# Estimated Amounts of β-Carotene, Vitamin B6, Riboflavin and Niacin in the Daily Diet of Older Subjects Associate Negatively with ADP-Induced Aggregation of Blood Platelets Independently of Cardiovascular Risk Factors

**Authors:** Kamil Karolczak, Agnieszka Guligowska, Bartłomiej K. Sołtysik, Joanna Kostanek, Tomasz Kostka, Cezary Watala

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu17213461 · Nutrients · 2025-11-02

## TL;DR

This study finds that certain vitamins in the diets of older people are linked to lower platelet activity, which could reduce blood clotting risks.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific vitamins that negatively correlate with platelet aggregation in older adults, independent of cardiovascular risk factors.

## Key findings

- Higher β-carotene intake is linked to lower ADP-induced platelet aggregation.
- Vitamin B6, riboflavin, and niacin also show negative associations with ADP-induced aggregation.
- Arachidonic acid-induced aggregation is also negatively associated with β-carotene intake.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Platelet-dependent thrombotic risk increases with age. Little is known, however, about the potential effect of vitamins on platelet reactivity in older subjects. Methods: Therefore, in the present study we examined the dependencies of whole blood platelet aggregability (in response to arachidonic acid (AA), collagen (COL) or adenosinediphosphate (ADP), using impedance aggregometry) in older men and women (60–65 yr, n = 246) on the intakes of vitamins (vitamins A, E, C, B6, B12 and D, niacin, thiamine, riboflavin, retinol, β-carotene and folates) with a typical daily diet (vitamin contents estimated using Dieta 5.0 software). Results: Overall, significant negative bootstrap-boosted partial correlation coefficients, adjusted for selected cardiovascular risk factors, were revealed for AA and β-carotene, and ADP and β-carotene, riboflavin, vitamin B6 and niacin. These findings were further validated by the outcomes of the bootstrap-boosted canonical analysis, confirming the relationships revealed for ADP, and to a lesser extent for AA. COL-dependent platelet aggregation appeared to not be associated with the amount of vitamins in the subjects’ daily diet. Conclusions: Hence, we conclude that the intake of vitamins in the daily diet of older subjects is negatively associated with platelet aggregability in an agonist- and vitamin-specific manner.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** β-carotene (PubChem CID 573), vitamin B6 (PubChem CID 1054), riboflavin (PubChem CID 1072), niacin (PubChem CID 938), adenosinediphosphate (ADP) (PubChem CID 197)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** thrombotic (MESH:D013927), platelet aggregation (MESH:D001791)
- **Chemicals:** AA (MESH:D016718), Niacin (MESH:D009525), ADP (MESH:D000244), vitamins A, E, C, B6, B12 and D (-), beta-Carotene (MESH:D019207), folates (MESH:D005492), thiamine (MESH:D013831), Riboflavin (MESH:D012256), retinol (MESH:D014801), Vitamin B6 (MESH:D025101)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

96 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12610711/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12610711