4.5 Article

Relationship between urinary nitrate concentrations and cognitive function in older adults: findings from the NHANES survey

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Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09637486.2020.1868411

Keywords

Inorganic nitrate; cognition; ageing; nitric oxide; nutritional biomarkers

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  1. Nottingham University

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Urinary nitrate concentrations were not significantly associated with cognitive performance, and the associations were also not significant in subjects at higher cardiovascular risk and with suboptimal vitamin D status. Longitudinal analyses are needed to further explore the relationship between urinary nitrate concentrations, dietary nitrate intake, and cognitive function.
This study evaluated the association of urinary nitrate concentrations with cognition in older subjects enrolled in the NHANES study. We also explored whether associations between urinary nitrate and cognition were modified by cardiovascular risk, vitamin D status and vitamin C intake. Two NHANES cycles were merged (2011-2012 and 2013-2014) and a total of 1,015 adults aged 60-80 (69.4 +/- 0.3) years were included. Cognition was assessed using the Word List Learning, Word List Recall, Animal Fluency and the Digit Symbol Substitution tests. Urinary nitrate was analysed using electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. Urinary nitrate concentrations were not associated with cognitive performance on any of the cognitive tests. Associations were also not significant in subjects at greater risk for cognitive impairment (i.e. high cardiovascular risk and non-optimal vitamin D status). Longitudinal analyses are needed to explore the associations of urinary nitrate concentrations with dietary nitrate intake and cognitive function.

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