| Literature DB >> 33226712 |
Leonardo Recena Aydos1,2,3, Luane Aparecida do Amaral1,3, Ana Cristina Jacobowski2,4, Roberta Serafim de Souza1,2,3, Eduardo Benedetti Parisotto4, Mariana Biava de Menezes4, Felipe Francisco Bittencourt Junior5,6, Emely Schuindt Fernandes5,6, Iandara Schettert Silva3,7, Luciane Candeloro Portugal8, Cláudio Gonçalves Oliveira8, Gustavo Tsuyoshi Senra Masuko3, Leandro Fontoura Cavalheiro9, Carlos Eduardo Domingues Nazário9, Elisvânia Freitas Dos Santos4, Maria Lígia Rodrigues Macedo2,4.
Abstract
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) and obesity are growing in many parts of the world, becoming public health problems. It is proposed that foods with functional properties can assist in the treatment of these diseases. Crude buriti pulp oil (BPO) is a food traditionally consumed by residents in the Pantanal, Cerrado and Brazilian Amazon. It is rich in oleic acid, tocopherols and carotenoids, emerging as a potential functional food. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate the effect of the supplementation of BPO on metabolic disorders caused by a high-fat diet. Four groups of C57BL6 mice were used, a lean group with AIN-93M diet and control oil supplementation, an obese group with a high-fat diet and control oil supplementation, and two obese groups with a high-fat diet and BPO supplementation in the amounts of 50 and 100 mg/kg. BPO worsened the metabolic state caused by the high-fat diet, worsening risk factors associated with MetS, as the abdominal circumference and retroperitoneal fat, serum levels of total cholesterol, uric acid, alanine transaminase, glucose and triglycerides, and renal fat, in addition to changes in glycaemic control and oxidative stress markers. C57BL/6 mice fed with a high-fat diet and supplemented with BPO presented a worsening in metabolic risk factors associated with MetS.Entities:
Keywords: high-fat diet; metabolic syndrome; obesity
Year: 2020 PMID: 33226712 DOI: 10.1111/jpn.13473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anim Physiol Anim Nutr (Berl) ISSN: 0931-2439 Impact factor: 2.130