1. Endothelial function in post-menopausal women: effect of folic acid supplementation.
- Author
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Paradisi G, Cucinelli F, Mele MC, Barini A, Lanzone A, and Caruso A
- Subjects
- Brachial Artery physiology, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Postmenopause blood, Brachial Artery drug effects, Endothelium, Vascular drug effects, Endothelium, Vascular physiology, Folic Acid pharmacology, Methionine pharmacology, Nitroglycerin pharmacology, Postmenopause physiology, Vasodilation drug effects
- Abstract
Background: Higher than normal homocysteine levels are associated with an increased incidence of adverse cardiovascular events in post-menopausal women, perhaps via hyperhomocysteinaemia-induced vascular endothelial damage. Because folic acid supplementation reduces homocysteine levels, we attempted to evaluate whether folic acid supplementation may affect endothelial function in post-menopausal women., Methods: Brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (endothelium-dependent) and nitroglycerin-induced dilatation (endothelium-independent) before and after a methionine load were analysed in 15 healthy post-menopausal women. Plasma levels of folate, homocysteine, glucose, insulin and lipids were measured, as was blood pressure. All studies were repeated after 1 month supplementation with 7.5 mg/day of folic acid., Results: After folate, endothelial function rose 37% over pre-folic acid supplementation value (P < 0.001), and flow-mediated dilation before folic acid was reduced by 62% subsequent to methionine loading (P < 0.0001); this reduction was still present after folic acid, but was only 19% (P < 0.001). Nitroglycerin-induced dilatation did not change in response to methionine loading before or after folic acid supplementation. Among the other cardiovascular risk factors studied, only high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol showed significant changes after folic acid supplementation, with a 6% increase (P < 0.03) and a 9% decrease (P < 0.03) respectively., Conclusions: Although preliminary, these results indicate that folic acid supplementation may improve endothelial function and lipid profile in post-menopausal women, thus contributing to reduce their cardiovascular risk.
- Published
- 2004
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