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Dietary Nitrates: A New Way of Increasing Nitric Oxide Production

Written by Robbie Durand

Dietary Nitrates: A New Way of Increasing Nitric Oxide Production

Nothing beats getting a good pump in the gym. Traditionally, bodybuilders have resorted to
using nitric oxide (NO) products to enhance NO production. Many bodybuilders know that nitric
oxide can be increased via the synthesis of nitric oxide synthase, through the amino acid
arginine. What many bodybuilders may not know is that NO can be produced via an alternative
pathway without NO synthase.

Diet is a major provider of nitrates in the body. Nitrates can enhance the production of nitric
oxide, independent of the arginine-dependent NO synthase pathway. 1 In 2004, it was
demonstrated that inorganic nitrate from dietary sources could be a major source of circulating
nitrite— which enhances nitric oxide production independent of the arginine-NOS pathway.
2

In one experiment, healthy subjects who ingested a dietary nitrate experienced a four-to-fivefold
increase in plasma nitrite. It turns out that much of the dietary nitrite from food entering the
stomach from saliva survives intact and reaches the systemic circulation. This suggests that
inorganic nitrate from food can be a substrate for NO formation in the body. Nevertheless,
based on numerous studies, it seems clear that dietary nitrates are indeed bioactive in the body.

Sources of Dietary Nitrates

Incorporating some fruits and vegetables into the diet in place of high protein can help facilitate
greater production of nitric oxide production. A diet rich in fruits and vegetables is associated
with a lower blood pressure and reduced risk of cardiovascular events. Despite extensive
research, the active ingredient(s) responsible for this effect has not been pinpointed, and trials

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Dietary Nitrates: A New Way of Increasing Nitric Oxide Production

Written by Robbie Durand

with single nutrients have been largely unsuccessful.

Remarkably, in a recent study of healthy volunteers, 3 the blood pressure-lowering effect of


dietary nitrate supplementation was similar to what was seen in the healthy control group in the
DASH project, a classic vegetable/fruit diet trial
4

— indicating that nitrate could be an important and active ingredient of this diet. This means
taking a nitrate supplement could be just as effective as eating fruits and vegetables for
increasing NO production.

It should be noted that the dosage of nitrate used in the study (0.1 mmol/kg/day) is readily
achievable through a diet rich in vegetables. So for those guys who are not eating fruits and
vegetables, you may be missing out on getting better pumps in the gym.

Beetroot Juice— A High Source of Nitrates

In a recent study, Webb and colleagues found that blood pressure decreases if healthy
volunteers ingest a natural nitrate source (beetroot juice). Researchers demonstrated that it was
the nitrate in the juice that had the effect, and it occurred via the nitrate’s chemical reduction to
nitrite. 5 In the study, 0.5 L of fresh beetroot juice decreased systolic blood pressure as much as
10 mmHg, and blood pressure was still significantly reduced 24 hours later. 5 The

researchers found that blood pressure was reduced within just one hour of ingesting beetroot
juice, with a peak drop occurring three to four hours after ingestion. Some degree of reduction
continued to be observed up to 24 hours after ingestion.

Researchers demonstrated that the decrease in blood pressure was due to the chemical
formation of nitrite from the dietary nitrate in the juice. The nitrate in the juice is converted in
saliva, by bacteria on the tongue, into nitrite. This nitrite-containing saliva is swallowed, and in
the acidic environment of the stomach is either converted into nitric oxide or re-enters the
circulation as nitrite. The peak time of reduction in blood pressure correlated with the
appearance and peak levels of nitrite in the circulation— an effect that was absent in a second
group of volunteers who refrained from swallowing their saliva during, and for three hours

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Dietary Nitrates: A New Way of Increasing Nitric Oxide Production

Written by Robbie Durand

following, beetroot ingestion.

A reduction in blood pressure was also demonstrated in 2006, in healthy volunteers, after three
days of dietary supplementation with inorganic nitrate. 6 In 2007, it was shown that dietary
nitrate decreases whole-body oxygen consumption in humans during submaximal exercise.
7

This could be due to the vasodilatation of the blood vessel walls, causing less need for oxygen
consumption by muscle. The nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway may be viewed as complementary to
the classical arginine-NOS pathway. These pathways work partly parallel to each other, but
when oxygen availability is reduced and NOS activity is decreased, nitrite reduction to NO
becomes more pronounced.

In sum, consuming natural foods high in nitrates may enhance muscle pumps in the gym. Or
you could try beetroot juice, which is naturally high in nitrates.

References:

1. Lundberg JO, Weitzberg E, Cole JA and Benjamin N. Nitrate, bacteria and human health. Na
t Rev
Microbiol,
2004 Jul;2(7):593-602.

2. Lundberg JO and Govoni M. Inorganic nitrate is a possible source for systemic generation of
nitric oxide. Free Radic Biol Med, 37, 395-400 (2004).

3. Larsen FJ, Ekblom B, Sahlin K, Lundberg JO and Weitzberg E. Effects of dietary nitrate on
blood pressure in healthy volunteers. N Engl J Med, 355, 2792-2793 (2006).

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Dietary Nitrates: A New Way of Increasing Nitric Oxide Production

Written by Robbie Durand

4. Appel LJ, Moore TJ, Obarzanek, E, Vollmer WM, Svetkey LP, Sacks FM, Bray GA, Vogt TM,

Cutler JA, Windhauser MM, Lin PH and Karanja N, A clinical trial of the effects of dietary
patterns on blood pressure. DASH Collaborative Research Group. N Engl J Med, 336,
1117-1124 (1997).

5. Webb AJ, Patel N, Loukogeorgakis S, Okorie M, Aboud Z, Misra S, Rashid R, Miall P,


Deanfield J, Benjamin N, Macallister R, Hobbs AJ and Ahluwalia A. Acute blood pressure
lowering, vasoprotective, and antiplatelet properties of dietary nitrate via bioconversion to nitrite.
Hypertension, 51, 784-90 (2008).

6. Larsen FJ, Ekblom B, Sahlin K, Lundberg JO and Weitzberg, E. Effects of dietary nitrate on
blood pressure in healthy volunteers. N Engl J Med, 355, 2792- 2793 (2006).

7. Larsen FJ, Weitzberg E, Lundberg JO and Ekblom B. Effects of dietary nitrate on oxygen cost
during exercise. Acta Physiol (Oxf), 191, 59-66 (2007).

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