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No effect of multivitamin supplementation on central blood pressure in healthy older people: a randomized controlled trial

journal contribution
posted on 2016-03-01, 00:00 authored by E Harris, R Rowsell, A Pipingas, Helen MacphersonHelen Macpherson
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Central blood pressure rises with age, which increases cardiovascular risk. There is some evidence that nutritional supplements may be useful to reduce central blood pressures in older people, but no studies have investigated the effects of multivitamin supplements for this purpose. This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study investigated the effects of 16-weeks supplementation with gender-specific multivitamin and herbal supplements. METHOD: Participants were healthy individuals, free from heart disease, and included 160 females aged ≥ 50 and 79 males aged 50-65 years. Analyses of co-variance, correcting for baseline cardiovascular assessments, were used to determine the effects of supplementation on central cardiovascular measures including augmentation index, augmentation pressure and pulse pressure. Significance was set at p = 0.016. RESULTS: No effects of multivitamin supplementation were observed in either males or females (respectively) for central augmentation index (p = 0.841; p = 0.296), central augmentation pressure (p = 0.794; p = 0.442), and central pulse pressure (p = 0.078; p = 0.304). Similarly, there was no treatment effect observed for brachial systolic, diastolic or pulse pressures. CONCLUSION: Four months multivitamin supplementation does not appear to exert any benefit to measures of central blood pressure in healthy older people.

History

Journal

Atherosclerosis

Volume

246

Pagination

236 - 242

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Shannon, Ireland

ISSN

0021-9150

eISSN

1879-1484

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, Elsevier