TY - JOUR
T1 - Diets containing pistachios reduce systolic blood pressure and peripheral vascular responses to stress in adults with dyslipidemia
AU - West, Sheila G.
AU - Gebauer, Sarah K.
AU - Kay, Colin D.
AU - Bagshaw, Deborah M.
AU - Savastano, David M.
AU - Diefenbach, Christopher
AU - Kris-Etherton, Penny M.
PY - 2012/6/4
Y1 - 2012/6/4
N2 - Nut consumption reduces cardiovascular risk, and reductions in blood pressure and peripheral vascular resistance may be important mediators of this relationship. We evaluated effects of pistachios on flow-mediated dilation and blood pressure response to acute stress. Twenty-eight adults with dyslipidemia completed a randomized, crossover, controlled-feeding study. All of the meals were provided and calories were controlled. After 2 weeks on a typical Western diet (35% total fat and 11% saturated fat), test diets were presented in counterbalanced order for 4 weeks each, a low-fat control diet (25% total fat and 8% saturated fat), a diet containing 10% of energy from pistachios (on average, 1 serving per day; 30% total fat and 8% saturated fat), and a diet containing 20% of energy from pistachios (on average, 2 servings per day, 34% total fat and 8% saturated fat). None of the resting hemodynamic measures significantly differed from pretreatment values. When resting and stress levels were included in the repeated-measures analysis, average reductions in systolic blood pressure were greater after the diet containing 1 serving per day versus 2 servings per day of pistachios (mean change in systolic blood pressure, −4.8 vs −2.4 mm Hg, respectively; P<0.05). After the higher dose, there were significant reductions in peripheral resistance (−62.1 dyne·s×cm−5) and heart rate (−3 bpm) versus the control diet (P<0.0001). These changes were partially offset by increases in cardiac output. There was no effect of diet on fasting flow-mediated dilation. Reductions in peripheral vascular constriction and the resulting decrease in hemodynamic load may be important contributors to lower risk in nut consumers.
AB - Nut consumption reduces cardiovascular risk, and reductions in blood pressure and peripheral vascular resistance may be important mediators of this relationship. We evaluated effects of pistachios on flow-mediated dilation and blood pressure response to acute stress. Twenty-eight adults with dyslipidemia completed a randomized, crossover, controlled-feeding study. All of the meals were provided and calories were controlled. After 2 weeks on a typical Western diet (35% total fat and 11% saturated fat), test diets were presented in counterbalanced order for 4 weeks each, a low-fat control diet (25% total fat and 8% saturated fat), a diet containing 10% of energy from pistachios (on average, 1 serving per day; 30% total fat and 8% saturated fat), and a diet containing 20% of energy from pistachios (on average, 2 servings per day, 34% total fat and 8% saturated fat). None of the resting hemodynamic measures significantly differed from pretreatment values. When resting and stress levels were included in the repeated-measures analysis, average reductions in systolic blood pressure were greater after the diet containing 1 serving per day versus 2 servings per day of pistachios (mean change in systolic blood pressure, −4.8 vs −2.4 mm Hg, respectively; P<0.05). After the higher dose, there were significant reductions in peripheral resistance (−62.1 dyne·s×cm−5) and heart rate (−3 bpm) versus the control diet (P<0.0001). These changes were partially offset by increases in cardiac output. There was no effect of diet on fasting flow-mediated dilation. Reductions in peripheral vascular constriction and the resulting decrease in hemodynamic load may be important contributors to lower risk in nut consumers.
U2 - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.182147
DO - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.182147
M3 - Article
VL - 60
SP - 58
EP - 63
JO - Hypertension
JF - Hypertension
SN - 0194-911X
IS - 1
ER -