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Deemed Essential to Health for Decades, Chromium Has No Nutritional Effect, UA Researchers Show

(24.11.2010)


Background:
It has been presented for a long time in many textbooks as an accepted fact that chromium has an beneficial effect on the glucose metabolism. Especially in the USA, chromium nutritional supplements became so popular for weight loss and muscle development that sales were second only to calcium among mineral supplements.

However, as has been mentioned by Sperling [1995, see below], "most of the findings have been based on concentrations greatly influenced by contamination. Interpretation of the data on the effects of chromium  on lipid and glucose metabolism is therefore difficult, made more so by the fact that the organic compound assumed to be the biological active form of chromium [chromodulin] has not yet been characterized and consequently is not available for supplementation studies. In addition, there is increasing evidence for the suggestion that the existence of the link between chromium and the glucose tolerance factor (Cr-GTF) is doubtful, and that earlier findings indicating the existence of the Cr-GTF complex have been heavily influenced by contamination".

The new study:
Research, publishing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry, strongly indicates that chromium, which the National Academies of Sciences accepted as an essential element in 1980, is not an essential element, said Dr. John Vincent, professor of chemistry at UA and a co-author of the study.

“This means that the status of chromium in numerous nutrition and related textbooks and in the dietary guidelines of the national academies and USDA (and similar agencies) will need to be rewritten,” said Vincent, one of the study’s primary authors, along with Dr. Jane Rasco, an assistant professor of biological sciences at UA.

In the U.S. Department of Agriculture-funded study, the researchers fed one group of rats a purified diet containing as little chromium (III) as practically possible for six months while closely monitoring the rat’s health through various measurements including blood tests. In other rats, the researchers added varying amounts of chromium to the rats’ diets while monitoring their health.

“The diet that had as little chromium (III) as we could put in it and the diet that had an amount corresponding to a human taking a standard nutritional supplement with chromium had no effect on the rats,” Vincent said. “They had the same body mass, they ate the same amount of food, and they were able to metabolize glucose exactly the same. There were no differences in the health of the rats,” he said.

“Together with the results of other recent studies, these results clearly indicate that chromium can no longer be considered an essential element,” the researchers wrote in their paper’s abstract.

Over the last decade, scientists began growing increasing skeptical of the purported nutritional benefits of chromium, but the researchers’ recently published abstract stated this was the first time the element had been studied in “carefully controlled metal free conditions using a series of purified diets containing variable chromium contents.”

In the 1950s, USDA workers proposed that chromium was essential, and in 1980 the National Academy of Sciences further validated that claim by setting an “adequate intake” for the amount of chromium one should incorporate into his or her diet.

“If you looked at the list of everything you needed in your diet – all the vitamins and proteins and carbohydrates – chromium would be listed on it along with iron and zinc and vitamins A,B and C and others,” Vincent said. “We need to take it off the list.

“To be an essential element, you must show that if you take it out of the diet, the subject has adverse health effects; and if you restore it, those effects are reversed. Or, you need to show that it binds to a specific molecule in the body that has a specific function.  The latter has not been done so the findings had previously relied on the nutritional studies.”

While the latest research showed chromium to have no nutritional benefit, Vincent said it did show in the rats the potential to have a therapeutic effect on diabetes when consumed in large doses.

“When we went to extremely high doses of chromium, then we also saw the rats had an increased sensitivity to insulin so their bodies did not have to produce as much insulin to metabolize excess sugar. So, we not only saw no nutritional effect, but we also could establish a drug-like effect.”

Research on chromium’s potential impact on diabetes is ambiguous, Vincent said, and it needs further study.

“If you have altered abilities to metabolize lipids and carbohydrates and you take an extremely large dose of chromium, it can lead to improvements – at least based on the findings obtained from the animal models.”

Vincent referred to the sale of chromium nutritional supplements, such as chromium picolinate, as “misguided,” based on current research, although further research into effects on diabetics could alter the situation, he said. Chromium nutritional supplements are, Vincent said, the second best selling mineral supplement, after calcium, with annual sales of products containing them of about one-half billion dollars.


Source: adapted from University of Alabama News

The new study

Kristin R. Di Bona, Sharifa Love, Nicholas R. Rhodes, DeAna McAdory, Sarmistha Halder Sinha, Naomi Kern, Julia Kent, Jessyln Strickland, Austin Wilson and Janis Beaird, Chromium is not an essential trace element for mammals: effects of a “low-chromium” diet, J. Biol.  Inorg. Chem., 16/3 (2011) 381-390. DOI: 10.1007/s00775-010-0734-y



Related studies

John B. Vincent, Chromium: celebrating 50 years as an essential element?, Dalton Trans., 39/16 (2010) 3787-3794. DOI: 10.1039/B920480F

M.D. Stout, A. Nyska, B.J. Collins, K.L. Witt, G.E. Kissling, D.E. Malarkey, M.J. Hooth, Chronic toxicity and carcinogenicity studies of chromium picolinate monohydrate administered in feed to F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice for 2 years, Food Chem. Toxicol., 47/4 (2009) 729-733. doi:10.1016/j.fct.2009.01.006

J.B. Vincent, D. Stalling, A history of chromium studies (1955-1995), In: J.B. Vincent(ed), The nutritional biochemistry of chromium(III). Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2007, pp 1–40. doi: 10.1016/B978-044453071-4/50002-3

Randall Bennett, Bobbi Adams, Amanda French, Yasmin Neggers and John B. Vincent, High-dose chromium(III) supplementation has no effects on body mass and composition while altering plasma hormone and triglycerides concentrations, Biol. Trace Elem. Res., 113/1 (2006) 53-66. DOI: 10.1385/BTER:113:1:53

John B. Vincent, The bioinorganic chemistry of chromium(III), Polyhedron, 20/1-2 (2001) 1-26. doi:10.1016/S0277-5387(00)00624-0

Khursheed N. Jeejeebhoy, The Role of Chromium in Nutrition and Therapeutics and As a Potential Toxin, Nutrition Reviews, 57/11 (1999) 329–335. DOI: 10.1111/j.1753-4887.1999.tb06909.x

Michael Sperling, Chromium - Compound Determination, in: Alan Townshend, Encyclopedia of Analytical Science, Academic Press, San Diego, 1995, page 736-743.

J. S. Striffler, J. S. Law, M.M. Polansky, S.J. Bhathena, R.A. Anderson, Chromium improves insulin response to glucose in rats, Metabolism, 44/10 (1995) 1314-1320. doi:10.1016/0026-0495(95)90036-5

Klaus Schwarz, Walter Mertz, Chromium(III) and the glucose tolerance factor, Arch. Biochem. Biophys., 85/1 (1959) 292-295.  doi:10.1016/0003-9861(59)90479-5


Related EVISA Resources

Link Database: Nutritional role of chromium
Link Database: Toxicity of chromium


Related EVISA News (newest first)

June 12, 2010: Chromium(VI) much more toxic than chromium(III): At least for freshwater algae a paradigm to revise?
May 17, 2007: Hexavalent Chromium in Drinking Water Causes Cancer in Lab Animals
April 24, 2007: Nutrigenomics: The role of chromium for fat metabolism revisited
June 8, 2006: Scientific journal adds fuel to ongoing chromium debate
March 20, 2005: United Kingdom's Food Standards Agency granted derogation to Chromium (III) compounds as a food supplement
November 23, 2004: Chromium (III) - not only therapeutic?


Last time modified: May 17, 2024



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