Benfotiamine counteracts smoking-induced vascular dysfunction in healthy smokers

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Abstract

Background. Smoking induces endothelial dysfunction (ED) mainly by exacerbating oxidative stress (OS) and inflammation. Benfotiamine, a thiamine prodrug with high bioavailability, prevents nicotine-induced vascular dysfunction in rats. It remained unknown whether this effect also occurs in humans. Methods. Therefore, 20 healthy volunteers (mean age: 38 years) were investigated twice, 710 days apart in a randomized, cross-over, and investigator-blinded design. Vascular function was assessed by flow-mediated vasodilatation (FMD) of the brachial artery and by measurements of the soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule (sVCAM)-1. Investigations were performed after an overnight fast as well as 20 minutes after one cigarette smoking. On another day, the same procedure was applied following a 3-day oral therapy with benfotiamine (1050 mg/day). Ten patients were randomized to start with smoking alone, and ten started with benfotiamine. Results. Results are expressed as (mean ± SEM). Smoking acutely induced a decrease in FMD by 50 ( ** P 0.001 versus baseline) an effect significantly reduced by benfotiamine treatment to 25*§ ( * P 0.05 versus baseline, § P 0.05 versus smoking alone). Smoking-induced elevation in sVCAM-1 was also prevented by benfotiamine. The endothelium-independent vasodilatation remained unaltered between days. Conclusion. In healthy volunteers, smoking blunts vascular function mirrored by a decrease in FMD and an increase in sVCAM-1. Short-term treatment with benfotiamine significantly reduces these effects, showing protective vascular properties. © 2012 Alin Stirban et al.

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Stirban, A., Nandrean, S., Kirana, S., Götting, C., Veresiu, I. A., & Tschoepe, D. (2012). Benfotiamine counteracts smoking-induced vascular dysfunction in healthy smokers. International Journal of Vascular Medicine, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/968761

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