Antioxidant intake from diet and supplements and elevated serum C-reactive protein and plasma homocysteine concentrations in US adults: a cross-sectional study

Public Health Nutrition
Q2
Mar 2011
Citations:43
Influential Citations:4
Observational Studies (Human)
81
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Cross-sectional analysis of NHANES 1999–2002; 8,335 US adults aged ≥19 years; pregnant and lactating women excluded; included those who completed a 24 h dietary recall and a dietary supplement interview; analyses weighted for the complex survey design.
Results
Higher antioxidant intake from diet and supplements is associated with lower odds of elevated CRP (>3 mg/L) and elevated homocysteine (>13 μmol/L). Specifically, vitamins C and E and carotene from diet (and from diet plus supplements) reduced odds of elevated CRP; flavonoids and selenium from the diet showed no significant association with CRP. For homocysteine, vitamins C and E, selenium and carotene (diet plus supplements) reduced odds of elevated levels; flavonoids showed no association. Authors conclude that high antioxidant intake may help reduce inflammation and homocysteine, potential mediators of cardiovascular disease risk, but causality cannot be established due to the cross-sectional design; further prospective studies are warranted.
Limitations
Cross-sectional design limits causal inference; chromium-shaped wording not applicable; single 24 h dietary recall may introduce within-person variability and misclassification of antioxidant intake; variation in selenium content of foods by geography/season; did not account for synthetic antioxidants (e.g., statins, BHA/BHT); CRP as a cardiovascular biomarker has limitations.

Abstract

Abstract Objective To investigate the association of antioxidant intakes from diet and supplements with elevated blood C-reactive protein (CRP) and homocysteine (Hcy) concentrations. Design A cross-sectional study. The main exposures were vitamins C ...