Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Dietary nitrate supplementation opposes the elevated diaphragm blood flow in chronic heart failure during submaximal exercise.

Chronic heart failure (CHF) results in a greater cost of breathing and necessitates an elevated diaphragm blood flow (BF). Dietary nitrate (NO3 ‾) supplementation lowers the cost of exercise. We hypothesized that dietary NO3 ‾ supplementation would attenuate the CHF-induced greater cost of breathing and thus the heightened diaphragm BF during exercise. CHF rats received either 5days of NO3 ‾-rich beetroot (BR) juice (CHF+BR, n=10) or a placebo (CHF, n=10). Respiratory muscle BFs (radiolabeled microspheres) were measured at rest and during submaximal exercise (20m/min, 5% grade). Infarcted left ventricular area and normalized lung weight were not significantly different between groups. During submaximal exercise, diaphragm BF was markedly lower for CHF+BR than CHF (CHF+BR: 195±28; CHF: 309±71mL/min/100g, p=0.04). The change in diaphragm BF from rest to exercise was less (p=0.047) for CHF+BR than CHF. These findings demonstrate that dietary NO3 ‾ supplementation reduces the elevated diaphragm BF during exercise in CHF rats thus providing additional support for this therapeutic intervention in CHF.

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