Bi-daily consumption of 450 mg of cocoa flavanols for 1 month significantly increased flow-mediated dilation by 1.2% compared to a flavanol-free control in healthy middle-aged individuals.
RCT (n=100)
Double-blind
Block randomization
No
Does cocoa flavanol intake improve flow-mediated vasodilation in healthy, middle-aged individuals without cardiovascular disease?
In healthy middle-aged individuals, bi-daily intake of 450 mg cocoa flavanols for 1 month significantly improved endothelial function, blood pressure, and lipid profiles, leading to a reduced predicted 10-year cardiovascular risk.
Mean Difference: 1.2 (95% CI 1–1.4)
Absolute Event Rate: 6.4% vs 5.3%
Cocoa flavanol (CF) intake improves endothelial function in patients with cardiovascular risk factors and disease. We investigated the effects of CF on surrogate markers of cardiovascular health in low risk, healthy, middle-aged individuals without history, signs or symptoms of CVD. In a 1-month, open-label, one-armed pilot study, bi-daily ingestion of 450 mg of CF led to a time-dependent increase in endothelial function (measured as flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD)) that plateaued after 2 weeks. Subsequently, in a randomised, controlled, double-masked, parallel-group dietary intervention trial (Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT01799005), 100 healthy, middle-aged (35-60 years) men and women consumed either the CF-containing drink (450 mg) or a nutrient-matched CF-free control bi-daily for 1 month. The primary end point was FMD. Secondary end points included plasma lipids and blood pressure, thus enabling the calculation of Framingham Risk Scores and pulse wave velocity. At 1 month, CF increased FMD over control by 1·2 % (95 % CI 1·0, 1·4 %). CF decreased systolic and diastolic blood pressure by 4·4 mmHg (95 % CI 7·9, 0·9 mmHg) and 3·9 mmHg (95 % CI 6·7, 0·9 mmHg), pulse wave velocity by 0·4 m/s (95 % CI 0·8, 0·04 m/s), total cholesterol by 0·20 mmol/l (95 % CI 0·39, 0·01 mmol/l) and LDL-cholesterol by 0·17 mmol/l (95 % CI 0·32, 0·02 mmol/l), whereas HDL-cholesterol increased by 0·10 mmol/l (95 % CI 0·04, 0·17 mmol/l). By applying the Framingham Risk Score, CF predicted a significant lowering of 10-year risk for CHD, myocardial infarction, CVD, death from CHD and CVD. In healthy individuals, regular CF intake improved accredited cardiovascular surrogates of cardiovascular risk, demonstrating that dietary flavanols have the potential to maintain cardiovascular health even in low-risk subjects.
Sansone et al. (Tue,) conducted a rct in Healthy individuals without cardiovascular disease (n=100). Cocoa flavanol vs. Nutrient-matched flavanol-free control drink was evaluated on Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) at 1 month (MD 1.2%, 95% CI 1.0, 1.4). Bi-daily consumption of 450 mg of cocoa flavanols for 1 month significantly increased flow-mediated dilation by 1.2% compared to a flavanol-free control in healthy middle-aged individuals.