| Literature DB >> 23150750 |
I Andújar1, M C Recio, R M Giner, J L Ríos.
Abstract
This paper compiles the beneficial effects of cocoa polyphenols on human health, especially with regard to cardiovascular and inflammatory diseases, metabolic disorders, and cancer prevention. Their antioxidant properties may be responsible for many of their pharmacological effects, including the inhibition of lipid peroxidation and the protection of LDL-cholesterol against oxidation, and increase resistance to oxidative stress. The phenolics from cocoa also modify the glycemic response and the lipid profile, decreasing platelet function and inflammation along with diastolic and systolic arterial pressures, which, taken together, may reduce the risk of cardiovascular mortality. Cocoa polyphenols can also modulate intestinal inflammation through the reduction of neutrophil infiltration and expression of different transcription factors, which leads to decreases in the production of proinflammatory enzymes and cytokines. The phenolics from cocoa may thus protect against diseases in which oxidative stress is implicated as a causal or contributing factor, such as cancer. They also have antiproliferative, antimutagenic, and chemoprotective effects, in addition to their anticariogenic effects.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23150750 PMCID: PMC3488419 DOI: 10.1155/2012/906252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Chemical structure of major cocoa phenolics.
(a)
| Metabolic and endocrine disorders | ||
|---|---|---|
| Assays | Effects | |
|
| Pancreatic | (i) Cocoa extracts and procyanidins dose-dependently inhibited pancreatic |
| HepG2 and Caco2 [ | (i) (+)-catechin, (−)-epicatechin, procyanidin B2, procyanidin C1, and cinnamtannin A2 (10 | |
|
| ||
|
| Randomized crossover trial with 19 hypertensive patients with impaired glucose tolerance [ | (i) Flavanol-rich dark chocolate (100 g/day for 15 days): |
| Randomized, crossover feeding trial in 42 high-risk volunteers [ | (i) Chronic cocoa consumption (42 g/day for 4 weeks): | |
| Meta-analysis of 8 randomized controlled trials involving 215 participants [ | (i) Short-term cocoa consumption: | |
| Randomized, single-blind, crossover study with 14 overweight/obese subjects [ | (i) 20 g of dark chocolate with 500 mg of polyphenols and then 20 g of dark chocolate with 1000 mg of polyphenols or vice versa for 2 weeks separated by a 1-week washout period: | |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled double-blind crossover trial [ | (i) High polyphenol chocolate (16.6 mg of epicatechins in 45 g): | |
(b)
| Cardiovascular diseases | |
|---|---|
| Assays | Effects |
| Forty-two high-risk patients in a randomized crossover feeding trial for 4 weeks [ | (i) 40 g of cocoa powder with 500 mL skim milk/day: |
|
| |
| Resting human PBMCs from 13 healthy subjects treated with 25 | (i) Individuals with low baseline levels of TGF- |
|
| |
| Twenty healthy subjects followed a balanced diet for 4 weeks; since day 14 to 27, they introduced daily 45 g of dark chocolate (860 mg of polyphenols, of which 58 mg were epicatechin) or white chocolate (5 mg polyphenols, undetectable epicatechin) [ | (i) 2 h after dark chocolate intake (860 mg of polyphenols, of which 58 mg were epicatechin): |
|
| |
| Blinded parallel-design study with 32 healthy subjects consuming 234 mg cocoa phenolics a day for 28 days [ | (i) ↑ Plasma epicatechin and catechin concentrations by 81% and 28%, respectively |
|
| |
| Double-blind, randomized study with 22 heart transplant recipients [ | (i) 2 h after ingestion of 40 g of flavonoid-rich dark chocolate (0.27 mg/g of catechin and 0.9 mg/g of epicatechin, with a total polyphenol content of 15.6 mg of epicatechin equivalents per gram): |
|
| |
| Crossover, single blind study with 20 healthy subjects and 20 smokers who received 40 g of dark (cocoa > 85%) or milk (cocoa < 35%) chocolate [ | (i) Smokers: |
|
| |
| Single oral administration of a natural flavonoid-enriched cocoa powder (50–600 mg/kg) in spontaneously hypertensive rats [ | Antihypertensive effect in hypertensive rats without modifying the arterial blood pressure in normotensive rats. No dose-response effect was observed |
|
| |
| Fifty male Kurosawa and Kusanagi-hypercholesterolemic rabbits received 100 g/day of standard diet or cacao liquor polyphenol diet [ | (i) Polyphenol-treated group: |
|
| |
| Six-month clinical trial with 36 prehypertensive healthy adult volunteers, at content levels of 120–139 and 80–89 mmHg [ | (i) 50 g of dark chocolate/day: |
|
| |
|
| (i) Significantly inhibited the angiotensin I converting enzyme activity |
(c)
| Anti-inflammatory properties | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| Polyphenol | Effect |
| Unstimulated and LPS-stimulated PBMCs [ | Different flavanol fractions (20 | (i) Monomers-pentamers: ↑ of LPS-induced synthesis of IL-1 |
|
| ||
| Macrophages [ | (i) Epicatechin (58 | (i) ↓ MCP-1 and TNF- |
|
| ||
| THP-1 [ | Procyanidin dimer B2: pretreatment for 30 min with 50 | (i) ↓ Expression of COX-2 |
|
| ||
| Caco-2 IL-1 | Polyphenol extract of cocoa (50 | (i) In the absence of proinflammatory stimuli, the polyphenol extract of cocoa induces a basal PGE2 synthesis due to COX-1 induction |
|
| ||
|
| Polyphenol | Effect |
|
| ||
| DSS-induced ulcerative colitis in Balb/C mice [ | Cocoa polyphenol-enriched extract (500 mg/kg) | (i) |
|
| ||
| Human PBMCs from 18 healthy volunteers [ | Cocoa powder (40 g) with either milk or water | (i) Cocoa + water: |
|
| ||
| MCF-7 and SKBR3 [ |
(i) After incubation with 250 ng/ | |
|
| ||
| RLE cells |
(i) Cocoa polyphenol extracts dose-dependently (10–100 | |
|
| ||
|
| ||
|
| ||
| Animals | Effects | |
|
| ||
| Wistar Han rats (5 weeks old) pretreated for 2 weeks with a cocoa-rich diet and injected with azoxymethane once a week for 2 weeks [ |
(i) The cocoa-rich diet (1 g of polyphenol/kg of diet): | |
(d)
| Cancer prevention | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Cell line | Effects |
|
| |
| Caco-2 cells [ | (i) Treatment of cells with 50 |
|
| |
| PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells [ | (i) Cocoa procyanidin fraction (1 and 5 |
|
| |
| HepG2 cells [ | (i) Pretreatment of cells subjected to oxidative stress with 0.05–50 |
|
| |
|
| (i) Treatment with benzo[a]pyrene |
|
| |
| JB6 P+ cells [ | (i) Cocoa procyanidin fraction (5 |
|
| |
| MCF-7 and SKBR3 [ | (i) After incubation with 250 ng/ |
|
| |
| RLE cells | (i) Cocoa polyphenol extracts dose-dependently (10–100 |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| Animals | Effects |
|
| |
| Wistar Han rats (5 weeks old) pretreated for 2 weeks with a cocoa-rich diet and injected with azoxymethane once a week for 2 weeks [ | (i) The cocoa-rich diet (1 g of polyphenol/kg of diet): |