All:
No time to properly address the stuff that's come up in teh recent resveratrol thread, except for this one idea: high-dose folic acid (often advocated; in this case, for IGF1 modulation).
I'm gonna greatly increase my (undeserved) reputation as an anti-supplement fanatic by strongly urging people to scale back the folic acid content of all supplements to the RDA (200 mcg) for a full daily dose -- ie, treat the RDA as the UL (Upper Limit).
I'm going to beg folks to actually read and consider the evidence -- none of it absolutely slam-dunk, but all of it worrisome -- before deciding that I'm either just showing the aforementioned bias, or a sleeper agent for Quackwatch/NCAF/Big Pharma.
Starting with colon (and other) cancers; ironically, both the fact, and the mechanism, whereby crystalline folic acid gains higher bioavailability vs food folate, appears to make it riskier, when for years, the supplement industry had always pointed to this higher bioavailability as a reason to FAVOR supplement use (dietary folates being low-bioavailability & thus unreliable).
Folate and cancer prevention: a closer look at a complex picture
Scientists question folic acid fortification
Folic acid metabolism in human subjects revisited: potential implications for proposed mandatory folic acid fortification in the UK
A temporal association between folic acid fortification and an increase in colorectal cancer rates may be illuminating important biological principles: a hypothesis.
Folic acid for the prevention of colorectal adenomas: a randomized clinical trial
Low folate levels may protect against colorectal cancer
Methylation of the ESR1 CpG island in the colorectal mucosa is an 'all or nothing' process in healthy human colon, and is accelerated by dietary folate supplementation in the mouse.
Older age and dietary folate are determinants of genomic and p16-specific DNA methylation in mouse colon
Then there's the failure of methylating suupplements to protect against heart disease -- and in some cases, the hints of worse outcomes for users -- complete with some plausible mechanisms:
Homocysteine trials -- clear outcomes for complex reasons
(That was up to 2006, and there've been several subsequent null or slightly harmful clinical trial outcomes subsequently, such as "Effect of folic acid and B vitamins on risk of cardiovascular events and total mortality among women at high risk for cardiovascular disease: a randomized trial").
Loscalzo J.
Adverse effects of supplemental L-arginine in atherosclerosis: consequences of methylation stress in a complex catabolism?
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2003 Jan 1;23(1):3-5. No abstract available.
PMID: 12524215 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
There's never been a good reason for almost anyone to take more than 400 µg of folic acid, at which dose the effect on homocysteine seems maxed out anyway, even in the elderly:
"A dose-response trial with a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled design was carried out among 316 Dutch men and women aged 50-75 y. Subjects received daily for 12 wk either a placebo or 1 of the 6 following folic acid doses: 50, 100, 200, 400, 600, or 800 micro g. ... An adequate dose of folic acid was defined as the dose that induced >or= 90% of the maximal reduction in homocysteine concentration. ... From the dose-response curve, the adequate daily dose of folic acid was estimated to be 392 micro g".
I'm not saying that any of this is a conclusive conviction of supra-RDA folic acid as a killer; I am saying it's not worth the gamble.
-Michael