Association between Serum Vitamin C and the Blood Pressure: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational Studies.

Published
May 20, 2020
Journal
Cardiovascular therapeutics
PICOID
77c9719c
DOI
Citations
31
Keywords
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 Li Ran et al.
Patients/Population/Participants

hypertensive subjects

Intervention

vitamin C intake

Comparison

serum vitamin C levels

Outcome

blood pressure

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Hypertension is regarded as a major and independent risk factor of cardiovascular diseases, and numerous studies observed an inverse correlation between vitamin C intake and blood pressure. Our aim is to investigate the relationship between serum vitamin C and blood pressure, including the concentration differences and the correlation strength. Two independent researchers searched and screened articles from the National Library of Medicine, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, VIP databases, and WANFANG databases. A total of 18 eligible studies were analyzed in the Reviewer Manager 5.3 software, including 14 English articles and 4 Chinese articles. In the evaluation of serum vitamin C levels, the concentration in hypertensive subjects is 15.13  People with hypertension have a relatively low serum vitamin C, and vitamin C is inversely associated with both systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure.

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