoQ10 usefulness. This
was due in part to the large amounts of pharmaceutical grade CoQ10 that was now available
from Japan and the ability to measure CoQ10 in blood and body tissues. CoQ10 since has
become known for its importance as a powerful antioxidant and free radical scavenger and
as a treatment in many chronic illnesses, especially heart disease.
Coenzyme Q10 Deficiency:
The usefulness of CoQ10 as a medical treatment has largely been approached from the perspective
that when a chronic disease is present (especially in the case of heart disease) CoQ10 is often
grossly deficient. For example, a person suffering from congestive heart failure often
demonstrates extreme CoQ10 deficiency. Normal blood and tissue levels of CoQ10 have been well
established. Significantly low levels of CoQ10 have been linked to a vast variety of diseases
in both animal and human studies.
But if CoQ10 is biosynthesized in our bodies why do we often suffer from deficiency? There
are at least three causes. The first is an insufficient diet. Dietary intake of CoQ10 is an
important factor in total blood and tissue levels of the compound. If we do not consume
enough of the foods that contain CoQ10 then the body must make up the difference. Further,
the biosynthesis of Coenzyme Q10 is a complex 17-step process involving a whole string of
B vitamins, vitamin C and pantothenic acid. Diets deficient in these compounds make CoQ10
synthesis impossible. This is not the place to discuss the condition of the average diet
and the vitamin deficient nature of many of our food sources. Suffice it to say that most
of us do not get nearly enough CoQ10 or the other vitamins necessary for optimal synthesis.
The second cause of deficiency is linked to the first, and that is impairment of CoQ10 biosynthesis.
In addition to inadequate intakes of the compounds necessary to make CoQ10 there are other biological
reasons for inadequate production of it. These might include physiological conditions and chronic
diseases that cause failure in production. The treatments of diseases can also be a factor. For
instance the use of statins to control cholesterol levels has been implicated in the depletion of
CoQ10 levels. The catch-22 is, in treating heart disease we use drugs that deplete natural
compounds that in turn are necessary to fight heart disease.
The third cause of CoQ10 deficiency is excessive use of the compound by the body. This again can
be related to medications, aging or other causes such as excessive exertion, hypermetabolism, and
acute shock states.
The real cause of CoQ10 deficiency is usually a combination of these three influences. It is
likely that the average CoQ10 levels which have been observed in humans are suboptimal. In other
words, the normal levels of CoQ10 that have become the standard for comparisons are very likely
less than optimal. That would mean that the extremely low levels observed in connection with
chronic diseases are just the worse case scenarios and that other less serious maladies are
connected with lesser levels of deficiency.
If this sounds too much like laboratory theory, it isn't. Patients who suffer from chronic
diseases and also demonstrate extreme low levels of CoQ10 are not laboratory specimens. They
are people who, in many cases, have been greatly helped by CoQ10 supplementation. If chronic
disease is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to CoQ10 deficiency one is forced to
wonder what better diets and CoQ10 supplementing could do for the eradication of diseases
and other chronic conditions.
Copyright © April 2005 Low Carb Luxury

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