Inorganic Nitrate Supplementation Lowers Blood Pressure in Humans

Author:

Kapil Vikas1,Milsom Alexandra B.1,Okorie Michael1,Maleki-Toyserkani Sheiva1,Akram Farihah1,Rehman Farkhanda1,Arghandawi Shah1,Pearl Vanessa1,Benjamin Nigel1,Loukogeorgakis Stavros1,MacAllister Raymond1,Hobbs Adrian J.1,Webb Andrew J.1,Ahluwalia Amrita1

Affiliation:

1. From the William Harvey Research Institute (V.K., A.B.M., S.M.-T., F.A., F.R., S.A., V.P., A.J.W., A.A.), Barts and London Medical School, Queen Mary University of London, London, United Kingdom; Centre for Clinical Pharmacology (M.O., S.L., R.M.) and Vascular Physiology Unit, Institute of Child Health (M.O., S.L.), and Department of Neuroscience, Physiology, and Pharmacology (A.J.H.), University College London, London, United Kingdom; University of Exeter and Plymouth (N.B.), Exeter, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Ingestion of dietary (inorganic) nitrate elevates circulating and tissue levels of nitrite via bioconversion in the entero-salivary circulation. In addition, nitrite is a potent vasodilator in humans, an effect thought to underlie the blood pressure–lowering effects of dietary nitrate (in the form of beetroot juice) ingestion. Whether inorganic nitrate underlies these effects and whether the effects of either naturally occurring dietary nitrate or inorganic nitrate supplementation are dose dependent remain uncertain. Using a randomized crossover study design, we show that nitrate supplementation (KNO 3 capsules: 4 versus 12 mmol [n=6] or 24 mmol of KNO 3 (1488 mg of nitrate) versus 24 mmol of KCl [n=20]) or vegetable intake (250 mL of beetroot juice [5.5 mmol nitrate] versus 250 mL of water [n=9]) causes dose-dependent elevation in plasma nitrite concentration and elevation of cGMP concentration with a consequent decrease in blood pressure in healthy volunteers. In addition, post hoc analysis demonstrates a sex difference in sensitivity to nitrate supplementation dependent on resting baseline blood pressure and plasma nitrite concentration, whereby blood pressure is decreased in male volunteers, with higher baseline blood pressure and lower plasma nitrite concentration but not in female volunteers. Our findings demonstrate dose-dependent decreases in blood pressure and vasoprotection after inorganic nitrate ingestion in the form of either supplementation or by dietary elevation. In addition, our post hoc analyses intimate sex differences in nitrate processing involving the entero-salivary circulation that are likely to be major contributing factors to the lower blood pressures and the vasoprotective phenotype of premenopausal women.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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