| Fish Amino Acid may Reverse
Smoking Damage
07/01/03 - Eating fish may help to reverse some of the
damage caused by smoking, according to new research
by scientists in Ireland. The researchers found that
taurine, an amino acid present in fish, restored normal
vessel function in smokers, thus preventing arteries
from hardening - a cause of heart disease and stroke.
Vitamin C also improved blood vessel health, but to
a lesser extent.
"When blood vessels are exposed to cigarette smoke
it causes the vessels to behave like a rigid pipe rather
than a flexible tube, thus the vessels can't dilate
in response to increased blood flow," said Dr David
J. Bouchier-Hayes, senior author of the taurine study
and professor of surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons
in Ireland, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin. This condition
is called endothelial dysfunction.
Endothelial dysfunction is one of the earliest signs
of the atherosclerosis, which is a major cause of heart
attacks and stroke. "We're not trying to find a
therapeutic treatment for smoking, because we believe
that the best therapy for smokers is to stop smoking,"
said Bouchier-Hayes. "Nonetheless, smokers provide
a good clinical model for treatment of endothelial dysfunction."
Bouchier-Hayes and colleagues recruited 15 healthy
smokers aged 20 to 37 and 15 healthy non-smoking volunteers.
The smokers were given either 2 grams per day of vitamin
C for five days or 1.5 grams per day of taurine. Smokers
then waited for a two-week "wash-out" period
and switched therapies for five more days.
Researchers assessed blood vessel functioning by flow
mediated dilation (FMD), which takes ultrasound images
of blood vessel diameter in the arm after a tourniquet
was placed on the forearm. Greater diameter after FMD
assessment indicates good endothelial function. They
assessed FMD at baseline and after taurine and vitamin
C supplementation. The researchers report that taurine
restored normal vessel function according to FMD measurements.
At baseline, non-smokers' blood vessel diameter was
3.39mm and smokers' diameter was 3.33mm. Before treatment,
FMD increased dilation in non-smokers to 3.7mm, while
smokers' vessels were virtually unchanged at 3.36mm
after FMD. When they took vitamin C, smokers' vessel
diameter increased to 3.45mm after FMD. When the were
given taurine, the smokers' vessel response was the
same as the non-smokers' at 3.7mm after FMD.
Taurine is found in many foods but is most abundant
in fish, said Bouchier-Hayes. He added that taurine
is present even in mild, white fish
not just fatty fish. The taurine supplement used in
the study is equivalent to that found in one serving
of fish.
The study is published in today's rapid access issue
of Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
http://www.nutraingredients.com/news/news.asp?id=6163
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food
and Drug Administration.
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