| Keeping Blood Pressure in Check
- with Vitamins?
Source: Hypertension 2002;40:810-816.
06/01/03 - People with high blood pressure have higher
levels of vitamins A and E but lower levels of vitamin
C and beta-carotene than those without blood pressure
problems, according to a new study by US researchers.
The results raise questions about the use of vitamins
- it seems that vitamin E does not help to reduce the
risk of blood pressure or heart disease. In fact blood
pressure rose as blood levels of vitamins A and E increased.
Writing in the December issue of Hypertension: Journal
of the American Heart Association, the authors noted
that serum vitamin C has been inversely associated with
blood pressure in several epidemiologic studies, but
little is known about the effect of other antioxidant
vitamins.
The researchers at Tulane University in New Orleans
examined the relation between serum vitamins A, C, and
E, alpha-carotene, and beta-carotene levels and blood
pressure among more than 15,000 men and women, aged
20, who participated in the Third National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey.
While findings confirmed previous research on the benefits
of vitamin C on blood pressure, alpha carotene and beta
carotene, (converted to vitamin A by the body) were
also associated with a lower risk of high blood pressure
for the first time.
This could be due to the impact of antioxidants on
free radicals, which are thought to lead to heart disease
and cancer. However there is a need for further research
to confirm the findings and explain further if antioxidants
do indeed have a role in blood pressure regulation.
The authors conclude: "These findings indicate
that antioxidant vitamins may be important in the underlying
cause and prevention of hypertension. Further studies
in this important area are warranted."
http://www.nutraingredients.com/news/news.asp?id=6157
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food
and Drug Administration.
Back to Research
|