Abstract

BackgroundDietary inorganic nitrate (NO3−) is a polyatomic ion, which is present in large quantities in green leafy vegetables and beetroot, and has attracted considerable attention in recent years as a potential health-promoting dietary compound. Numerous small, well-controlled laboratory studies have reported beneficial health effects of inorganic NO3− consumption on blood pressure, endothelial function, cerebrovascular blood flow, cognitive function, and exercise performance. Translating the findings from small laboratory studies into ‘real-world’ applications requires careful consideration.Main bodyThis article provides a brief overview of the existing empirical evidence basis for the purported health-promoting effects of dietary NO3− consumption. Key areas for future research are then proposed to evaluate whether promising findings observed in small animal and human laboratory studies can effectively translate into clinically relevant improvements in population health. These proposals include: 1) conducting large-scale, longer duration trials with hard clinical endpoints (e.g. cardiovascular disease incidence); 2) exploring the feasibility and acceptability of different strategies to facilitate a prolonged increase in dietary NO3− intake; 3) exploitation of existing cohort studies to explore associations between NO3− intake and health outcomes, a research approach allowing larger samples sizes and longer duration follow up than is feasible in randomised controlled trials; 4) identifying factors which might account for individual differences in the response to inorganic NO3− (e.g. sex, genetics, habitual diet) and could assist with targeted/personalised nutritional interventions; 5) exploring the influence of oral health and medication on the therapeutic potential of NO3− supplementation; and 6) examining potential risk of adverse events with long term high- NO3− diets.ConclusionThe salutary effects of dietary NO3− are well established in small, well-controlled laboratory studies. Much less is known about the feasibility and efficacy of long-term dietary NO3− enrichment for promoting health, and the factors which might explain the variable responsiveness to dietary NO3− supplementation between individuals. Future research focussing on the translation of laboratory data will provide valuable insight into the potential applications of dietary NO3− supplementation to improve population health.

Highlights

  • BackgroundDietary inorganic nitrate (NO3−) is a polyatomic ion present in large quantities in green leafy vegetables and certain root vegetables such as beetroot [1]

  • Research focus 1: large-scale, longer duration trials NO3− consumption has been linked with a range of positive health outcomes, the majority of trials exploring the salutary effects of inorganic NO3− have involved short-term supplementation regimens, typically a few days in duration

  • A high vegetable NO3− intake was associated with a lower risk of Atherosclerotic vascular disease (ASVD) (HR: 0.79 95% CI: 0.68, 0.93, P = 0.004) and all-cause mortality (HR: 0.87 95% CI: 0.78, 0.97, P = 0.011)

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Summary

Background

Dietary inorganic nitrate (NO3−) is a polyatomic ion present in large quantities in green leafy vegetables and certain root vegetables such as beetroot [1]. Inorganic NO3−has attracted substantial attention as a potential health promoting and exercise performance-enhancing dietary compound These effects have largely been attributed to its ability to serve as a substrate for the ubiquitous gasotransmitter, nitric oxide (NO; Fig. 1) [2]. The mechanisms for the ergogenic effects of NO3− have not been fully resolved, but may include: 1) improvements in mitochondrial efficiency (reported by some [51], but not others [52]); 2) enhanced muscle contractile efficiency/ function [53–56]; and 3) augmented tissue blood flow, to areas of low oxygen tensions such as type II muscle fibres (demonstrated in animal models [57, 58], but with less convincing data in humans [59–63]). Such research is warranted to help guide practitioners, influence policy, and form guidelines for the effective and safe consumption of inorganic NO3−

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