Accentuated blood pressure (BP) fluctuation and low cerebral blood flow (CBF) response to CO increase the risk of transient ischemic attack (TIA) recurrence and stroke in TIA patients. Improving cardio- and cerebrovascular function may reduce stroke risk. We found dietary nitrate lowered dynamic blood pressure variability (BPV) in rats and improved cerebrovascular CO reactivity in healthy individuals. In 30 TIA patients, we examined the effects of a 7-day supplementation of dietary nitrate (0.1 mmol·kg·day) on cerebrovascular function using a randomized, single-blinded, placebo-controlled study design. We hypothesized that 7-day dietary nitrate supplementation would decrease variabilities in BP and CBF and improve CBF-CO slope and cerebral autoregulation (CA). We assessed beat-to-beat middle cerebral artery blood velocity (MCAv; index of CBF) and BP at rest and during CO breathing. Transfer function analysis was performed on beat-to-beat MCAv and BP to determine CA parameters (gain, phase, and coherence). Irrespective of treatment, high- and low-frequency BP-MCAv gain and MCAv-CO slope increased 7 days following TIA onset, while low-frequency BPV decreased ( < 0.05 vs. baseline). At follow-up, dietary nitrate elevated plasma nitrate concentration by ~547% ( < 0.001) and moderately lowered BPV ( = 0.6, = 0.011), MCAv variability ( = 0.7, = 0.018), and BP-MCAv coherence ( = 0.7, = 0.008) in the very-low-frequency range (0.02-0.07 Hz), while MCAv-CO slope and arterial stiffness were unaffected ( > 0.05). Concurrent with standard treatment, dietary nitrate supplementation reduces BP and CBF fluctuation and improves cerebral autoregulation in TIA patients, without affecting cerebrovascular CO reactivity. We found dietary nitrate supplementation reduced blood pressure and brain blood flow fluctuations and improved the relationship between blood pressure and brain blood flow in transient ischemic attack patients. Meanwhile, dietary nitrate had no effects on the brain blood vessels' response to CO. We attribute the improved brain blood flow stability to the improved myogenic control of blood pressure with dietary nitrate. Our findings indicate that dietary nitrate could be an effective strategy for stabilizing blood pressure and brain blood flow following transient ischemic attack.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00160.2020DOI Listing

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