Most Popular White Papers
Health Care Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedEffects of vitamin C on intracoronary L-arginine dependent coronary vasodilatation in patients with stable angina
Alternative Medicine Review, Dec, 2005 by D. Tousoulis, C. Xenakis, C. Tentolouris
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of intravenous vitamin C administration on the vasomotor responses to intracoronary L-arginine infusion in epicardial coronary arteries. METHODS: 28 patients with coronary artery disease and stable angina were enrolled in the study. Eight patients received intracoronary infusions of 150 micromol/min L-arginine before and after intravenous infusion of vitamin C, 10 patients received intracoronary infusions of 150 micromol/min L-arginine before and after intravenous infusion of normal saline, and 10 patients received intracoronary normal saline before and after intravenous infusion of vitamin C.
- More Articles of Interest
- High-dose fish oil and antioxidants in Crohn's disease and the response of...
- Arginine + vitamin C: stack these two to make more nitric oxide that's longer...
- Citrulline, Viagra® and BiDil®bad medicine
- Vitamin C supplementation affects oxidative-stress blood markers in response...
- The citrus flavonoid naringenin stimulates DNA repair in prostate cancer cells
The diameter of proximal and distal coronary artery segments was measured by quantitative angiography. RESULTS: Infusion of L-arginine caused significant dilatation of both proximal (4.87 (0.96)%, p < 0.01 v normal saline) and distal (6.33 (1.38)%, p < 0.01 v normal saline) coronary segments. Co-infusion of vitamin C and L-arginine dilated proximal coronary segments by 8.68 (1.40)% (p < 0.01 v normal saline, p < 0.01 v L-arginine) and distal segments by 13.07 (2.15)% (p < 0.01 v normal saline, p < 0.01 v L-arginine). Intravenous infusion of vitamin C caused a borderline increase in proximal and distal coronary segment diameters (1.93 (0.76)% and 2.09 (1.28)%, respectively, not significant). CONCLUSIONS: L-arginine dependent coronary segment vasodilatation was augmented by the antioxidant vitamin C in patients with coronary artery disease. Thus, vitamin C may have beneficial effects on nitric oxide bioavailability induced by L-arginine.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Thorne Research Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group