Vitamin C and Heart Health: A Review Based on Findings from Epidemiologic Studies
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Observational Cohort Studies
4. Clinical Trials
5. Meta-Analyses
6. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cohort | Population | Mean Follow-up | Size (n) | Age (years) | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EPIC [14,15] | Healthy men and women | 4 years | 19,496 | 45 to 79 | Plasma vitamin C inversely related to risk of heart failure and mortality from CVD and ischemic heart disease |
CARDIA [16] | Healthy men and women | 15 years | 2884 | 18 to 30 | Dietary vitamin C inversely related to hypertension |
Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study [17] | Healthy men | 5 years | 1605 | 42, 48, 54, or 60 | Vitamin C deficiency associated with increased CHD risk |
NHS [12] | Healthy women | 16 years | 85,118 | 30 to 55 | Vitamin C from supplements (but not from foods) associated with lower risk of CHD |
HPFS [13] | Healthy males | 4 years | 39,910 | 40 to 75 | Vitamin C intake not associated with CHD risk |
IRAS and SLVDS [18] | Diabetic men and women | 4 years | IRAS n = 520, SLVDS n = 422 | IRAS: 40 to 69; SLVDS: 20 to 74 | Vitamin C not associated with CVD risk factor status |
Iowa Women’s Health Study [19] | Postmenopausal diabetic women | 15 years | 1923 | 55 to 69 | Supplemental vitamin C intake associated with an increased risk of CVD mortality |
Clinical Trial | Population | Size (n) | Age (years) | Intervention | Trial Duration | Outcome(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Women’s Antioxidant Cardiovascular Study [22] | Females with history of CVD or 3 or more CVD risk factors | 8171 | 40 and older | 500 mg/day ascorbic acid | 9.4 years | No effect on myocardial infarction, stroke, coronary revascularization, or CVD death |
Vitamin C Trial in Obese Adults [24] | Obese men and women with hypertension and/or diabetes | 64 | 20–60 | 500 mg/day ascorbic acid twice daily | 8 weeks | No effect on total cholesterol of triglycerides |
Physicians Health Study II [20] | Healthy males | 14,641 | 50 and older | 500 mg/day ascorbic acid | 8 years | No effect on major cardiovascular events, myocardial infarction, stroke, cardiovascular mortality, or total mortality |
SU.VI.MAX [21] | Healthy men and women | 13,017 (7876 women, 5141 men) | Women 35–60; men 45–60 | Daily blend of 120 mg vitamin C, 30 mg vitamin E, 6 mg beta-carotene, 100 μg selenium, and 20 mg zinc | 7.5 years | No effect on incidence of ischemic CVD |
HATS [25] | Men and women with coronary disease | 160 | Men under 63; women under 70 | 800 IU vitamin E, 1000 mg vitamin C, 25 mg natural beta-carotene, 100 μg selenium; and simvastatin and niacin | 3 years | No effect on LDL or HDL with antioxidant supplement |
WAVE [23] | Postmenopausal women with CVD | 423 | Postmenopausal (mean age of 65) | 800 IU vitamin E and 1000 mg of vitamin C | 2.8 years | Higher all-cause mortality in the antioxidant group versus the placebo |
Meta-Analysis Topic | Number of Studies | Total Participants (n) | Trial Sizes (n) | Trial Durations | Vitamin C Supplement Dosages | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arterial Stiffness [26] | 20 | 1909 | 8 to 1162 | 8 h to 2635 days | 120 to 4000 mg daily | Arterial stiffness was reduced with vitamin E and combined antioxidant supplement, but not with vitamin C alone |
Endothelial Function [27] | 46 (17 supplemented with vitamin C alone) | 1817 (478 in trials that supplemented with vitamin C alone) | 7 to 197 | 4 to 240 weeks | 500 to 2000 mg daily | Significant improvements in endothelial function |
Lipid Profile [28] | 40 | 1981 | 8 to 305 | 2 to 240 weeks | 125 to 4500 mg daily | No significant change in blood lipids |
Blood Pressure [29] | 29 | 1407 | 10 to 120 | 2 to 26 weeks | 60 to 4000 mg daily | Vitamin C supplementation reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure |
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Moser, M.A.; Chun, O.K. Vitamin C and Heart Health: A Review Based on Findings from Epidemiologic Studies. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2016, 17, 1328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17081328
Moser MA, Chun OK. Vitamin C and Heart Health: A Review Based on Findings from Epidemiologic Studies. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2016; 17(8):1328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17081328
Chicago/Turabian StyleMoser, Melissa A., and Ock K. Chun. 2016. "Vitamin C and Heart Health: A Review Based on Findings from Epidemiologic Studies" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 17, no. 8: 1328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17081328
APA StyleMoser, M. A., & Chun, O. K. (2016). Vitamin C and Heart Health: A Review Based on Findings from Epidemiologic Studies. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(8), 1328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17081328