Acute Dietary Nitrate Supplementation Improves Flow Mediated Dilatation of the Superficial Femoral Artery in Healthy Older Males

Nutrients
Q1
Apr 2019
Citations:41
Influential Citations:2
Interventional (Human) Studies
81
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Fifteen healthy men aged 60–75 years; randomized, double-blind, cross-over design; two experimental sessions separated by 7 ± 2 days; Ankle-brachial index >1.0; exclusions included anti-hypertensive medication, smoking, cardiovascular disease, high physical activity or communicable diseases; some participants used low-dose statins.
Intervention
Beetroot juice with nitrate (NO3−), 140 mL containing 800 mg NO3−; single acute oral dose.
Results
NO3− supplementation acutely increased plasma NO2− by ~8.6-fold and improved superficial femoral artery FMD by 1.18 ± 0.94% (placebo 0.23 ± 1.13%; p=0.002). AIx75 decreased more with NO3− (−8.7 ± 11.6%) than placebo (−4.6 ± 5.5%; p=0.027). Passive leg movement hyperaemia, blood pressure, and pulse wave velocity did not change. These findings indicate increased NO bioavailability and improved leg conduit artery endothelial function after NO3− in older men, with potential implications for exercise tolerance; however, effects on downstream microvascular function were not observed, and further research is needed to determine functional significance.
Limitations
Small, male-only sample (n=15); some participants on low-dose statins; potential medication confounding; cross-over design may limit generalizability; findings may not generalize to females; baseline NO2− was low; diurnal variation could affect augmentation index.

Abstract

Aging is often associated with reduced leg blood flow, increased arterial stiffness, and endothelial dysfunction, all of which are related to declining nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability. Flow mediated dilatation (FMD) and passive leg movement (PLM) h...