Dietary intake of advanced glycation end products did not affect endothelial function and inflammation in healthy adults in a randomized controlled trial.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the effects of a high-AGE diet versus a low-AGE diet on endothelial function, circulating AGEs, inflammatory mediators, and AGE receptors in healthy adults.
Results Summary
The study found that a low-AGE diet reduced serum and urine CML levels but had no significant impact on endothelial function or inflammatory mediators. A high-AGE diet showed no significant changes in CML levels or any measured health outcomes.
Population
24 healthy adults aged 50-69 years.
Effective Dosage
Not specified (diets prepared at high or mild temperatures).
Duration
6 weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
low-AGE diet | decrease | serum carboxymethyl-lysine (CML) | healthy adults | from 763 ± 24 to 679 ± 29 ng/mL | changed from baseline to 6 wk | #1 |
low-AGE diet | decrease | urine carboxymethyl-lysine (CML) | healthy adults | from 1.37 ± 1.47 to 0.77 ± 2.01 μg/mL creatinine | changed from baseline to 6 wk | #2 |
high-AGE diet | no change | serum and urinary CML concentrations | healthy adults | no significant changes | no significant changes | #3 |
high-AGE diet | no change | peripheral arterial tonometry | healthy middle-aged to older adults | no significant impact | had no significant impact | #4 |
high-AGE diet | no change | inflammatory mediators | healthy middle-aged to older adults | no significant impact | had no significant impact | #5 |
low-AGE diet | no change | peripheral arterial tonometry | healthy middle-aged to older adults | no significant impact | had no significant impact | #6 |
low-AGE diet | no change | inflammatory mediators | healthy middle-aged to older adults | no significant impact | had no significant impact | #7 |
diet high or low in AGEs | no change | endothelial function | healthy middle-aged to older adults | no impact | had no impact | #8 |
diet high or low in AGEs | no change | inflammatory mediators | healthy middle-aged to older adults | no impact | had no impact | #9 |
When food is heated to high temperatures, the characteristic "browning" generates advanced glycation end products (AGEs). AGEs are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other adverse outcomes. Whether dietary AGEs are absorbed and are harmful to human health remains highly controversial. The objective of this study was to compare the effects of a diet high or low in AGEs on endothelial function, circulating AGEs, inflammatory mediators, and circulating receptors for AGEs in healthy adults. A randomized, parallel-arm, controlled dietary intervention was conducted for 6 wk with 24 healthy adults, aged 50-69 y, that compared isocaloric, food-equivalent diets that were prepared at either high or mild temperatures. Peripheral arterial tonometry, serum and urine carboxymethyl-lysine (CML), inflammatory mediators (interleukin-6, C-reactive protein, vascular adhesion molecule-1, and tumor necrosis factor-α receptors I and II), soluble receptor for AGEs, and endogenous secretory receptor for AGEs were measured at baseline and after 6 wk of dietary intervention. In the low-AGE diet group, the following changed from baseline to 6 wk (mean ± SE): serum CML from 763 ± 24 to 679 ± 29 ng/mL (P = 0.03) and urine CML from 1.37 ± 1.47 to 0.77 ± 2.01 μg/mL creatinine (P = 0.02). There were no significant changes in serum and urinary CML concentrations from baseline to follow-up in the high-AGE diet group. A high- or low-AGE diet had no significant impact on peripheral arterial tonometry or any inflammatory mediators after 6 wk of dietary intervention. In healthy middle-aged to older adults, consumption of a diet high or low in AGEs for 6 wk had no impact on endothelial function and inflammatory mediators, 2 precursors of cardiovascular disease.