Blood Pressure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Growth of Lettuce With Different Content of Inorganic Nitrate as a Feeding Strategy for Placebo-controlled Nutritional Interventions to Test the Effects of Inorganic Nitrate on Human Health
Leafy vegetables are a natural source of dietary nitrate, which may reduce systolic blood
pressure (BP). However, the evidence has been obtained from studies using nitrate solutions
(i.e., potassium or sodium nitrate) or beetroot juice supplementation which have a suitable
placebo for the design of double-blind clinical trials. However, the design of food-based
nutritional interventions is complicated by the fact that an appropriate placebo treatment
is not available and, therefore, it is not possible to meet the criteria for proper
double-blind randomised placebo-controlled intervention trials. In addition, the biological
effects of processed products such as beetroot juice or solutions with a pharmacological
grade may be different from that of fresh vegetables, e.g. due to conversion of nitrate to
nitrite in the mouth during chewing.
Objectives: to investigate whether two sets of lettuce specifically grown with different
nitrate content but otherwise similar composition show different effects on nitrate uptake
and bioavailability in humans. Additionally, the investigators also aim to design human
intervention studies to investigate the effect of intake of lettuce with different nitrate
content on vascular health.
These objectives will be tested by growing lettuce with different fertiliser compositions
resulting in high and low nitrate content and then investigating the bioavailability and
short-term effect on BP in healthy young volunteers in a double-blind cross-over design.
Eligible subjects will consume one meal each of either low or high nitrate lettuce. Urine,
blood and saliva samples will be collected at baseline, for 6 hours after the ingestion and
then again after 24hr. Blood Pressure BP will be measured continuously for 24 hours starting
at baseline. The volunteers will repeat the intervention with the second treatment.
Study Design and Subjects: This study is designed as a double-blind, randomized, crossover,
intervention trial in which thirty healthy young volunteers (BMI: 20-25 kg/m2), non-smoking
subjects (age: 18-35 years) will be recruited. In each of two intervention periods, subjects
will be asked to eat 50g of either high nitrate lettuce or low nitrate lettuce (placebo) on
a single occasion (the second visit) with dietary restriction for 3 days prior to the second
visit and in the 24 hr period following after the consumption, concluded with a third visit,
with at least 3 weeks washout period before the second 2-day intervention period. Urine,
saliva and blood samples will be collected during a 6-hour period during the second visit.
Urine samples will be collected during 24h from consumption until the third visit, to assess
the pharmacokinetics and bioavailability and compliance to the interventions (details in the
diagram of human trial).
The primary outcomes are 24-hour BP and nitrate content in urine, plasma and saliva. Samples
will be collected into tubes and then analysed in the laboratory for the nitrate content
(NO3-) by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GCMS). Participants will follow specific
dietary and lifestyle instructions to minimise confounding effects.
Participant will receive a small honorarium after the study and reasonable travel expenses
will be reimbursed.
Dietary Interventions: Participants will be asked to arrive fasting in the morning of the
second (main) visit and will consume a standard meal (Chicken Hotpot from ASDA) with the
same drink water at the evening before and the evening after the visit, as well as following
a diet that excludes a list of specific foods containing high nitrate (rocket, spinach,
other leafy vegetables, radish and beet root), cured meat, cured seafood and cured fish,
mature cheese for 24hr prior to the study and fasting on the morning of the study.
Anthropometry: This includes the measurements of body weight, height and waist circumference
according to standardised protocols. Procedures are safe, not invasive and induce minimal
discomfort for the participants.
Body Composition: This includes the measurement of body fat and muscle using a non-invasive
technique called bio impedance analysis using a leg-to-leg bioelectrical impedance device
(TANITA 300 MA). The procedure is safe, non-invasive and induces minimal discomfort for the
participant. The duration of the measurement is of approximately 3-5 minutes.
24-hr BP monitoring: participants will be fitted with an automated portable device to
measure BP over a 24-hr period. Participants will be instructed on how to safely operate the
device. The measurement are safe and minimally invasive. BP readings will be recorded every
30 minutes during day time and every hour during the night to minimise the potential impact
on sleep quality.
Urine samples: The first morning void (FMV) will be collected at home (pre supplementation)
and after arrival full urine samples (all that the volunteer is able to produce) at set
times before and after the supplementation (between baseline and 6hr) at NU-Food research
facility. Subsequent collections afterwards (between 6-12hr and 12-24 hr) will take place at
home in appropriate plastic containers and the samples will be collected at the final visit
24hr after the consumption. After measuring the volume of each sample, sub samples will be
stored for analysis and for calculation of pharmacokinetics.
Saliva samples: a small saliva sample (~2ml) will be collected in disposable plastic
containers at baseline and at every hour for 6 hours at NU-Food research facility; and then
after 9 and 12 hour at home, with the final sample taken after 24 hr.
Blood Samples: Venous blood samples (LH 6 ml) will be collected at baseline, three and six
hours post supplementation of treatments and then again after 24 hr.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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