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Original Research Communications |
1 From the British Heart Foundation Cardiovascular Research Unit, the Department of Cardiology and Medicine, the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, and the Medical Statistics Unit, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
2 Supported by grants from the British Heart Foundation (PG/91094 and PG/93147).
3 Address reprint requests to RA Riemersma, BHF Cardiovascular Research Unit, University of Edinburgh, Hugh Robson Building, George Square, Edinburgh EH8 9XF, United Kingdom. E-mail: rudolph.riemersma{at}ed.ac.uk.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: The aim of this study was to examine whether low plasma concentrations of vitamin C confer an independent risk of acute myocardial infarction (AMI).
Design: Male patients (n = 180) aged <65 y with a first AMI and without an existing diagnosis of angina (>6 mo) who were admitted within 12 h after onset of symptoms were compared with apparently healthy volunteers (n = 177). Plasma concentrations and dietary intakes of vitamin C were determined during hospitalization and 3 mo later.
Results: Compared with the control subjects, the patients had higher total cholesterol and lower HDL-cholesterol concentrations and more of them smoked. The relative risk of AMI for the lowest compared with the highest quintile of plasma vitamin C during hospitalization (14.5 and >60.5 µmol/L, respectively) was 8.37 (95% CI: 3.28, 21.4) after adjustment for classic risk factors. At 3 mo, mean (±SEM) plasma vitamin C concentrations in patients had increased significantly, from 19.6 ± 1.2 to 35.1 ± 1.9 µmol/L (P < 0.001) and no longer conferred a risk of AMI [relative risk: 1.02 (95% CI: 0.51, 2.03)]. Habitual dietary vitamin C intake of patients (before AMI) did not differ significantly from that of control subjects. The increase in plasma vitamin C after recovery from the infarction could not be explained by a similarly large increase in dietary vitamin C.
Conclusions: A low plasma concentration of vitamin C was not associated with an increased risk of AMI, irrespective of smoking status. The apparent risk of AMI due to a low plasma vitamin C concentration was distorted by the acute phase response.
Key Words: Vitamin C ascorbic acid acute myocardial infarction smoking acute phase response risk diet men Scotland
| INTRODUCTION |
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| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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Vitamin C status declines during AMI (14). We therefore reexamined patients 83 ± 14 d after AMI. Follow-up took place >100 d after AMI in 10 patients. There were 3 deaths and 13 refusals to attend follow-up. Patients with AMI could be referred to a dietitian 46 wk after discharge. After March 1993, patients attended group sessions to reduce their CHD risk but were not advised to use vitamin C supplements.
The names and addresses of the control subjects were obtained from the Lothian Health Board Central Register, which listed a systematic sample of men aged 3064 y. These men were age-matched (within a 5-y band) with the patients. The original cohort consisted of 486 men. The general practitioners of these potential control subjects were asked to exclude men by using the same exclusion criteria described above or for any other confidential reasons. Sixty men could not be traced. Sixteen general practitioners refused to participate. Eight men had died and 93 were excluded because of CHD, diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, or major illness. The general practitioners excluded another 37 men for various other reasons. Letters of invitation were sent to 272 men. One reminder was mailed within 23 wk if necessary. The response rate was 65%.
The confounding influence of the effect of socioeconomic difference between patients and healthy volunteers was minimized by matching deprivation categories (15), which take into account male unemployment rates and car and house ownership in postal-code sectors of Edinburgh, as determined by the 1991 census. The deprivation score on a scale of 17 is strongly related to mortality rates in the United Kingdom (15). Plasma vitamin C concentrations of men in Edinburgh vary throughout the year (3); seasonal influence was avoided by studying control subjects and patients during the same period. All subjects gave written, informed consent to their participation in the study, which was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Lothian Health Board.
Methods
A self-administered questionnaire was used to record subjects' demographic information, medical histories, and family histories of premature CHD (before age 55 y) (16). Patients who had not smoked for >28 d before admission were classified as exsmokers. The patients' heights and weights were measured by one observer. Patients completed the Caerphilly semiquantitative food-frequency questionnaire (17) during their hospital stay (to define their habitual diets before AMI) and after recovery (to determine their current dietary habits). Supine blood pressure was also measured in patients by one observer with a random-zero sphygmomanometer (on reexamination).
Blood samples (6 mL, in heparin-containing tubes) for the determination of plasma vitamin C concentrations require immediate centrifugation (16). Therefore, nonfasting blood samples were collected from patients only between 0800 and 1700, whereas fasting blood samples were collected from healthy volunteers and patients on reexamination. All subjects refrained from rich sources of vitamin C (eg, orange juice and vitamin C tablets) before their morning appointments.
Vitamin C was analyzed enzymatically (18). Plasma vitamin C concentrations were corrected for the decline of
1%/mo that occurs during storage at -40°C; the CV was 2.1%. Plasma lipids (cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triacylglycerol) were determined in nonfasting admission blood samples (6.3 ± 3.7 h after onset of symptoms). Blood was collected on reexamination from patients and control subjects, all of whom fasted from 2100. Plasma lipids were determined enzymatically (16). Samples from patients and control subjects were analyzed simultaneously by staff who did not know the origin of the samples.
Statistical analyses
Results were summarized as means (±SEMs). Statistical comparisons between groups were done by using t tests for continuous data and chi-square tests with Yates' correction for nominal (binary) data. Vitamin C and triacylglycerol were analyzed after square root and logarithmic transformations, respectively. Multiple logistic regression was used to examine factors related to changing plasma vitamin C concentrations and to test for the effect of vitamin C on AMI after adjustment for the effect of other factors. The adjusted odds ratios for AMI were calculated in relation to the distribution of plasma vitamin C in control subjects (16). The statistical analysis was carried out by using SPSS for WINDOWS (version 6; SPSS Inc, Chicago).
| RESULTS |
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| DISCUSSION |
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The aim of the present study was not to identify factors responsible for the reduced in-hospital vitamin C concentrations but to reexamine whether the high risk of AMI in patients with low vitamin C concentrations during the acute phase would disappear 3 mo after an AMI. This was clearly the case.
Several limitations of this study need to be considered. Plasma vitamin C concentrations could not be measured in 16 patients (9%) at follow-up because 3 patients died and 13 patients refused to attend follow-up. The in-hospital vitamin C concentrations of these patients were not significantly different from those of other patients. In 10 patients, recovery blood samples were collected >100 d after hospitalization for various reasons, mainly because of illness or reinfarction. Exclusion of the results of either group did not affect the conclusions: Plasma vitamin C increased significantly in patients after discharge and no longer differed from that of control subjects.
The question remains as to whether plasma vitamin C concentrations returned to normal. Several factors could influence vitamin C concentrations post-AMI: stopping smoking, continuing acute phase response, acquiring an infection, and changing diet. The increase in plasma vitamin C concentrations from acute phase to recovery was observed in nonsmokers, exsmokers, and current smokers. Interestingly, the increase was slightly larger in patients who reported stopping smoking than in persistent smokers, but without knowing cotinine concentrations we may have underestimated the effect of smoking cessation. Most patients had a vitamin C intake 3 mo after AMI that was identical to their habitual intake. Only a minority of patients increased their vitamin C intake considerably. This type of data is subject to reporting bias and we do not know whether such bias was reduced at follow-up. However, the small increase in vitamin C consumption could not explain the large change in plasma concentrations. The increase in plasma vitamin C after recovery from AMI remained constant in 47 patients who could be followed for a much longer period; the 3- and >12-mo values were 42.4 ± 3.8 and 44.8 ± 7.7 µmol/L, respectively.
Our combined dietary and plasma vitamin C data strengthen the view that the vitamin C concentration at recovery is a good reflection of the usual concentration (ie, before hospital admission). Thus, subjects with a low plasma vitamin C concentration do not have an increased risk of AMI, irrespective of smoking status. This is at variance with other data. Vitamin C protects LDL particles against oxidative damage (1921) and inhibits smoking-induced formation of lipid peroxidation products (22, 23) and smoking-induced leukocyte adhesion in vivo (24). Vitamin C can also improve endothelial dysfunction (25). Low vitamin C concentrations also were associated with hypertension, and vitamin C supplements reduced blood pressure by 7.5 mm Hg (26). However, large supplements of vitamin C (7503000 mg) were given over relatively short periods and therefore the relevance of these observations to atherogenesis or CHD over a lifetime remains to be seen.
Another limitation originates from the differential response rate, which was higher in patients than in control subjects. These data mask the varying response rate by deprivation score, which was almost 80% in the least-deprived groups (deprivation score 1, 2, and 3) and as little as 30% in the most-deprived groups. More potential control subjects from the latter groups were excluded by their general practitioner on grounds of ill health. Thus, some of the control subjects in this study were healthier than the group they represented.. Given that we did not have dietary information or plasma samples of the nonrespondents, we do not wish to speculate. However, it is now clear that plasma vitamin C concentrations are lower in subjects with chronic infections (acute phaselike response); exclusion of such subjects would have increased the average plasma vitamin C concentration of the control group. Support for this view comes from our observation that there was only a weak association between deprivation score and plasma vitamin C concentration, which would have been expected if there had been an overrepresentation of healthy, vitamin Cdeprived subjects. However, if such bias had been present in our control group the effect would have been to increase the difference in plasma vitamin C between patients and control subjects. Thus, such bias cannot explain the lack of association between this antioxidant and risk of myocardial infarction.
We studied survivors of AMI and thus cannot exclude the possibility that plasma or dietary vitamin C status is lower in patients who die out of hospital during their first AMI. However, low dietary vitamin C intake in Scotland was not associated with increased risk of fatal CHD in another study (27). The tendency of an increased incidence of serious ventricular arrhythmia in the patients in our study who had the lowest plasma vitamin C concentrations may reflect the well-known relation between infarct size and clinical complications. Blood samples for analysis of vitamin C were collected at any time during the hospital stay and the concentration at the onset of arrhythmia is unknown. It is therefore premature to suggest any causal link between low plasma vitamin C and arrhythmia.
Our results agree with the results of clinical and epidemiologic studies that suggest that plasma or dietary vitamin C do not influence the risk of CHD markedly. Confounding by lifestyle factors may explain the fact that subjects who took large vitamin C supplements regularly were less likely to develop cardiovascular disease over a 10-y period (8, 9). The results of a Finnish case-control study of patients with fatal or nonfatal AMI suggest that vitamin C deficiency is a risk factor for CHD, but it is uncertain whether this was the primary endpoint of that study (11). The concentration that defined our lowest quintile of plasma vitamin C was almost identical to that used to identify subjects at risk of vitamin C deficiency in the Finnish study (14.5 and 11 µmol/L, respectively). There was no greater risk of AMI in nearvitamin C deficient Edinburgh men, unadjusted or adjusted, than in those with high concentrations of vitamin C (>60.5 µmol/L). Plasma vitamin C concentrations were lower in patients with an acute coronary syndrome (unstable angina or AMI within 2 wk) than in patients with stable CHD who were living in Boston (28). The 20% difference in vitamin C concentration was attributed to increased activity within the coronary lesion. Low plasma vitamin C was not associated with a greater extent of CHD (28). In the Scottish Heart Health Study, low dietary vitamin C was linked with an increased risk of total, but not of fatal, CHD in men (27). This suggests that the difference between the results of our study and those of the Finnish study was not likely to have been due to a strong association between vitamin C deficiency and fatal CHD in Finland. Whatever the explanation for the apparent difference in results, the ultimate conclusions are the same and do not argue in favor of the use of large vitamin C supplements to prevent CHD.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| REFERENCES |
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