| Literature DB >> 29641454 |
Brett J West1, Shixin Deng2, Fumiyuki Isami3, Akemi Uwaya4, Claude Jarakae Jensen5.
Abstract
Noni juice is a globally popular health beverage originating in the tropics. Traditional Tahitian healers believe the noni plant to be useful for a wide range of maladies, and noni juice consumers throughout the world have similar perceptions. Nevertheless, human clinical trials are necessary for a precise understanding of what the health benefits of noni juice are. A review of published human intervention studies suggests that noni juice may provide protection against tobacco smoke-induced DNA damage, blood lipid and homocysteine elevation as well as systemic inflammation. Human intervention studies also indicate that noni juice may improve joint health, increase physical endurance, increase immune activity, inhibit glycation of proteins, aid weight management, help maintain bone health in women, help maintain normal blood pressure, and improve gum health. Further, these studies point to notable antioxidant activity in noni juice, more so than other fruit juices which served as trial placebos. It is this antioxidant effect and its interaction with the immune system and inflammation pathways that may account for many of the observed health benefits of noni juice. However, the existing evidence does have some limitations as far as its general application to noni juice products; all the peer-reviewed human interventions studies to date have involved only one source of French Polynesian noni juice. Geographical factors and variations in processing methods are known to produce commercial noni juice products with divergent phytochemical and nutrient compositions. Therefore, other sources of noni products may have different toxicological and pharmacological profiles.Entities:
Keywords: Morinda citrifolia; antioxidant; clinical trial; immune system; inflammation; noni juice
Year: 2018 PMID: 29641454 PMCID: PMC5920423 DOI: 10.3390/foods7040058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Summary of human intervention studies of noni juice products.
| Study Reference | Study Type | Study Population | Number of Subjects in Study | Treatment | Oral Doses | Duration | Main Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| West et al. 2009 [ | Double blind, placebo-controlled clinical safety study | Healthy adults | 96 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 0 mL (placebo), 30 mL, 300 mL, and 750 mL daily | 28 days | No dose-related adverse events or effects on clinical chemistry and hematological measurements, urinalysis, electrocardiogram, blood pressure, heart rate, or body weight. |
| Wang et al. 2009 [ | Double blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial | Heavy cigarette smokers (>20 cigarettes/day) | 285 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 0 mL (placebo), 29.5 mL, and 118 mL daily | 30 days | 26.9–30.8% reduction in mean plasma superoxide anion radicals ( |
| Wang et al. 2009 [ | Clinical trial, no placebo comparator reported | Heavy cigarette smokers (>20 cigarettes/day) | 203 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 0 mL (placebo), 29.5 mL, and 118 mL daily | 30 days | 44.9% average reduction in aromatic DNA adducts in peripheral blood lymphocytes ( |
| Wang et al. 2013 [ | Double blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial | Heavy cigarette smokers (>20 cigarettes/day) | 245 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 0 mL (placebo), 29.5 mL, and 118 mL daily | 30 days | 20.3–25.6% reduction in mean total cholesterol ( |
| Wang et al. 2012 [ | Double blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial | Heavy cigarette smokers (>20 cigarettes/day) | 132 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 0 mL (placebo), 29.5 mL, and 118 mL daily | 30 days | 44.6–57.4% reduction in lipid peroxidation-derived DNA adducts in peripheral blood lymphocytes ( |
| Palu et al. 2012 [ | Open-label pilot study | Adult (>40 years age) non-smokers with normal to mildly elevated cholesterol | 10 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 59 mL twice per day | 30 days | No significant difference between pre- and post-trial total cholesterol, HDL, or LDL levels. |
| Akinbo et al. 2006 [ | Open-label, conventional treatment-controlled trial | Cervical spondylosis patients | 90 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 15 mL twice per day | 4 weeks | 60% of patients in noni group experienced pain relief and improvement in range of motion. Efficacy rate was not significantly different from conventional treatment ( |
| Wang et al. 2011 [ | Open-label trial | Osteoarthritis patients | 82 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 3 fluid ounces (88.5 mL) daily | 90 days | 23.7% reduction in frequency (in days) of severe pain ( |
| Palu et al. 2008 [ | Placebo-controlled clinical trial | Highly trained athletes (middle and long-distance runners) | 40 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 100 mL twice per day | 21 days | 21% increase in mean time-to-fatigue ( |
| Anugweje et al. 2012 [ | Placebo-controlled clinical trial | University athletes | 46 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 100 mL twice per day | 30 days | Significant reduction in mean serum creatine kinase (from 209.8 to 148.1 IU/L, |
| West et al. 2013 [ | Double blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial | Semi-professional cyclists | 20 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 120 mL daily | 14 days | Increases in oxygen uptake at 50-watt workload (from 15.2 to 17.4 mL/kg/min, |
| Ma et al. 2008 [ | Open-label pilot study | Healthy adults | 12 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 300 mL daily | 8 weeks | Mean serum malondialdehyde levels declined from 4.81 to 3.90 nmol/mL ( |
| West et al. 2014 § [ | Open-label pilot study | Overweight or obese adults with grade 1 hypertension and impaired fasting glucose | 34 | Mixed noni juice beverage (MAX) † | 60 to 240 mL daily | 8 weeks | Decrease in mean skin autofluorescence units, a measurement of advanced glycation end products (A.G.E.s), from 1.89 to 1.77 units ( |
| Palu et al. 2011 [ | Open-label pilot study | Adults with a body mass index greater than 25 | 22 | Mixed noni juice beverage ‡, exercise intervention, calorie restriction, and other dietary supplements | ≥30 mL daily | 12 weeks | Every participant in the trial experienced weight loss. Mean percent body fat decreased by 8.91% ( |
| Bogdanov et al. 2015 [ | Open-label prospective study in 3 parallel groups | Obese adults (grade 3) | 90 | Low sodium and calorie restricted diet, as well as 2 different mixed noni juice beverages (TNJ, MAX) *,† (each used by a different group) | 60 mL twice per day | 42 days | After 6 weeks of calorie restriction, the average loss of lean muscle mass was 3.1–4.1% in the two noni groups, whereas it was 8.5% in the control group ( |
| Langford et al. 2004 [ | Placebo-controlled pilot study | Post-menopausal women | 8 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 2 fluid ounces (59 mL) twice per day | 3 months | Improved mental health score in SF-36 clinical survey ( |
| Palu et al. 2008 [ | Open-label pilot study | Hypertensive adults | 10 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 2 fluid ounces (59 mL) twice per day | 4 weeks | Systolic blood pressure (BP) was reduced in all participants. Diastolic BP was reduced in nine participants. Mean systolic and diastolic BPs were reduced from 144 to 132 mmHg and from 83 to 76 mmHg, respectively. |
| Glang et al. 2013 [ | Open-label pilot study with a no-treatment control group | Adults with moderate to severe gingivitis/periodontitis | 11 | Mixed noni juice beverage (TNJ) * | 30 mL twice per day | 4 weeks | Decline in mean papilla bleeding index (from 2.25 to 1.01) was significantly greater than that of the control group ( |
* Tahitian Noni® Juice (TNJ, manufactured by Morinda, Inc., American Fork, UT, USA); contains noni juice from puree (89%) as well as grape (Vitis vinifera) and blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) juices. † TruAge Max (MAX, manufactured by Morinda, Inc., American Fork, UT, USA); contains noni juice from puree, olive (Olea europaea) leaf extract and cornelian cherry (Cornus officinalis and Cornus mas) juices. ‡ Tahitian Noni® Original Bioactive Beverage (manufactured by Morinda, Inc. American Fork, UT, USA); contains noni juice from puree (89%) as well as grape and blueberry juices. § A cross-sectional population study (n = 3913 Japanese volunteers) of the anti-AGE effect of mixed noni juice beverage ingestion, was not included in this table, as it is not an intervention study.