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Co-ingestion of Antioxidant Drinks With an Unhealthy Challenge Meal Fails to Prevent Post-prandial Endothelial Dysfunction: An Open-Label, Crossover Study in Older Overweight Volunteers

Muggeridge, David J.; Goszcz, Katarzyna; Treweeke, Andrew; Adamson, Janet; Hickson, Kirsty; Crabtree, Daniel; Megson, Ian L.

Authors

Katarzyna Goszcz

Andrew Treweeke

Janet Adamson

Kirsty Hickson

Daniel Crabtree

Ian L. Megson



Abstract

Eating a high calorie meal is known to induce endothelial dysfunction and it is reported that consuming drinks rich in antioxidants may be protective against this. In this study we assessed the effects of three antioxidant drinks with considerable disparity in their antioxidant content on endothelial function. Seven apparently healthy overweight and older adults (BMI 25–35; mean age 57 ± 3 years; one male, six females) completed four trials in a randomized counterbalanced design. Water (control), orange juice, green tea, or red wine were consumed with a high calorie meal (> 900 kcal). Endothelial function was measured by flow-mediated dilatation immediately before (fasted, baseline) and 2 h after the meal. Blood samples were also obtained for lipid and glucose analysis, plasma nitrite (NO−2) and oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL). Participants returned after a minimum 3 days washout to complete the remaining arms of the study. The results found that the high calorie meal induced a substantial increase in triglycerides, but not cholesterol or glucose, at 2 h after meal ingestion. FMD was significantly reduced by ∼35% at this timepoint, but the effect was not attenuated by co-ingestion of any of the antioxidant drinks. Reduced FMD was mirrored by a reduction in NO−2, but ox-LDL was not increased at 2 h after the meal. None of the undertaken measures were influenced by the antioxidant drinks. We conclude that co-ingestion of none of our test antioxidant drinks protected against the substantial post-prandial endothelial dysfunction induced by an unhealthy meal challenge in our sample population at a 2 h timepoint.

Citation

Muggeridge, D. J., Goszcz, K., Treweeke, A., Adamson, J., Hickson, K., Crabtree, D., & Megson, I. L. (2019). Co-ingestion of Antioxidant Drinks With an Unhealthy Challenge Meal Fails to Prevent Post-prandial Endothelial Dysfunction: An Open-Label, Crossover Study in Older Overweight Volunteers. Frontiers in Physiology, 10, Article 1293. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.01293

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 25, 2019
Online Publication Date Oct 11, 2019
Publication Date Oct 11, 2019
Deposit Date Oct 22, 2020
Publicly Available Date Oct 23, 2020
Journal Frontiers in Physiology
Electronic ISSN 1664-042X
Publisher Frontiers Media
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 10
Article Number 1293
DOI https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.01293
Keywords antioxidants, polyphenols, red wine, green tea, orange juice, endothelial function, flow-mediated dilatation
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2694120

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Co-ingestion Of Antioxidant Drinks With An Unhealthy Challenge Meal Fails To Prevent Post-prandial Endothelial Dysfunction: An Open-Label, Crossover Study In Older Overweight Volunteers (1.7 Mb)
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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).





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