Effect of hypotensive therapy combined with modified diet or zinc supplementation on biochemical parameters and mineral status in hypertensive patients.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the effect of antihypertensive treatment, modified diet, and zinc supplementation on mineral status, including copper, in newly diagnosed hypertensive patients.
Results Summary
The study did not report significant findings specific to copper's effects, focusing primarily on zinc's impact on mineral status and biochemical parameters. Copper concentrations were measured but no detailed outcomes were discussed.
Population
Newly diagnosed hypertensive patients on antihypertensive monotherapy.
Effective Dosage
Not specified for copper.
Duration
Not specified.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
antihypertensive monotherapy | decrease | zinc concentration in serum | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | decreased | #1 |
antihypertensive monotherapy | decrease | zinc concentration in erythrocytes | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | decreased | #2 |
antihypertensive monotherapy | increase | level of zinc in urine | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | increased | #3 |
antihypertensive monotherapy | decrease | CAT activity | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | decreased | #4 |
antihypertensive monotherapy | decrease | SOD activity | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | decreased | #5 |
antihypertensive monotherapy | decrease | TNF-α concentration in serum | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | decreased | #6 |
antihypertensive monotherapy | increase | level of NO in the serum | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | increased | #7 |
zinc supplementation | increase | zinc concentration in serum | group S | - | led to an increase | #8 |
zinc supplementation | increase | zinc concentration in erythrocytes | group S | - | led to an increase | #9 |
zinc supplementation | increase | zinc concentration in hair | group S | - | led to an increase | #10 |
higher zinc intake | decrease | glucose concentration in the serum | groups with higher zinc intake | - | decreased | #11 |
hypotensive drugs | neutral | zinc status | newly diagnosed hypertensive patients | - | disturb | #12 |
antihypertensive monotherapy combined with increased zinc supply in the diet or supplementation | neutral | zinc homeostasis | patients with hypertension | - | favorably modify | #13 |
antihypertensive monotherapy combined with increased zinc supply in the diet or supplementation | neutral | glucose status | patients with hypertension | - | regulate | #14 |
BACKGROUND: Hypotensive therapy leads to a number of trace elements metabolism disturbances. Zinc balance is frequently affected by antihypertensive treatment. AIM: To evaluate the effect of a hypotensive treatment, modified diet and zinc supplementation on mineral status and selected biochemical parameters in newly diagnosed hypertensive patients on monotherapy. METHODS: In the first stage, arterial hypertension in ninety-eight human subjects was diagnosed. In the second stage, antihypertensive monopharmacotherapy was implemented. In the third stage, patients were randomized into three groups and continued antihypertensive monotherapy: group D received an optimal-mineral-content diet, group S received zinc supplementation, and group C had no changes in diet or zinc supplementation. Iron, zinc, and copper concentrations in serum, erythrocytes, urine, and hair were determined. Lipids, glucose, ceruloplasmin, ferritin, albumin, C-reactive protein (CRP), tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), nitric oxide (NO), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) were assayed in serum. RESULTS: Antihypertensive monotherapy decreased zinc concentration in serum and erythrocytes and increased the level of zinc in urine, decreased CAT and SOD activity, TNF-α concentration in serum, and increased the level of NO in the serum. Zinc supply led to an increase in zinc concentration in serum, erythrocytes, and hair (in group S only). In the groups with higher zinc intake, decreased glucose concentration in the serum was observed. Significant correlation was seen between the zinc and glucose serum concentrations. CONCLUSION: Hypotensive drugs disturb zinc status in newly diagnosed hypertensive patients. Antihypertensive monotherapy combined with increased zinc supply in the diet or supplementation favorably modify zinc homeostasis and regulate glucose status without blood pressure affecting in patients with hypertension.