Plasma nitrite response and arterial reactivity differentiate vascular health and performance |
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Authors: | Jason D. Allen Elizabeth M. Miller Earl Schwark Jennifer L. Robbins Brian D. Duscha Brian H. Annex |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Wallace Clinic, Center for Living Campus, DUMC 3022, Durham, NC 27710, USA;bDepartment of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA |
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Abstract: | NO is crucial for endothelial function and vascular health. Plasma nitrite (NO2−) is the main oxidation product of NO and has been shown to reflect changes in eNOS activity. We hypothesized that plasma NO2− response to physical exercise stress along with physiological endothelial function would be reduced with increasing severity of vascular disease. Subject groups were: (a) risk factors but no vascular disease (RF); (b) Type 2 diabetes with no vascular disease (DM); (c) diagnosed peripheral arterial disease (PAD); and (d) DM + PAD. Venous blood was drawn at rest and 10 min following maximal exercise. Plasma samples were analyzed by reductive chemiluminescence. Brachial diameters were imaged prior to, during and following 5 min of forearm occlusion (BAFMD). There were no differences in resting plasma NO2− or BA diameters between groups. The PAD groups had lower age adjusted BAFMD responses (p 0.05). Within group analysis revealed an increase in NO2− in the RF group (+39.3%), no change in the DM (−15.51%), and a decrease in the PAD (−44.20%) and PAD + DM (−39.95%). This was maintained after adjusting for age and VO2peak (p 0.05). ΔNO2− and BAFMD were the strongest independent predictors of VO2peak in multivariate linear regression. These findings suggest ΔNO2− discriminates severity of cardiovascular disease risk, is related to endothelial function and predicts exercise capacity. |
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Keywords: | Endothelium Nitric oxide Plasma nitrite Cardiovascular disease Exercise VO2peak |
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