Most of us think of oranges as the go-to source of vitamin C. But inside every glass of orange juice sits another nutrient with powerful cardiovascular benefits: hesperidin.
Hesperidin is a natural citrus flavonoid found primarily in oranges and their juice.
It’s becoming one of the most researched plant compounds for heart, blood vessel, and antioxidant support — and when paired with vitamin C, its benefits appear even stronger.
For a deeper dive into this topic, you can read our full article here: The Benefits of Hesperidin.
Below, we break down what hesperidin is, what the science shows, and why supplements containing hesperidin (often paired with vitamin C) may be worth considering.
What Is Hesperidin?
Hesperidin is one of the most abundant flavonoids in citrus fruit. In fact, around 90% of the flavonoids in orange juicecome from hesperidin.
Researchers are increasingly interested in hesperidin because of its potential to:
- Support healthy blood pressure
- Improve blood vessel flexibility
- Enhance circulation and microvascular function
- Reduce oxidative stress
- Work synergistically with vitamin C
These effects aren’t just theoretical — they’ve been demonstrated in controlled human studies.
What the Research Shows (The Key Study)
One of the most important clinical trials investigating hesperidin was published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
You can view the study directly here.
Study Highlights
Researchers studied 24 healthy, middle-aged men across three 4-week phases. Each participant consumed one of the following per phase:
- Orange juice (naturally high in hesperidin)
- A control drink + hesperidin supplement
- A control drink + placebo
The findings were clear:
1. Hesperidin helped lower diastolic blood pressure
Both orange juice and the hesperidin supplement significantly reduced DBP compared with placebo.
2. Hesperidin improved blood vessel function — even after one dose
Six hours after consuming hesperidin, participants had measurably better endothelial function (the ability of blood vessels to relax and expand).
3. The more hesperidin absorbed, the better the vascular response
Plasma analysis showed a direct correlation between hesperidin uptake and improvements in vessel dilation.
Why Vitamin C Makes Hesperidin More Effective
The study showed that orange juice performed even better than hesperidin alone. Why?
Because orange juice contains natural vitamin C, a nutrient known to:
- Support nitric oxide (NO) availability
- Improve antioxidant status
- Work synergistically with flavonoids
- Enhance endothelial function
- Reduce oxidative stress in blood vessels
This is why many formulas pair hesperidin with vitamin C — the two nutrients amplify each other’s effects.
To explore a supplement designed with this synergy in mind, see Tangy Vitamin C.