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Author Notes:

Corresponding author. Tel: +1 404 6861832; fax: +1 404 686 4888, Email: jcalver@emory.edu

This article is part of the Review Focus on: Inorganic Nitrite and Nitrate in Cardiovascular Health and Disease

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Research Funding:

Supported by grants from the American Diabetes Association (7-09-BS-26) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (1R01HL098481-01). This work was also supported by funding from the Carlyle Fraser Heart Center (CFHC) of Emory University Hospital Midtown.

Keywords:

  • Exercise
  • Nitric oxide
  • Nitrite
  • Cardioprotection

Cardioprotective effects of nitrite during exercise

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Journal Title:

Cardiovascular Research

Volume:

Volume 89, Number 3

Publisher:

, Pages 499-506

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Exercise training has been shown to reduce many risk factors related to cardiovascular disease, including high blood pressure, high cholesterol, obesity, and insulin resistance. More importantly, exercise training has been consistently shown to confer sustainable protection against myocardial infarction in animal models and has been associated with improved survival following a heart attack in humans. It is still unclear how exercise training is able to protect the heart, but some studies have suggested that it increases a number of classical signalling molecules. For instance, exercise can increase components of the endogenous antioxidant defences (i.e. superoxide dismutase and catalase), increase the expression of heat shock proteins, activate ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channels, and increase the expression and activity of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase resulting in an increase in NO levels. This review article will provide a brief summary of the role that these signalling molecules play in mediating the cardioprotective effects of exercise. In particular, it will highlight the role that NO plays and introduce the idea that the stable NO metabolite, nitrite, may play a major role in mediating these cardioprotective effects.

Copyright information:

Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2010. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

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