Dietary nitrate supplementation does not influence thermoregulatory or cardiovascular strain in older individuals during severe ambient heat stress
- PMID: 32816341
- PMCID: PMC7731583
- DOI: 10.1113/EP088834
Dietary nitrate supplementation does not influence thermoregulatory or cardiovascular strain in older individuals during severe ambient heat stress
Abstract
New findings: What is the central question of this study? Does dietary nitrate supplementation with beetroot juice attenuate thermoregulatory and cardiovascular strain in older adults during severe heat stress? What is the main finding and its importance? A 7-day nitrate supplementation regimen lowered resting mean arterial pressure in thermoneutral conditions. During heat stress, core and mean skin temperatures, vasodilatory responses, sweat loss, heart rate and left ventricular function were unchanged, and mean arterial pressure was only transiently reduced, post-supplementation. These data suggest nitrate supplementation with beetroot juice does not mitigate thermoregulatory or cardiovascular strain in heat-stressed older individuals.
Abstract: This study tested the hypothesis that dietary nitrate supplementation with concentrated beetroot juice attenuates thermoregulatory and cardiovascular strain in older individuals during environmental heat stress. Nine healthy older individuals (six females, three males; aged 67 ± 5 years) were exposed to 42.5 ± 0.1°C and 34.0 ± 0.5% relative humidity conditions for 120 min before (CON) and after 7 days of dietary nitrate supplementation with concentrated beetroot juice (BRJ; 280 ml, ∼16.8 mmol of nitrate daily). Core and skin temperatures, body mass changes (indicative of whole-body sweat loss), skin blood flow and cutaneous vascular conductance, forearm blood flow and vascular conductance, heart rate, arterial blood pressures and indices of cardiac function were measured. The 7-day beetroot juice regimen increased plasma nitrate/nitrite levels from 27.4 ± 15.2 to 477.0 ± 102.5 μmol l-1 (P < 0.01) and lowered resting mean arterial pressure from 90 ± 7 to 83 ± 10 mmHg at baseline under thermoneutral conditions (P = 0.02). However, during subsequent heat stress, no differences in core and skin temperatures, skin blood flow and vascular conductance, forearm blood flow and vascular conductance, whole-body sweat loss, heart rate, and echocardiographic indices of systolic function and diastolic filling were evident following nitrate supplementation (all P > 0.05). Mean arterial pressure was lower in BRJ vs. CON during heat stress (treatment-by-time interaction: P = 0.02). Overall, these findings suggest that dietary nitrate supplementation with concentrated beetroot juice does not attenuate thermoregulatory or cardiovascular strain in older individuals exposed to severe ambient heat stress.
Keywords: beetroot juice; blood pressure; cardiac function; core temperature; skin blood flow.
© 2020 The Authors. Experimental Physiology © 2020 The Physiological Society.
Conflict of interest statement
COMPETING INTERESTS
None declared.
Figures





Similar articles
-
Augmented reflex cutaneous vasodilatation following short-term dietary nitrate supplementation in humans.Exp Physiol. 2015 Jun;100(6):708-18. doi: 10.1113/EP085061. Epub 2015 May 13. Exp Physiol. 2015. PMID: 25826741 Clinical Trial.
-
Folic acid supplementation does not attenuate thermoregulatory or cardiovascular strain of older adults exposed to extreme heat and humidity.Exp Physiol. 2018 Aug;103(8):1123-1131. doi: 10.1113/EP087049. Epub 2018 Jun 26. Exp Physiol. 2018. PMID: 29873123 Free PMC article.
-
Short-term dietary nitrate supplementation augments cutaneous vasodilatation and reduces mean arterial pressure in healthy humans.Microvasc Res. 2015 Mar;98:48-53. doi: 10.1016/j.mvr.2014.12.002. Epub 2014 Dec 30. Microvasc Res. 2015. PMID: 25554360
-
Dietary Nitrate from Beetroot Juice for Hypertension: A Systematic Review.Biomolecules. 2018 Nov 2;8(4):134. doi: 10.3390/biom8040134. Biomolecules. 2018. PMID: 30400267 Free PMC article.
-
The effect of beetroot inorganic nitrate supplementation on cardiovascular risk factors: A systematic review and meta-regression of randomized controlled trials.Nitric Oxide. 2021 Oct 1;115:8-22. doi: 10.1016/j.niox.2021.06.002. Epub 2021 Jun 11. Nitric Oxide. 2021. PMID: 34119659
Cited by
-
Skeletal Muscle, Skin, and Bone as Three Major Nitrate Reservoirs in Mammals: Chemiluminescence and 15N-Tracer Studies in Yorkshire Pigs.Nutrients. 2024 Aug 13;16(16):2674. doi: 10.3390/nu16162674. Nutrients. 2024. PMID: 39203815 Free PMC article.
-
Meta-analysis of heat-induced changes in cardiac function from over 400 laboratory-based heat exposure studies.Nat Commun. 2025 Mar 14;16(1):2543. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-57868-6. Nat Commun. 2025. PMID: 40087302 Free PMC article.
References
-
- Amano T, Okushima D, Breese BC, Bailey SJ, Koga S & Kondo N (2018). Influence of dietary nitrate supplementation on local sweating and cutaneous vascular responses during exercise in a hot environment. Eur J Appl Physiol 118, 1579–1588. - PubMed
-
- Applegate WB, Runyan JW, Brasfield L, Williams ML, Konigsberg C & Fouche C (1981). Analysis of the 1980 heat wave in Memphis. J Am Geriatr Soc 29, 337–342. - PubMed
-
- Bartholomew B & Hill MJ (1984). The pharmacology of dietary nitrate and the origin of urinary nitrate. Food Chem Toxicol Int J Publ Br Ind Biol Res Assoc 22, 789–795. - PubMed
-
- Benjamin N, O’Driscoll F, Dougall H, Duncan C, Smith L, Golden M & McKenzie H (1994). Stomach NO synthesis. Nature 368, 502. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical