Grape Seed Extract May Be A
Useful Supplement To Blunt Hypertension In Postmenopausal Women
New findings may be
significant for the increasing number of women entering middle age
April 9, 2003 (San Diego, CA) – Nearly two years
ago, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reported
that women who took estrogen for ten years or more after menopause were
twice as likely to die of ovarian cancer as nonusers. For the 20 million
Americans who used estrogen alone or in combination therapy, the news
reports have been devastating.
Many women immediately stopped taking the hormone. But
if they were post-menopausal and hypertensive (had high blood pressure),
they were abandoning a therapy that appeared to be useful in lowering blood
pressure.
Now, a new research study finds that a diet moderately
high in grape seed extract can blunt salt (sodium chloride)-sensitive
hypertension to about the same extent as treatment with either plant
estrogens or 17ß-estradiol. This suggests that mechanisms other than the
estrogen receptor activation actually provides the beneficial effects of
estrogen therapy and that grape seed extract may be a useful supplement to
blunt hypertension and other cardiovascular symptoms in postmenopausal
women.
Background
These findings may be significant for the increasing
number of women entering middle age. It is estimated that between 40 and 50
million Americans have hypertension, which is indicated when an individual’s
systolic or diastolic blood pressure is maintained above 140 mm Hg or 90 mm
Hg, respectively. This debilitating medical disorder becomes more prevalent
with increasing age, and at all ages and in both sexes it afflicts
African-Americans more often than whites. Men with hypertension outnumber
women with hypertension during young adulthood and early middle age, but
hypertension rapidly increases in women after the age of menopause, and they
soon outnumber men with hypertension.
Hypertension is strongly, continuously, and
independently related to coronary artery disease (CAD), stroke, renal
disease, and all-cause mortality. Past research has found that for every
7.5 mm Hg increase in diastolic blood pressure, the risk for coronary heart
disease increases 29 percent and stroke risk increases 46 percent. These
risks have been shown for women as well as for men.
A New Study
Physiologists from Alabama previously found that plant
estrogens from soy reduce salt-sensitive hypertension in young,
estrogen-depleted spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). In the current
study this group examined whether the polyphenols in grape seed extract
(primarily proanthocyandins) could provide the same result, indicating that
the effects of the plant compounds might not simply be due to estrogen
receptor mechanisms. The authors of “Antihypertensive Effects of Grape Seed
Extract in Estrogen-Depleted Female Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats (SHR)”
are Ning Peng, Nancy Brissie, and J.M. Wyss, all from the University of
Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL. Their findings are being presented
at Experimental Biology 2003, a meeting sponsored by the American
Physiological Society, being held April 11-15, 2003, at the San Diego
Convention Center, San Diego, CA.
Methodology
The ovaries were removed from spontaneously
hypersensitive rats at three weeks of age and put on a phytoestrogen free
(PE) diet containing high (eight percent) or basal (one percent) sodium
chloride. The researchers added 0.5 percent grape seed extract added to
the food of ½ the rats. Blood pressure and heart rate were measured
telemetrically, and plasma PE concentrations were determined by mass
spectrometry.
Results
The research results indicated the following:
-
Addition of grape seed extract to the diet has little effect
on estrogen-depleted female SHR on a normal diet that contains less than
1% salt.
-
A high (8%) salt diet greatly increases blood pressure in
these rats, but the addition of grape seed extract to the high salt diet
greatly reduces the salt-sensitive rise in blood pressure in these
estrogen-depleted SHR.
-
The addition of grape seed extract does not affect heart
rate, suggesting that its blood pressure lowering effect is specific.
Conclusions
These research findings indicate that in
estrogen-depleted SHR, grape seed extract blunts the hypertensive effects of
a high salt diet to about the same extent as treatment with either
endogenous or dietary estrogens. None of the three compounds effects heart
rate.
This suggests that mechanisms other than the estrogen
receptor activation may underlie the beneficial effects of estrogen therapy
and that grape seed extract may be a useful supplement to blunt hypertension
in postmenopausal women.
-end-
The American
Physiological Society (APS) is one of the world’s most prestigious
organizations for physiological scientists. These researchers specialize in
understanding the processes and functions underlying human health and
disease. Founded in 1887 the Bethesda, MD-based Society has more than
10,000 members and publishes 3,800 articles in its 14 peer-reviewed journals
each year.
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Editor’s
Note: For receive a copy of the abstract, or to schedule an interview with a
member of the research team, please contact Donna Krupa at 703.967.2751
(cell), 703.527.7357 (office) or at
djkrupa1@aol.com.