| Literature DB >> 35847051 |
Marko Nemet1, Milica Vasilić1, Ana Tomas2.
Abstract
The global prevalence of dyslipidemia (elevated plasma levels of total cholesterol, LDL-Cholesterol, triglycerides, and lower plasma levels of HDL-Cholesterol) is constantly on the rise. Lately, carob pulp has been recognized as an effective natural product for the treatment of dyslipidemia. The two main components of the carob pulp, polyphenols, and insoluble fiber are believed to have beneficial effects on lipid metabolism. Studies on humans and animals confirmed its lipid-lowering effects. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain this phenomenon, namely by affecting three organ systems: 1) gastrointestinal tract, 2) liver and 3) adipose tissue. Also, carob products have antioxidative, anti-inflammatory, and vascular-protective activity.Entities:
Keywords: carob; cholesterol; dyslipidemia; fiber; polyphenols; triglycerides
Year: 2022 PMID: 35847051 PMCID: PMC9277349 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.921123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
Human and animal studies on lipid-lowering effects of carob extracts.
| No. | Author and date | Study description | Intervention | Follow up | Key findings | Overview of findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Clinical trial (noncomparative, open-label study on hypercholesterolemic subjects) | Normal diet plus 15 g of carob preparation daily with meals such as a fruit muesli bar (36 g), powdered drink (35 g), or breakfast cereal (35 g). Each food product contained 5 g of a carob preparation (Caromaxtm®, Nutrinova, Germany). The products had to be taken immediately before or with breakfast, at lunch, and at dinner | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC and LDL-C after 4 w, 6 w, and 8 w; maximal reduction in TC (7.8%) and LDL-C (12.2%) were observed after 6w; Significant reduction in LDL:HDL after 4 w; Except a small but significant reduction in HDL after 4 w, other changes in HDL and TAG were nonsignificant | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓LDL:HDL |
| 2 |
| Randomized clinical trial (double-blind, placebo-controlled, and parallel arm study on hypercholesterolemic subjects) | The carob fiber group consumed 15 g of carob pulp preparation per day as an ingredient of 4 slices of bread (a total of 180 g; 2 slices in the morning, 2 slices in the evening) and one fruit bar (about 40 g) to be eaten at noon | Run-in phase of 2 w; intervention phase of 6 w | Significant reduction in TC (2.0 ± 1.8%), LDL-C (2.0 ± 1.8%), and a marginally significant reduction in LDL:HDL (7.9 ± 2.2%) in the carob group | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓LDL:HDL |
| 3 |
| Randomized crossover trial (on healthy subjects) | On the morning of every study day after a 10 h overnight fast, subjects consumed 400 ml of a standardized liquid meal (Pfrimmer-Nutricia®) within less than 5 min. Liquid meals were enriched with 0, 5, 10, or 20 g of carob fiber and provided in random order. The total fiber content was 74.6 g/100 g carob fiber corresponding to 68.4 g insoluble and 6.2 g soluble fiber. The total polyphenol content of the preparation was 2.8 g/100 g | Four sessions 300 min each, separated by intervals of 1w | Significant and dose-dependent reduction in TAG and serum NEFA at 60 min after a test meal consumption ( | Postprandially ↓TAG ↓NEFA |
| 4 |
| Randomized crossover trial (on healthy subjects) | On the day preceding the blood sampling sessions (day 1), foods with or without a total of 50 g carob fiber were provided in a randomized order; The total fiber content was 4.6 g per 100 g carob fiber preparation corresponding to 68.4 g insoluble and 6.2 g soluble fiber. The content of water-soluble polyphenols in the preparation was 2.84 g per 100 g; the content of extractable polyphenols by organic solvents was 0.39 g per 100g; In the morning of study day 2, after a 10 h overnight fast, subjects consumed 103 g standardized white bread within 5 min | Two sessions 300 min each, separated by intervals of 1 w | Significant reduction in TAG ( | Postprandially ↓TAG ↓NEFA |
| 5 |
| Randomized clinical trial (double-blind, placebo-controlled, and parallel arm clinical study on hypercholesterolemic subjects) | Subjects were asked to consume their usual diet with the addition of either, placebo or Exxenterol®. The dietary fiber used in this study was a concentrated polyphenols extract from carob (Exxenterol®, Puleva Biotech S.A.). This is a natural insoluble dietary fiber comprised of 80% insoluble polyphenols from carob pod | Run-in phase of 2 w; intervention phase of 4 w | Significant reduction in TC (17.8%), LDL-C (22.5%), LDL:HDL (26.2%), and TAG (16.3%) from baseline to post-intervention, compared to placebo; no significant changes in HDL-C. The effect of treatment with carob was greater in subjects with baseline levels higher than the average | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓LDL:HDL ↓TAG |
| 6 |
| Clinical trial (randomized double-blind study on healthy subjects) | 4.45 g (2.23 g, twice a day) of the Inositol enriched beverage (Fruit Up®, a commercially available product consisting of natural ingredients) or a sucrose-sweetened beverage, and maintained a normocaloric diet throughout the study. The composition of Fruit Up® is as follows: naturally occurring soluble carbohydrates (monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, polyalcohols, and soluble fiber) and minor compounds (in trace contents: organic acids, minerals, amino-acids) derived principally from carob pods | run-in period of 1 m (normocaloric diet); 12 w | Significant reduction in Apo B levels and increase in LDL particle size at 12 weeks in the carob group | ↓Apo-B ↑LDL particle size |
| 7 |
| Randomized clinical trial (double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-arm study on obese subjects) | 50 g (two packages of 25 g per day) of snack enriched with wakame and carob pod flour | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC (5.8%) ( | ↓TC ↓LDL-C |
| 8 |
| Quasi-experimental study on obese men | 4 groups: resistance training, carob supplementation, combined training and supplementation, and control; participants consumed 1.5 g of carob seed powder in three capsules (500 mg) in three meals per day during 8 weeks | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC ( | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓TAG ↑HDL-C |
| 9 |
| Male albino rats, sharls strain with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with 10% and 15% carob extract | 6 w | Both groups of rats showed a decrease in the mean value of triglycerides, total cholesterol, LDL and VLDL and an increase in the HDL compared with positive control extract compared with positive control | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓VLDL-C ↓TAG ↑HDL-C |
| 10 |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | 6 w study: diets supplemented with carob molasses via drinking water (1% w/v) ad lib; Postprandial study: addition of 5% of carob molasses to lipid emulsion | 6 w | After 6 weeks: significant increase in HDL-C in both high-fat and regular diet groups; no effect on TC, LDL, TAG, or apolipoprotein B; Postprandially: significant reduction in TAG, chylomicron-TAG, and chylomicron-cholesterol | After 6 w: ↑HDL-C Postprandially |
| 11 |
| Male New Zealand rabbits with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with carob pod supplement (1 g x kg-1 x d-1) | 8 w | Significant reduction TC, LDL-C, and TAG in dyslipidemic group ( | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓TAG |
| 12 |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats with alloxan-induced diabetes | Standard diet supplemented with 10% and 20% carob extract | 6 w | Significant reduction in TC, LDL-C, VLDL-C, and TAG and a significant increase in HDL-C in the 10% and 20% carob group compared to the dyslipidemic group | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓VLDL-C ↓TAG ↑HDL-C |
| 13 |
| Male Sprague-Dawley rats with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with 10% and 20% carob powder | 6 w | Significant reduction in TC, LDL-C, VLDL-C, and TAG and a significant increase in HDL-C in the 10% and 20% carob group compared to the dyslipidemic group | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓VLDL-C ↓TAG ↑HDL-C |
| 14 |
| Healthy male New Zealand rabbits fed standard diet. | Standard diet supplemented with 2.5%, 5%, 10% carob pod powder | 120 d | Significant reduction in TC, LDL-C, HDL-C, and TAG ( | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓HDL-C ↓TAG |
| 15 |
| Male rats (Rattus norvegicus of East China Origin) with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with 20% parsley seeds methanol extract and 20% carob legumes methanol extract | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC, LDL-C, VLDL-C, and TAG and a significant increase in HDL-C in both parsley group and carob group compared to the hypercholesterolemic rats | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓VLDL-C ↓TAG ↑HDL-C |
| 16 |
| Healthy male Wistar rats fed standard diet. | Standard diet supplemented with carob fruit pulp extract 25, 50, 150 mg/kg daily administrated by oral gavage | 1 w; digestibility studies on the 1st d and 7th d | Postprandially: significant reduction in the TC and TAG after carob fruit pulp extract (25, 50, 150 mg/kg) treatments (all | Postprandially ↓TC ↓TAG |
| 17 |
| Male Wistar rats with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with 20% carob pulp extract | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC, LDL-C, VLDL-C, and TAG in both obese and control groups; a significant increase in HDL-C only in obese rats | ↓TAG ↓TC ↓VLDL-C ↓LDL-C ↑HDL-C |
| 18 |
| Male New Zealand rabbits with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with 3% of insoluble carob pod fiber | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC and TAG in the dyslipidemic group treated with carob ( | ↓TC ↓TAG |
| 19 |
| Male Wistar rats with streptozotocin-nicotinamide-induced diabetes and diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with carob fruit extract (4 g/kg restructured meat) homogenized with lean mixed meat | 8 w | Significant reduction in TC ( | ↓TC ↓LDL-C ↓VLDL-C ↓IDL-C ↓TAG ↑HDL total mass |
| 20 |
| C57/BL6J mice with diet-induced hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with 4.8% of CSAT+® (carob pod and seed extract) | 26 w | Significant reduction in TC ( | ↓TC ↓LDL-C |
| 21 |
| Male Wistar rats with diet-induced diabetes and hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia | Standard diet supplemented with carob fruit extract (4 g/kg restructured meat) homogenized with lean mixed meat | 8 w | Significant reduction in VLDL-C ( | ↓VLDL-C ↓IDL-C ↓LDL total mass ↓TAG |
| 22 |
| Healthy male New Zealand rabbits fed standard diet. | Standard diet supplemented with 10 g/kg of Carob Powder and Whey powder or a mixture of 5 g/kg of Carob powder and 5 g/kg of Whey powder | 7 w | Significant reduction in TC and TAG in carob group compared to control group | ↓TC ↓TAG |
TC, total cholesterol; LDL-C, LDL-cholesterol; VLDL-C, VLDL-cholesterol; IDL-C, IDL-cholesterol; HDL-C, HDL-cholesterol; TAG, triglycerides; NEFA, non-esterized fatty acid CM-TAG, chylomicron triglycerides; CM-C, chylomicron cholesterol; Apo-B, Apolipoprotein B; d, day(s); w, week(s); m, month(s).