| Literature DB >> 28796173 |
Guo-Yi Tang1, Xiao Meng2, Ya Li3, Cai-Ning Zhao4, Qing Liu5, Hua-Bin Li6,7.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies have shown that vegetable consumption is inversely related to the risk of cardiovascular diseases. Moreover, research has indicated that many vegetables like potatoes, soybeans, sesame, tomatoes, dioscorea, onions, celery, broccoli, lettuce and asparagus showed great potential in preventing and treating cardiovascular diseases, and vitamins, essential elements, dietary fibers, botanic proteins and phytochemicals were bioactive components. The cardioprotective effects of vegetables might involve antioxidation; anti-inflammation; anti-platelet; regulating blood pressure, blood glucose, and lipid profile; attenuating myocardial damage; and modulating relevant enzyme activities, gene expression, and signaling pathways as well as some other biomarkers associated to cardiovascular diseases. In addition, several vegetables and their bioactive components have been proven to protect against cardiovascular diseases in clinical trials. In this review, we analyze and summarize the effects of vegetables on cardiovascular diseases based on epidemiological studies, experimental research, and clinical trials, which are significant to the application of vegetables in prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive component; cardiovascular disease; effect; mechanism; vegetable
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28796173 PMCID: PMC5579650 DOI: 10.3390/nu9080857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Other vegetables associated with CVDs.
| Vegetables | Subjects | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vegetables with carotenoids | U.S. male physicians aged 40–84 years ( | Lowered the risks of CHD | [ |
| Onion quercetin | Incorporated into the atherosclerotic region, acted as a complementary antioxidant | [ | |
| soybean isoflavones | Chinese adults ( | Lowered serum TAG, carotid artery intima-media thickness, increased HDL-C | [ |
| soybean foods, isoflavones | (Meta-analysis) | reduced ischemic heart disease, lowered blood LDL-C, improved endothelial function, slowed the progression of subclinical atherosclerosis | [ |
| Green leafy vegetables | (Meta-analysis) | Reduced incidence of CVDs significantly (15.8%) | [ |
| Nitrate-containing vegetables | Non-hypertensive subjects aged 20–70 years ( | Had a protective effect against development of hypertension | [ |
Other vegetables and their effects on CVDs.
| Vegetables | Subjects | Effects and Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rats | Decreased blood pressure, increased heart rate | [ | |
| Celery (seed) | RAW264.7 macrophages | Lessened lipid droplets and TC content, decreased secretion of inflammatory cytokine TNF-α and interleukin (IL)-6, promoted cell viability, inhibited apoptosis, suppressed NF-κB, p65 and notch1 protein expressions | [ |
| Sprague Dawley rats | Decreased systolic blood pressure, cholesterol, TG, LDL and VLDL | [ | |
| SHRs | Lowered systolic blood pressure, urinary protein excretion/creatinine excretion ratio, creatinine clearance and ACE activity | [ | |
| Lettuce | Rats | Decreased LDL/HDL ratio and liver cholesterol levels, increased fecal total steroid excretion, depressed apparent absorption of dietary cholesterol, improved VE/TG ratio in plasma, limited lipid peroxidation in heart | [ |
| Collard greens | SHRs | Modulated liver fatty acid composition, protected against elevations in atherogenic fatty acids | [ |
| In vitro thrombolytic model | Showed clot lysis activity | [ | |
| Rape (seed) | SHRs | Inhibited ACE, dilated mesenteric artery | [ |
| Rape (seed) | SHRs | Inhibited ACE and renin activities, lowered blood pressure | [ |
| Rape (seed) | SHRs | Reduced surface hydrophobicity, scavenged oxygen radicals, inhibited ACE, lowered blood pressure | [ |
| Spinach | Balb/c mice | Decreased catalase, increased SOD activities, protected against doxorubicin-induced heart injury | [ |
| Spinach | SHRs | Exerted anti-hypertensive activity | [ |
| Spinach (leaf) | SHRs | Inhibited ACE, exerted anti-hypertensive activity | [ |
| Pumpkin | In vitro | Antioxidant, inhibited α-glucosidase and ACE, anti-diabetic- and anti-hypertension | [ |
| In vitro, normotensive anesthetized rats | Lowered arterial blood pressure, inhibited spontaneously beating guinea pig atria and K+ -induced contractions of rabbit aorta | [ | |
| Lyophilized carrot | C57BL/6J mice | Increased total neutral sterols fecal excretion, increased antioxidant status and VE/TG ratio, lowered lipemia, regulated cholesterol metabolism | [ |
| Carrot | In vitro, mice | Anti-thrombosis | [ |
| Broccoli | stroke-prone SHRs | Attenuated oxidative stress, hypertension and inflammation | [ |
| Broccoli | Rats | Protected mammalian hearts, activated survival proteins, improved post-ischemic ventricular function and pro-caspase 3 activities and redox cycling of thioredoxins, reduced myocardial infarct size, cardiomyocyte apoptosis and cytochrome c release | [ |
| Broccoli | Rats | Protected against myocardial oxidative damage and cell death during I/R, inhibited markers of necrosis and apoptosis, decreased oxidative stress | [ |
| Broccoli | Rats | Improved post-ischemic ventricular function, reduced MI and cardiomyocyte apoptosis | [ |
| Corn | SHRs, in vitro | Inhibited ACE, lowered systolic blood pressure | [ |
| Corn | In vitro | Antioxidant, inhibited a-glucosidase and ACE, anti-diabetic- and anti-hypertension | [ |
| Purple corn | SHRs | Decreased blood pressure and heart rate | [ |
| Maize | Wistar rats | Reduced infarct size, increased myocardial glutathione levels, modulated cardiac antioxidant defenses | [ |
| Pea | Rats | Reduced MDA, tissue calcium concentration, myeloperoxidase and apoptosis indicator caspase-3, protected hearts from I/R injury | [ |
| Rats | Hindered free radical-mediated tissue injury, endothelial dysfunction and leukocyte recruitment, protected against splanchnic artery I/R-induced splanchnic injury | [ | |
| Pea | In vitro | Inhibited α-amylase and α-glucosidase and ACE | [ |
| Pea | Weanling Han:SPRD-cy rats | Lowered serum creatinine and renal chemokine receptor 2 level | [ |
| Pea | Rats | lowered plasma TC concentrations, affected cellular cholesterol homeostasis | [ |
Figure 1The cardioprotective effects of vegetables.
The mechanisms involved in the cardioprotective effects of vegetables.
| Cardioprotective Effects | Mechanisms |
|---|---|
| Lower blood pressure | Inhibit ACE activity and hypothalamic MR-ATIR pathway, alleviate sympathoexcitation; improve protein kinase C-β II activity; modify relative telomere length of peripheral leucocyte, increase NOS expression; inhibit Ca2+ influx and K+ -induced contractions. |
| Regulate lipid metabolism | Decrease TC, TG, TAG, VLDL-C, TC/HDL-C ratio and atherosclerotic plaque formation, increase LDL-C/TG and VE/TG ratio; inhibit fatty acid synthase and ACAT activity, modulate energy producing mitochondrial enzymes; modify expression of ACAT and sterol regulatory element-binding protein-2 and its downstream genes. |
| Antioxidant | Scavenge free radicals (NO, superoxide, hydroxyl, TBARS); increase endogenous aortic H2S production; improve SOD, catalase, GPx, carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1 and paraoxonase 1 activity. |
| Improve endothelial function | Decrease endothelin and artery intima-media thickness, increase NO, improve apolipoprotein A-I and apolipoprotein J protein profile; inhibit endothelin-converting enzyme; diminish DNA damage. |
| Anti-inflammatory | Attenuate TNF-α induced leukocytes adhesion; reduce NF-κB, IL-6; inhibit expression of AM. |
| Anti-platelet | Prolong APTT, TT, PT, bleeding time and clotting time; inhibit MAPK, ESRK, factor VIII activities and c-Jun N-terminal kinase signaling pathways. |
| Attenuate myocardial damage | Decrease MDA, water content leakage and infarct size, increase cyclic guanosine monophosphate; inhibit creatine kinase, aspartate transaminase, lactate dehydrogenase and CPKMB activity, modulate protein kinase A, p38, and phosphodiesterase-5 activity; inhibit Bad, Bax, caspase-8, caspase-9, and caspase-3 and aquaporin 4 expression, increase phosphor (p)-Akt, p-Bad, p-Erk1/2, Bcl-2, p-JAK2 and p-STAT3. |
| Regulate blood glucose | Inhibit α-amylase and α-glucosidase activity; improve hemoglobin A1c and high fasting blood sugar level. |
Relationship between other vegetables and CVD.
| Vegetables | Subjects | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sesame | Overweight or obese men and women ( | No improvement in markers of CVD risk | [ |
| Tomato | Patients with grade-1 hypertension ( | Decreased blood pressure and TBARS level | [ |
| Tomato | Healthy women ( | Improved serum antioxidant status, decreased vascular AM 1 | [ |
| Tomato | Healthy subjects ( | Decrease plasma TC, TG and several cellular and plasma inflammatory biomarkers, increase plasma HDL-C and IL-10 | [ |
| Tomato | Healthy middle-aged volunteers ( | No change in inflammatory markers, insulin resistance and sensitivity, lipid concentrations and arterial stiffness | [ |
| Broccoli | Hypertensive individuals ( | No significant change in blood pressure and endothelial function measured by flow mediated dilation | [ |
| Broccoli | Healthy Caucasian volunteers ( | Increased the urinary concentrations of sulforaphane metabolites and vitamin C, decreased the urinary concentrations of tetranor-PGEM, 11β-PGF2α and 11-dehydro-TXB2 | [ |
| Onion | Healthy men ( | Improved postprandial but not fasting flow-mediated vasodilation; did not alter systemic and forearm hemodynamics | [ |
| Onion | Overweight-to-obese patients ( | Decreased 24 h, daytime and night-time systolic blood pressure in hypertensives; did not affect vasoactive biomarkers | [ |