| Literature DB >> 31881654 |
Danja J Den Hartogh1,2, Alessandra Gabriel1, Evangelia Tsiani1,2.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a growing metabolic disease characterized by insulin resistance and hyperglycemia. Current preventative and treatment approaches to insulin resistance and T2DM lack in efficacy, resulting in the need for new approaches to prevent and treat the disease. In recent years, epidemiological studies have suggested that diets rich in fruits and vegetables have beneficial health effects, including protection against insulin resistance and T2DM. Curcumin, a polyphenol found in turmeric, and curcuminoids have been reported to have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, hepatoprotective, nephroprotective, neuroprotective, immunomodulatory and antidiabetic properties. The current review (II of II) summarizes the existing in vivo studies examining the antidiabetic effects of curcumin.Entities:
Keywords: animal studies; curcumin; curcuminoids; diabetes; human studies; in vivo; insulin resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881654 PMCID: PMC7019668 DOI: 10.3390/nu12010058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Chemical structure of curcumin and curcuminoids found in turmeric.
Evidence of antidiabetic effects of curcumin: in vivo Streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes animal studies.
| Animal | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Serum Effects | Other Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albino Wistar rats | 0.5% of diet; 8 weeks | ↓ Phospholipid | ↓ Kidney weight | [ |
| Albino Wistar rats | 300 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Body weight | [ |
| Wistar Rats | 80 mg/kg b.w./day; 45 days | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Lipid peroxidation | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 15 and 30 mg/kg b.w./day; 2 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Renal changes | [ |
| Wistar-NIN rats | 0.01% curcumin; 8 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ TBARS | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 50 mg/kg b.w./day; 6 weeks | ↓ Urea | ↑ Albumin | [ |
| C57/BL6J mice | 7.5 mg/kg b.w./day; 10 h prior to STZ | ↓ Glucose | ↑ Glucose clearance | [ |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | 150 mg/kg b.w./day; 1 month | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Body weight | [ |
| Wistar rats | 80 mg/kg b.w./day; 45 days | ↓ Glucose | Kidney and liver: | [ |
| Swiss albino mice | 10 mM; 10 µL/mouse i.p.; 28 days and 106 BMCs, single injection | ↓ Glucose | ↑ Islet regeneration | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Glucose | Kidney: | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Glucose | Kidney: | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 1 and 5 mg/kg b.w./day; 6 weeks | ↓ TNF-α | Kidney: | [ |
| Wistar rats | 60 and 90 mg/kg b.w./day; 31 days | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Proteinuria | [ |
| Curl:HEL1 rats | 10 mg/kg b.w./day; 45 days | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Pancreas, aorta and liver MDA levels | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 0.2 mg/kg b.w./day; 6 weeks | ↓ TNF-α | ↓ Renal macrophage infiltration | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Triglyceride | Kidney: | [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | 5 mg/kg b.w./second day; 67 days | ↓ Creatinine | Kidney: | [ |
| Wistar rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 12 weeks | No measured effects | ↓ Renal fibrosis | [ |
| Wistar rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 12 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Renal fibrosis | [ |
| Wistar rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 6 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↑ Body weight | [ |
| Wistar rats | 100 and 200 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | No measured effects | ↓ Kidney weight | [ |
| Wistar rats | 1.5 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Cholesterol | ↓ Oxidative stress | [ |
| Wistar rats | 100 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↑ Splenic white pulp composition | [ |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 50 mg/kg b.w./day; 28 days | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Islet death | [ |
↓ Reduced effect; ↑ Increased effect.
Evidence of antidiabetic effects of curcumin: in vivo alloxan-induced diabetes animal studies.
| Animal | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Serum Effects | Other Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wistar rats | 0.08 mg/kg b.w./day; 21 days | ↓ Glucose | Liver: | [ |
| Wistar rats | 0.1 mg/kg b.w.; 2 h | ↓ Glucose | No measured effects | [ |
↓ Reduced effect; ↑ Increased effect.
Evidence of the antidiabetic effects of curcumin: in vivo genetic diabetes animal studies.
| Animal | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Serum Effects | Other Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KK-Ay mice | 1500 mg/kg b.w./day; 4 weeks | ↓ Glucose | No measured effects | [ |
| KK-Ay mice | 137, 620 and 1500 mg/kg b.w./day; 4 weeks | ↓ Glucose | No measured effects | [ |
| C57BL/KsJ- | 0.02%, | ↓ Glucose | Liver: | [ |
| 200 mg/kg/day; 18 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Body weight | [ | |
| 60 mg/kg/day; 4 weeks | ↓ Glucose | Kidney and liver: | [ | |
| OLETF rats | 100 mg/kg/day; 45 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↑ β cell function | [ |
| Leprdb/db mice | 1500 mg/kg b.w./day | ↓ Glucose | ↓ β-cell loss | [ |
| C57BL/KsJ db/db mice | 200 mg/kg/day; 16 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Renal hypertrophy | [ |
↓ Reduced effect; ↑ Increased effect.
Evidence of antidiabetic effects of curcumin: in vivo diet-induced diabetes animal studies.
| Animal | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Serum Effects | Other Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sprague–Dawley rats | 1 g/100 g diet; 2 weeks | ↓ Triacylglycerol | ↓ Hepatic triacylglycerol levels | [ |
| Male swiss albino rats | 0.5% | ↓ Triglyceride | No measured effects | [ |
| C57BL/6J Mice | 0.4% dietary intake; 2 days/week for 28 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Body weight | [ |
| C57BL/6J mice | 50 mg/kg b.w./day; 15 days | ↓ Glucose | ↓ HOMA-IR | [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | 0.5% and 1% | ↓ Triglyceride | ↓ Oxidative stress | [ |
| Wistar rats | 200 mg/kg b.w./day; 10 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Body weight | [ |
| Wistar rats | 200 mg/kg b.w./day; 8 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ HOMA-IR | [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | 80 mg/kg b.w./day; 12 weeks | ↓ Insulin | ↓ Body weight gain | [ |
| C57BL/6 mice | 50 mg/kg b.w./day; 12 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Adipose glycerol and FFA | [ |
↓ Reduced effect; ↑ Increased effect.
Effects of curcumin: Human studies.
| Condition | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Serum Effects | Other Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy individuals | 6 g; 30 and 60 mins | ↑ Insulin | No additional effects | [ |
| T2DM dyslipidemia patients | 200 mg/capsule/day; 12 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ BMI | [ |
| T2DM patients | 200 mg/day; 14 weeks | ↓ Glucose | No additional effects | [ |
| Diabetic Nephropathy | 22.1 mg/day; 2 months | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Proteinuria | [ |
| Diabetic Patients | 200 mg/day; 4 weeks | No measured effects | ↓ Microangiopathy | [ |
| Diabetic Patients | 200 mg/day; 4 weeks | No measured effects | ↓ Microangiopathy | [ |
| Pre-Diabetic Patients | 1500 mg/day; 9 months | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Diabetes | [ |
| Overweight Diabetic Patients | 300 mg/day; 3 months | ↓ Glucose | ↓ HOMA-IR | [ |
| Pre-diabetic and controlled diabetic patients | 3.17 g | ↓ Insulin | ↓ HOMA-IR | [ |
| Obese patients | 1 g/day; 30 days | ↓ Triglyceride | No additional effects | [ |
| Diabetic patients | 1500 mg/day; 6 months | ↓ Insulin | ↓ HOMA-IR | [ |
| Metabolic syndrome patients | 630 mg/thrice/day; 12 weeks | ↑ HDL | No additional effects | [ |
| T2DM patients | 475 mg/once; 24 h | ↓ Glucose | No additional effects | [ |
| Overweight Diabetic patients | 300mg/day; 3 months | ↓ A-FABP | No measured effects | [ |
| Overweight patients with metabolic syndrome | 1600 mg/day; 30 days | No measurements | ↑ Weight loss | [ |
| Diabetic patients | 500 mg/day; 15-30 days | ↓ MDA | No measured effects | [ |
| T2DM patients | 80 mg/day; 3 months | ↓ Fasting glucose | ↓ BMI | [ |
| Diabetic proteinuric CKD patients | 320 mg/day; 8 weeks | ↑ Gpx activity | ↓ Lipid peroxidation | [ |
| Diabetic patients | 1000mg/day; 12 weeks | ↓ Triglyceride | No measured effects | [ |
| Diabetic patients | 500 mg/day; 3 months | ↓ Glucose | ↑ HOMA-IR | [ |
| Fasting glucose impaired patients | 125 mg/twice/day; 8 weeks | ↓ Fasting insulin | ↓ HOMA-IR | [ |
| T2DM patients | 1500 mg/thrice/day; 10 weeks | ↓ Glucose | ↓ Mean weight | [ |
↓ Reduced effect; ↑ Increased effect.
Figure 2Overall effects of curcumin in T2DM animal models.