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Query: UNIPROT:Q99581 (
FEV
)
3,296
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of vitamin C pretreatment in preventing ragweed-induced bronchospasm was evaluated in 6 ragweed-sensitive asthmatics studied in a double-blind randomized fashion. The patients received either lactose capsules or 500 mg of ascorbic acid and were studied out of season. Antigen dose-response curves were determined prior to the administration of lactose or ascorbic acid in each individual subject and subsequently after administration of ascorbic acid or lactose. Bothe PD20FEV1 (provocation dose necessary for a 20% reduction in forced expiratory volume in 1 second) and PD35SGaw (provocation dose necessary for a 35% reduction in specific airways conductance) were determined. In none of the six patients was there a change in baseline
FEV
1 (p greater than 0.70) nor the overall average baseline specific airways conductance (rho greater than 0.90). Additionally, no statistically significant difference (p greater than 0.60) was noted between log PD35SGaw vitamin C day and lactose day. Likewise, no statistically significant difference (p greater than 0.60) was evident when comparing log PD20FEV1 lactose and ascorbic acid days.
Vitamin C
(500 MG) HAS NO PROTECTIVE EFFECT AGAINST RAGWEED ANTIGEN-INDUCED BRONCHOSPASM.
...
PMID:The effect of vitamin C on antigen-induced bronchospasm. 36 73
Reduced pulmonary function is an important predictor of mortality in the general population, and antioxidant vitamins are thought to positively influence pulmonary function.
Vitamin C
, vitamin E, retinol, and carotenoids are powerful antioxidants but information about the joint relation of serum levels of these antioxidants to pulmonary function is limited. We analyzed the association of
FEV
(1) and FVC with serum vitamins C and E, retinol, and carotenoids (beta-cryptoxanthin, lutein/zeaxanthin, beta-carotene, and lycopene) in a cross-sectional study. The analysis was carried out in a sample of 1,616 randomly selected residents of Western New York, USA, age 35 to 79 yr and free of respiratory disease. Lung function was adjusted for height, age, sex, and race and expressed as percentage of predicted normal
FEV
(1) (
FEV
(1)%) and FVC (FVC%). Participants in the lowest quartile of each of the serum antioxidants had consistently lower
FEV
(1)% and FVC% than those in higher quartiles. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed significant associations of vitamin C, vitamin E, beta-cryptoxanthin, lutein/zeaxanthin, beta-carotene, and retinol with
FEV
(1)% when these variables were investigated individually after adjustment for other covariates (smoking status, pack-years of smoking, weight, eosinophil count, and education). When all of these antioxidant vitamins were analyzed simultaneously in a multivariate regression model, the strongest association was seen with vitamin E and beta-cryptoxanthin. Only retinol showed an independent effect on
FEV
(1)% after controlling for vitamin E and beta-cryptoxanthin. As for
FEV
(1)%, vitamin E and beta-cryptoxanthin were most strongly related to FVC% when all variables were considered in the multivariate regression model. The differences in
FEV
(1) associated with a reduction of one standard deviation of serum vitamin E or beta-cryptoxanthin were equivalent to the negative influence of approximately 1 to 2 yr of aging. Our findings support the hypothesis that antioxidant vitamins may play a role in respiratory health and that vitamin E and beta-cryptoxanthin appear to be stronger correlates of lung function than other antioxidant vitamins.
...
PMID:The relation of serum levels of antioxidant vitamins C and E, retinol and carotenoids with pulmonary function in the general population. 1131 66