Title of article
Possible relationship of folic acid supplementation and improved flow-mediated dilation in premenopausal, eumenorrheic athletic women
Author/Authors
Hoch, Anne Z. Cardiovascular Center - Departments of Orthopaedic Surgery, USA , Pajewski, Nicholas M. General Clinical Research Center - Division of Biostatistics - Department of Population Health, USA , Hoffmann, Raymond G. General Clinical Research Center - Department of Population Health, USA , Schimke, Jane E. , Gutterman, David D. Medical College of Wisconsin - Cardiovascular Center, USA
From page
123
To page
129
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine if six weeks of folic acid supplementation would improve brachial artery endothelialdependent flow-mediated dilation in eumenorrheic female runners with previously normal serum folate levels. This was a prospective, double-blinded, randomized pilot study with convenience sampling. Sixteen eumenorrheic subjects who were not taking birth control pills and who ran at least 20 miles/week were randomly assigned to 10 mg/day of folic acid supplementation or placebo for at least 6 weeks. Serum folate levels and brachial artery measurements were made during the early follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, in a sedentary state, following an 8 hour fast; a standard ultrasound technique was used. The brachial artery vasodilator response to reactive hyperemia was similar between the folic acid (6.6% ± 0.8%, mean ± SE) and placebo groups (6.5% ± 0.7%) at baseline. After six weeks, there was a significantly higher change in flow-mediated dilation for the folic acid group (3.5% ± 0.6%) compared to the placebo group (0.1% ± 0.2%) (p = 0.01). Serum folate levels also increased significantly in the folic acid group following six weeks of folic acid supplementation. This study demonstrates that brachial artery flow-mediated dilation improves significantly in eumenorrheic female runners with previously normal serum folate levels after 6 weeks of supplementation with folic acid.
Keywords
Premenopause , regular menstruation , endothelial function , folate , flow , mediated vasodilation
Journal title
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Journal title
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Record number
2643553
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