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Metabolic Syndrome Functional Foods Inflammation

Grape Compounds Protect Heart, Liver, Kidneys

10 years, 11 months ago

14245  0
Posted on May 20, 2013, 6 a.m.

Consuming grapes may help protect against organ damage associated with the progression of metabolic syndrome, an animal model reveals.

Characterized by central obesity, hypertension, and adverse glucose and insulin metabolism, Metabolic Syndrome is a condition associated with increased risk of type-2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.  E. Mitchell Seymour, from the University of Michigan Health System (Michigan, USA), and colleagues studied the effects of a high fat, American-style diet both with added grapes and without grapes (the control diet) on the heart, liver, kidneys, and fat tissue in obesity-prone rats. The grapes – a blend of red, green and black varieties – were provided as a freeze-dried grape powder and integrated into the animals’ diets for 90 days.  The data revealed that three months of a grape-enriched diet significantly reduced inflammatory markers throughout the body, but most significantly in the liver and in abdominal fat tissue.  Consuming grapes also reduced liver, kidney and abdominal fat weight, compared with those consuming the control diet.  Additionally, grape intake increased markers of antioxidant defense, particularly in the liver and kidneys.  

E. M. Seymour, J. Wells, T. Han-Markey, T. Soni, C. Burant, S. L. Hummel. Univ. of Michigan Hlth. Syst. and VA Hlth. Syst. “Dash-style diet is effective in patients with treated hypertension and diastolic heart failure independent of change in body weight – a pilot study” [Abstract D7 615.7]. Presentation at Experimental Biology 2013, 21 April 2013.

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