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Higher habitual dietary flavonoid intake associates with lower central blood pressure and arterial stiffness in healthy older adults

Authors :
Jonathan M. Hodgson
Grace M. McPhee
Karen Nolidin
Benjamin H. Parmenter
Catherine P. Bondonno
Lachlan Cribb
Karen Savage
Mrudhula Komanduri
Kevin D. Croft
Matthew B. Cooke
Nicola P. Bondonno
Matthew P. Pase
Con Stough
Ana Lea
Source :
British Journal of Nutrition. 128:279-289
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.

Abstract

Flavonoids have shown anti-hypertensive and anti-atherosclerotic properties: the impact of habitual flavonoid intake on vascular function, central haemodynamics and arterial stiffness may be important. We investigated the relationship between habitual flavonoid consumption and measures of central blood pressure and arterial stiffness. We performed cross-sectional analysis of 381 non-smoking healthy older adults (mean age 66·0 (sd 4·1) years; BMI, 26·4 (sd 4·41) kg/m2; 41 % male) recruited as part of the Australian Research Council Longevity Intervention study. Flavonoid intake (i.e. flavonols, flavones, flavanones, anthocyanins, isoflavones, flavan-3-ol monomers, proanthocyanidins, theaflavins/thearubigins and total consumption) was estimated from FFQ using the US Department of Agriculture food composition databases. Measures of central haemodynamics and arterial stiffness included systolic blood pressure (cSBP), diastolic blood pressure (cDBP), mean arterial pressure (cMAP) and augmentation index (cAIx). After adjusting for demographic and lifestyle confounders, each sd/d higher intake of anthocyanins ((sd 44·3) mg/d) was associated with significantly lower cDBP (−1·56 mmHg, 95 % CI −2·65, −0·48) and cMAP (−1·62 mmHg, 95 % CI −2·82, −0·41). Similarly, each sd/d higher intake of flavanones ((sd 19·5) mg/d) was associated with ~1 % lower cAIx (−0·93 %, 95 % CI −1·77, −0·09). These associations remained significant after additional adjustment for (1) a dietary quality score and (2) other major nutrients that may affect blood pressure or arterial stiffness (i.e. Na, K, Ca, Mg, n-3, total protein and fibre). This study suggests a possible benefit of dietary anthocyanin and flavanone intake on central haemodynamics and arterial stiffness; these findings require corroboration in further research.

Details

ISSN :
14752662 and 00071145
Volume :
128
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5ae1fc93ce7d12c5131f6ebaf06ff38
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s000711452100324x