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Metabolic Syndrome Functional Foods

Go Wild for Wild Blueberries

10 years, 5 months ago

10012  0
Posted on Nov 26, 2013, 6 a.m.

Two cups of wild blueberries a day may help to improve the markers of Metabolic Syndrome, extrapolate researchers from an animal model.

Wild blueberries are a rich source of phytochemicals called polyphenols, which have been reported by a growing number of studies to exert a wide array of protective health benefits. Dorothy Klimis-Zacas , from the University of Maine (Maine, USA), and colleagues studied Metabolic Syndrome in a lab animal model.   The team observed that wild blueberry consumption (2 cups per day, human equivalent) for 8 weeks helped to regulate and improve the balance between relaxing and constricting factors in the vascular wall, improving blood flow and blood pressure. Observing that: “[wild blueberry] consumption altered the biomechanical properties of the [animal model]  aorta,” the study authors submit that the data suggests  that regular long-term wild blueberry diets may help improve or prevent pathologies associated with the metabolic syndrome, most notably cardiovascular disease and diabetes

Stefano Vendrame, Aleksandra S. Kristo, Dale A. Schuschke, Dorothy Klimis-Zacas.  “Wild blueberry consumption affects aortic vascular function in the obese Zucker rat.”  Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism, 6 November 2013.

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