Nadine Flowers
University of Warwick
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Chemical Communications | 2001
Philip L. Hentall; Nadine Flowers
A methyl substituent at C-5 of the nicotinamide ring is found to confer increased acid stability in a reduced nicotinamide model (5-20 fold) and in a reduced dinucleotide coenzyme (2-3 fold), while retaining reactivity towards hydride transfer.
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 2013
L C Hartley; Nadine Flowers; Jennifer Holmes; Aileen Clarke; Saverio Stranges; Lee Hooper; Karen Rees
Background There is increasing evidence that both green and black tea are beneficial for cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention. Objective Determine the effects of green and black tea on the primary prevention of CVD. Methods The following electronic databases were searched with no language restrictions from their inception to October 2012: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library and trial registers. Included studies fulfilled the following criteria: study design - RCTs, participants - free of CVD (includes those at high risk), intervention – Green tea, Black tea or tea extracts, comparator – no intervention or placebo, outcomes – diagnosis of CVD or change in the risk factor profile for CVD (blood pressure, lipids). Two reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts, assessed shortlisted studies for formal inclusion/exclusion, abstracted data and assessed methodological quality. Results Database searching resulted in1733 hits of which 130 went forward for formal inclusion/exclusion. Nine RCTs met the inclusion criteria. Five trials examined green tea extracts and four examined black tea extracts. No studies reported cardiovascular events. Black tea extracts were found to produce statistically significant reductions in LDL cholesterol (mean difference -0.46mmol/l [95% CI -0.54, -0.39]) and blood pressure (SBP - mean difference -1.85mmHG [-32.6, -0.44]; DBP - mean difference -1.32mmHG [-2.7, -0.06]), but only a small number of trials contributed to each analysis and studies were at some risk of bias. Green tea extracts were also found to produce statistically significant reductions in total cholesterol (mean difference -0.65 mmol/l [-0.81, -0.50]), LDL cholesterol (mean difference -0.58 mmol/l [-0.87, -0.28]) and blood pressure (SBP - mean difference -3.43 mmHG [-4.54, -2.31]), but only three studies contributed to each analysis. When both tea types were analysed together they showed favourable effects on LDL cholesterol (mean difference -0.47 mmol/l [-0.54, -0.40]) and blood pressure (SBP - mean difference -2.27 mmHG [-3.44, -1.11]; DBP mean difference -2.60 mmHG [-3.46, -1.73]). Conclusion There are very few long term studies examining the intake of green or black tea for the primary prevention of CVD. The limited evidence suggests that tea has favourable effects on CVD risk factors, but due to the small number of trials contributing to each analysis the results should be treated with caution and further high quality trials with longer term follow-up are needed to confirm this.
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2013
Karen Rees; Louise Hartley; Nadine Flowers; Aileen Clarke; Lee Hooper; Margaret Thorogood; Saverio Stranges
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2013
Louise Hartley; Ewemade Igbinedion; Jennifer Holmes; Nadine Flowers; Margaret Thorogood; Aileen Clarke; Saverio Stranges; Lee Hooper; Karen Rees
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2013
Louise Hartley; Nadine Flowers; Jennifer Holmes; Aileen Clarke; Saverio Stranges; Lee Hooper; Karen Rees
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2013
Karen Rees; Louise Hartley; Camilla Day; Nadine Flowers; Aileen Clarke; Saverio Stranges
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2015
Christine Clar; Zainab Oseni; Nadine Flowers; Maryam Keshtkar-Jahromi; Karen Rees
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2015
Lena Al-Khudairy; Louise Hartley; Christine Clar; Nadine Flowers; Lee Hooper; Karen Rees
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2014
Louise Hartley; Nadine Flowers; Myeong Soo Lee; Edzard Ernst; Karen Rees
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2014
Nadine Flowers; Louise Hartley; Daniel Todkill; Saverio Stranges; Karen Rees