Does ascorbic acid improve brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation in healthy sedentary and physically active ageing men?
Healthy men divided into three groups: young sedentary, older sedentary, and older endurance-exercise trained
Ascorbic acid intravenous infusion and chronic oral supplementation (500 mg/day for 30 days)
Baseline (pre-intervention) and cross-group comparisons (young vs older, sedentary vs active)
Brachial artery flow-mediated dilatationsurrogate
Intravenous, but not oral, ascorbic acid acutely restores age-related endothelial dysfunction in sedentary older men, highlighting the role of oxidative stress in vascular ageing.
Peripheral conduit artery flow-mediated dilatation decreases with ageing in humans. The underlying mechanisms and efficacy of preventive strategies are unknown. Brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation was determined at baseline and after ascorbic acid (vitamin C) intravenous infusion and chronic supplementation (500 mg day(-1) for 30 days) in three groups of healthy men: young sedentary (n= 11; 25 +/- 1 years, mean +/-s.e.m.), older sedentary (n= 9; 64 +/- 2), and older endurance-exercise trained (n= 9; 64 +/- 2). At baseline, flow-mediated dilatation (normalized for the hyperaemic stimulus) was approximately 45% lower in the older (0.015 +/- 0.001) versus young (0.028 +/- 0.004) sedentary men (P 15-fold in all groups and restored flow-mediated dilatation in the sedentary older men (to 0.023 +/- 0.002; P > 0.1 versus other groups), with no effects in the other two groups. Oral ascorbic acid supplementation did not affect flow-mediated dilatation in any group. Brachial artery endothelium-independent dilatation (sublingual nitroglycerin) did not differ among the groups at baseline nor change with ascorbic acid administration. These results provide the first evidence for an important role of oxidative stress in both the impairment in peripheral conduit artery flow-mediated dilatation with sedentary human ageing and the preservation of flow-mediated dilatation with physically active ageing.
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Iratxe Eskurza
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Kevin D. Monahan
General Cardiology
Jed A. Robinson
University of Colorado Boulder
The Journal of Physiology
University of Colorado Boulder
University of Colorado Health
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Eskurza et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d07eb7632f68323204f571 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2003.057042
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