EFFECTS OF CHELATION WITH EDTA AND VITAMIN B THERAPY ON NITRIC OXIDE-RELATED ENDOTHELIAL VASODILATOR FUNCTION

SUMMARY 1. ‘Chelation therapy’ with EDTA is being frequently used in patients with cardiovascular disease, despite limited objective evidence of effectiveness. Depressed nitric oxide (•NO)‐related endothelial function accompanies atherosclerosis, and even the vascular risk factors alone, and is impr...

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Published inClinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology Vol. 26; no. 11; pp. 853 - 856
Main Authors Green, Daniel J, O'Driscoll, J Gerard, Maiorana, Andrew, Scrimgeour, Neil B, Weerasooriya, Rukshen, Taylor, Roger R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melbourne, Australia Blackwell Science Pty 01.11.1999
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Summary:SUMMARY 1. ‘Chelation therapy’ with EDTA is being frequently used in patients with cardiovascular disease, despite limited objective evidence of effectiveness. Depressed nitric oxide (•NO)‐related endothelial function accompanies atherosclerosis, and even the vascular risk factors alone, and is improved by numerous interventions that also improve prognosis in vascular disease. 2. The aim of the present study was to determine the influence of chelation therapy with EDTA alone and EDTA in combination with B vitamins on endothelial function. 3. After a control series of saline infusions, we examined the effects of a series of EDTA infusions (1.5 g, 10 times over 6 weeks) in eight subjects with coronary artery disease. In addition, because EDTA is commonly supplemented by other components, particularly B group vitamins, we subsequently examined the effect of a similar series of vitamin‐supplemented EDTA infusions. 4. Forearm blood flow (FBF) was assessed by plethysmography and graded intrabrachial infusions of the endothelium‐dependent vasodilator acetylcholine (ACh) and the endothelium‐ independent dilator sodium nitroprusside (SNP). 5. There was no difference in vasodilation to either drug after EDTA alone compared with the control periods, but the response to ACh was augmented after combined therapy (P < 0.03, ANOVA). The latter was accompanied by a small but consistent mean (±SEM) fall in plasma homocysteine of 1.6±0.5 μmol/L (P < 0.05). 6. The selective increase in the vasodilator response to ACh after therapy with EDTA and several B group vitamins indicates that NO‐related endothelial function was improved. The absence of response to EDTA alone suggests that the supplementary vitamins were necessary for this benefit, which may have been related to the accompanying decrease in plasma homocysteine. These results, along with the current interest in the possible cardioprotective effects of vitamins and the increasing administration of ‘chelation therapy’, call for more definitive studies on these aspects of ‘alternative medicine’.
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ArticleID:CEP3156
ObjectType-Article-1
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ISSN:0305-1870
1440-1681
DOI:10.1046/j.1440-1681.1999.03156.x