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Effects of L-citrulline supplementation and watermelon consumption on longer-term and postprandial vascular function and cardiometabolic risk markers

Authors :
Ellen T. H. C. Smeets
Ronald P. Mensink
Peter J. Joris
Nutrition and Movement Sciences
RS: NUTRIM - R1 - Obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular health
Source :
British Journal of Nutrition, 128(9), 1758-1770. Cambridge University Press
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

l-Citrulline may improve non-invasive vascular function and cardiometabolic risk markers through increases in l-arginine bioavailability and nitric oxide synthesis. A meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials (RCT) was performed to examine longer-term and postprandial effects of l-citrulline supplementation and watermelon consumption on these markers for CVD in adults. Summary estimates of weighted mean differences in vascular function and cardiometabolic risk markers with accompanying 95 % CI were calculated using random or fixed-effect meta-analyses. Seventeen RCT were included involving an l-citrulline intervention, of which six studied postprandial and twelve longer-term effects. Five studies investigated longer-term effects of watermelon consumption and five assessed effects during the postprandial phase. Longer-term l-citrulline supplementation improved brachial artery flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD) by 0·9 %-point (95 % CI 0·7, 1·1, P < 0·001). Longer-term watermelon consumption improved pulse wave velocity by 0·9 m/s (95 % CI 0·1, 1·5, P < 0·001), while effects on FMD were not studied. No postprandial effects on vascular function markers were found. Postprandial glucose concentrations decreased by 0·6 mmol/l (95 % CI 0·4, 0·7, P < 0·001) following watermelon consumption, but no other longer-term or postprandial effects were observed on cardiometabolic risk markers. To conclude, longer-term l-citrulline supplementation and watermelon consumption may improve vascular function, suggesting a potential mechanism by which increased l-citrulline intake beneficially affects cardiovascular health outcomes in adults. No effects on postprandial vascular function markers were found, while more research is needed to investigate the effects of l-citrulline and watermelon on risk markers related to cardiometabolic health.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071145
Volume :
128
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3bc78cf180923fef318634a599de52b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007114521004803