GUEST BLOG / By Jessica Berman--Antioxidants in
Citrus May Head Off Obesity-Related Diseases says an article in Voice of
America’s website
Eating
citrus fruit could head off chronic diseases that are related to obesity, a
growing health problem in many parts of the world, according to a new study.
Diabetes,
heart disease and liver disease are increasing as more people pack on the
kilos. But there’s a substance in citrus fruits called flavanones, which are
antioxidants that help people’s bodies reduce the amount of oxidative stress.
The diseases linked to obesity are caused by oxidative stress and its related
inflammation.
When humans
consume a fatty diet, their fat cells produce reactive oxygen species that harm
cells. When fat cells become too large, which they do in obese individuals,
they produce higher levels of reactive oxygen species that overwhelm the body,
causing inflammation and disease.
Researchers
say antioxidants found in fruits and vegetables, such as citrus flavanones,
help fight reactive oxygen species and reduce oxidative stress in animals that
eat a high fat diet.
Paula Ferreira, a graduate researcher at the Universidade Estadual Paulist in Brazil conducted the research. The month-long experiment by Ferreira and colleagues involved 50 mice, feeding them either a normal diet, a high fat diet, or a high fat diet with three flavanones.
Investigators
found the mice that ate a high fat diet, but no flavanones, had significantly
higher levels of cell damage, than mice that ate a normal diet
Mice on the
high fat died had 80 percent more cell damage markers in their blood and 57
percent in the liver compared to rodents fed a normal diet, report researchers.
But mice fed
a high fat diet plus the three flavanones - hesperidin, eriocitrin and
eriodictyol - had a reduction in cell damage markers compared to mice on a
standard diet. Reductions in the liver ranged from 50 to 64 percent depending
upon the flavanone given compared to those on a high fat diet alone.
Researchers
said the obese mice became healthier consuming citrus flavanones even though
they did lose any weight.
“Our results
indicate that in the future, we can use citrus flavanones, a class of antioxidants,
to prevent or delay chronic diseases caused by obesity in humans,” said
Ferreira.
It’s also
possible, said researchers, that citrus could be beneficial to people who are
not obese but eat a fatty, Western-style diet, she said. Ferreira said the best
way to get flavanones is to drink them, like orange juice.
“Many of the
citrus juices, because citrus juice has high amounts of ... these compounds.”
The
researchers presented their findings at the American Chemical Society’s annual
meeting in Pennsylvania, the largest scientific society in the world.
Investigators
next plan to conduct human studies, to see whether it’s healthier to give
citrus flavanones in juice or pill form, or whether they have the same effect.
SOURCE: Voice of
America website, August 21, 2016
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