Japanese fermented soybean food as the major determinant of the large geographic difference in circulating levels of vitamin K2: possible implications for hip-fracture risk.
- 2001-04
- Nutrition 17(4)
- M. Kaneki
- S. Hedges
- T. Hosoi
- S. Fujiwara
- A. Lyons
- S. Crean
- Nobuhiko Ishida
- Mamoru Nakagawa
- Masahiro Takechi
- Y. Sano
- Y. Mizuno
- S. Hoshino
- M. Miyao
- S. Inoue
- Kiyomi Horiki
- M. Shiraki
- Yasuyoshi Ouchi
- H. Orimo
- PubMed: 11369171
- DOI: 10.1016/S0899-9007(00)00554-2
Abstract
Increasing evidence indicates a significant role for vitamin K in bone metabolism and osteoporosis. In this study, we found a large geographic difference in serum vitamin K2 (menaquinone-7; MK-7) levels in postmenopausal women. Serum MK-7 concentrations were 5.26 +/- 6.13 ng/mL (mean +/- SD) in Japanese women in Tokyo, 1.22 +/- 1.85 in Japanese women in Hiroshima, and 0.37 +/- 0.20 in British women. We investigated the effect of Japanese fermented soybean food, natto, on serum vitamin K levels. Natto contains a large amount of MK-7 and is eaten frequently in eastern (Tokyo) but seldom in western (Hiroshima) Japan. Serum concentrations of MK-7 were significantly higher in frequent natto eaters, and natto intake resulted in a marked, sustained increase in serum MK-7 concentration. We analyzed the relation between the regional difference in natto intake and fracture incidence. A statistically significant inverse correlation was found between incidence of hip fractures in women and natto consumption in each prefecture throughout Japan. These findings indicate that the large geographic difference in MK-7 levels may be ascribed, at least in part, to natto intake and suggest the possibility that higher MK-7 level resulting from natto consumption may contribute to the relatively lower fracture risk in Japanese women.