| Literature DB >> 28824916 |
Valeria Ludovici1,2, Jens Barthelmes1, Matthias P Nägele1, Frank Enseleit1, Claudio Ferri2, Andreas J Flammer1, Frank Ruschitzka1, Isabella Sudano1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) represents the most common cause of death worldwide. The consumption of natural polyphenol-rich foods, and cocoa in particular, has been related to a reduced risk of CVD, including coronary heart disease and stroke. Intervention studies strongly suggest that cocoa exerts a beneficial impact on cardiovascular health, through the reduction of blood pressure (BP), improvement of vascular function, modulation of lipid and glucose metabolism, and reduction of platelet aggregation. These potentially beneficial effects have been shown in healthy subjects as well as in patients with risk factors (arterial hypertension, diabetes, and smoking) or established CVD (coronary heart disease or heart failure). Several potential mechanisms are supposed to be responsible for the positive effect of cocoa; among them activation of nitric oxide (NO) synthase, increased bioavailability of NO as well as antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory properties. It is the aim of this review to summarize the findings of cocoa and chocolate on BP and vascular function.Entities:
Keywords: arterial stiffness; blood pressure; cocoa; endothelial function; flavonoids
Year: 2017 PMID: 28824916 PMCID: PMC5539137 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2017.00036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Studies investigating cocoa and blood pressure.
| Reference | Year | Study design | Population | Duration (weeks) | Intervention | Reduction of SBP/DBP active group (mmHg) | Reduction of SBP/DBP control group (mmHg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fraga et al. ( | 2005 | Randomized crossover | 28 normotensive | 2 | High-flavanol milk (168 mg)/white chocolate | −6/−5 | −2/−1 |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2005 | Randomized crossover | 15 normotensive | 1 | Dark (500 mg flavanols)/white chocolate | −7/−4.2 | −0.5/−0.3 |
| Crews et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized double-blind parallel | 101 normotensive | 6 | Dark chocolate (397 mg flavanol) and cocoa drink (357 mg flavanol)/low-flavanol chocolate and drink | −3.58/−0.5 | −3.05/−0.57 |
| Mastroiacovo et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind parallel | 90 normotensive | 8 | High (993 mg)/intermediate (520 mg)/low (48 mg) flavanol cocoa drink | −7.83/−4.77 | −1.60/−1.57 |
| Sansone et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind parallel | 100 normotensive | 4 | High (450 mg)/low-flavanol cocoa drink | −4.4/−3.9 | −1/0 |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 20 normotensive | 1 | High (800, 500, 200, 80 mg)/low (0 mg) flavanol cocoa | −4.8/−3.03 | –/– |
| Murphy et al. ( | 2003 | Randomized double-blind parallel | 32 normotensive | 4 | High (234 mg flavanols and procyanidins)/low-flavanol chocolate | +2/−1 | +3/0 |
| Engler et al. ( | 2004 | Randomized double-blind | 21 normotensive | 2 | High (213 mg procyanidins, 46 mg epicatechin)/low-flavanol chocolate | −1/+0.9 | −2.8/−0.1 |
| Shiina et al. ( | 2009 | Randomized single-blind | 39 normotensive | 2 | Dark (550 mg flavanols)/white chocolate | +4.6/+6.6 | +4/+5.2 |
| Njike et al. ( | 2011 | Randomized crossover | 44 normotensive overweight | 6 | High/low-flavanol cocoa drink | +2.2/−0.5 | −0.1/+0.8 |
| Taubert et al. ( | 2003 | Randomized crossover | 13 hypertensive | 2 | Dark (500 mg flavanols)/white chocolate | −5.1/−1.8 | +0.4/+0.3 |
| Taubert et al. ( | 2007 | Randomized single-blind parallel | 44 pre-hypertensive/hypertensive | 18 | Dark(30 mg flavanols)/white chocolate | −2.9/−1.9 | +0.1/0 |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2005 | Randomized crossover | 20 hypertensive | 2 | Dark (500 mg flavanols)/white chocolate | −11.9/−8.5 | −0.7/−0.6 |
| Muniyappa et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 20 hypertensive | 2 | High (900 mg)/low-flavanol drink | −2/−3 | −1/−4 |
| Davison et al. ( | 2010 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 52 hypertensive | 6 | High (1,052 mg)/low-flavanol cocoa drink | −5.3/−3 | −2.1/+0.1 |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized crossover | 19 hypertensive with IGT | 2 | Dark (1,008 mg polyphenols)/white chocolate | −3.8/−3.9 | −0.1/−0.2 |
| Davison et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized parallel | 49 normotensive obese or overweight | 12 | High (902 mg)/low-flavanol cocoa | −1.9/−1.8 | +4.2/+2.8 |
| Rostami et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind | 60 hypertensive diabetic | 8 | Dark/white chocolate | −5.9/−6.4 | −1.1/+0.2 |
| Monagas et al. ( | 2009 | Randomized crossover | 47 diabetics or more than 3 CV risk factors | 4 | Cocoa powder (495 mg polyphenols) with milk/milk | 0.0/−2 | −3/−3 |
| De Palma et al. ( | 2016 | Randomized crossover | 32 patients with stable HF | 4 | High (1,064 mg)/low-flavanol dark chocolate | −1.8/−4.2 | −0.9/+2.9 |
IGT, impaired glucose tolerance; HF, heart failure; CHD, coronary heart disease; CV, cardiovascular; SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure.
Studies investigating cocoa and vascular function.
| Reference | Year | Study design | Population | Duration | Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rodriguez-Mateos et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 15 healthy subjects | 1,2,3,4 h | CF-rich drink (1.4–10.9 mg/kg body weight) vs. nitrate or nutrient-matched flavanol-free drink | Improvement in FMD after flavanol and nitrate intake |
| Engler et al. ( | 2004 | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | 21 heathy subjects | 2 weeks | High flavonoid chocolate (213 mg procyanidins, 46 mg epicatechin) vs. low-flavonoid chocolate | Improvement in FMD, increased epicatechin concentrations |
| Sansone et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind controlled parallel | 100 healthy subjects | 30 days | CF-containing drink (450 mg) or a nutrient-matched flavanol-free control bi-daily | Improvement in FMD, decreased SBP and DBP, decreased PWV |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind crossover controlled | 20 healthy subjects | 5 weeks | Five treatments with daily intake of 10 g cocoa (0, 80, 200, 500, 800 mg flavonoids) | Dose-dependent improvement in FMD, decreased PWV, and BP |
| Schroeter et al. ( | 2006 | Randomized crossover | 16 healthy subjects, isolated rabbit rings | 2 h | Drink with high flavonoid content | Improvement in FMD, paralleled the appearance of flavanols in plasma |
| Heiss et al. ( | 2015 | Randomized double-blind controlled parallel | 42 healthy subjects | 14 days | CF-containing drink (450 mg bid) vs. CF-free drink | Improvement in FMD, decreased PWV, and in total peripheral resistances |
| Shiina et al. ( | 2009 | Randomized single-blind | 39 healthy subjects | 2 weeks | 45 g commercially available dark chocolate vs. white chocolate | Improvement in coronary circulation as measured by coronary velocity flow reserve |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2005 | Randomized crossover placebo-controlled | 20 untreated hypertensive patients | 15 days | 100 g dark chocolate (21.91 mg catechin, 65,97 mg epicatechin) vs. flavanol-free white chocolate | Improvement in FMD, decreased BP and LDL cholesterol, increased insulin sensitivity |
| Grassi et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized crossover placebo-controlled | 19 hypertensive with IGT | 15 days | 100 g dark chocolate (36 mg catechin, 110 mg epicatechin) vs. flavanol-free white chocolate | Improvement in FMD, decreased SBP and DBP, decreased insulin resistance |
| Heiss et al. ( | 2005 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 11 smokers | 2 h | 100 ml cocoa drink with high (176–185 mg) or low (<11 mg) flavanol content | Improvement in FMD and increased circulating NO pool. Increased flavanol metabolites |
| Hermann et al. ( | 2006 | Randomized placebo-controlled | 20 smokers | 2 h | 40 g commercially available dark chocolate vs. white chocolate | Improvement in FMD, antioxidant status, and platelet function |
| Davison et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled parallel | 49 obese and overweight patients | 12 weeks | Dietary high (902 mg) vs. low (36 mg) flavanol intake | Improvement in FMD |
| Njike et al. ( | 2011 | Randomized controlled crossover | 44 overweight patients | 6 weeks | Sugar-free cocoa beverage or placebo, sugar-sweetened cocoa beverage or placebo | Improvement in FMD, no change in weight |
| West et al. ( | 2014 | Randomized double-blind crossover placebo-controlled | 30 overweight patients | 30 days | 37 g dark chocolate plus sugar-free cocoa beverage (flavanols 814 mg) vs. low-flavanol chocolate bar and cocoa-free and sugar-free beverage | Unchanged FMD, increased basal diameter and peak diameter of the brachial artery, increased basal blood flow, in women decreased augmentation index |
| Balzer et al. ( | 2008 | Randomized double-blind | 41 diabetic patients | 30 days | Flavanol-rich cocoa (321 mg flavanols × 3) or a nutrient-matched control (25 mg flavanols × 3) | Improvement in FMD |
| Mellor et al. ( | 2013 | Randomized double-blind crossover controlled | 10 diabetic patients | 2 h | 13.5 g of high vs. low-flavanol chocolate; 60 min later, a 75 g oral glucose load | Improved endothelial function assessed by reactive hyperemia peripheral artery tonometry |
| Heiss et al. ( | 2003 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 20 patients with at least 1 CV risk factor | 2 h | Flavanol-rich cocoa drink (100 ml) | Improvement in FMD and increased levels of nitrosated and nitrosylated species |
| Heiss et al. ( | 2010 | Randomized double-blind crossover controlled | 16 CHD patients | 30 days | Dietary high (375 mg bid) vs. low (9 mg bid) flavanol cocoa drink | Improvement in FMD and mobilization of endothelial progenitor cells |
| Flammer et al. ( | 2012 | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | 20 heart failure patients | 2 h and 30 days | 40 g commercially available dark chocolate vs. flavonoid-free placebo chocolate | Improvement in FMD of platelet function |
| Flammer et al. ( | 2007 | Randomized double-blind | 22 heart transplant patients | 2 h | 40 g commercially available dark chocolate vs. flavonoid-free placebo chocolate | Inducing coronary vasodilation, improvement in coronary endothelial function, and improvement in platelet function |
| Rassaf et al. ( | 2016 | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | 57 hemodialytic patients | 30 days | CF-rich beverages (900 mg per study day) vs. flavanol-free beverages | Improvement in FMD decreased DBP. Ingestion of flavanols during HD alleviated HD-induced vascular dysfunction |
| Sansone et al. ( | 2017 | Randomized double-blind crossover | 47 healthy subjects | High (820 mg)/low-flavanol cocoa drink with high (220 mg)/low methylxanthines content | CFs with methylxanthines increased epicatechin serum concentration, increased FMD decreased PWV and DBP compared with flavanols alone | |
Modified from Ref. (.
FMD, flow-mediated dilation; endoPAT, reactive hyperemia peripheral artery tonometry; PWV, pulse wave velocity; CV, cardiovascular; NO, nitric oxide; CHD, coronary heart disease; HD, hemodialysis; BP, blood pressure; SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; CF, cocoa flavanol; IGT, impaired glucose tolerance.
Figure 1Cocoa flavanols and endothelial function. ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; A I, angiotensin I; A II, angiotensin II; ECE, endothelin-converting enzyme; ET 1, endothelin-1; EDHF, endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor; eNOS, endothelial NO synthase; l-NAME, l-nitroarginine methyl ester; ROS, reactive oxygen species; NO, nitric oxide; cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; COX, cyclooxygenase; PGI2, prostacyclin; TXA2, thromboxane A2; SOD, superoxide dismutase; CF, cocoa flavanol. CFs improve endothelial function via different pathways. They increase NO availability, stimulating eNOS function, preventing l-NAME-induced hypertension, and reducing ROS. They also stimulate EDHF-mediated relaxation, inhibit endothelin-1, and reduce ACE activity. Modified by Corti et al., Circulation 2009.