Functional properties and health benefits of orange juice
Transcription
Functional properties and health benefits of orange juice
Functional properties and health benefits of orange juice Thais Cesar, PhD Pharmaceutical School, Sao Paulo State University – UNESP Araraquara SP, Brazil Orange juice Functional Properties: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Essential nutrients for a healthy diet Protection against cardiovascular disease No association with gain of weight or obesity Decrease of insulin resistance Improvement of antioxidant capacity Decrease of inflammation markers Improves satiety Orange juice • Natural source of vitamins and minerals: Vitamin C, Folic Acid, Potassium • Easily incorporated into a healthy diet plan 100% fruit juices, as Orange Juice, are associated with a lower BMI and a healthier diet in children and adults O’Neil et al Nutr Res 2011, Nutr J 2012 % RDA - 2000 kcal diet Nutritional contribuition 100 80 60 40 20 0 kcal Carb Ca K Vit C Folate 6% 12% 18% 9.6% 100% 12.5% 8 oz of orange juice USDA Nutrient Database (2005 e 2007) release 2.1b 4 Orange juice • Citrus flavonoids Hesperidin & 15.6 mg/240mL Naringin 1.9 mg/240mL • Cholesterol-lowering potential in animal and human (Kurowska et al, 2000; Roza et al, 2007) Orange juice and Coronary Heart Disease • Naringenin and Hesperitin in vivo 1) activity ACAT1, ACAT2, MTP 2) lipoproteins assembly (VLDL) 3) LDL receptor ( Plasma Clearance of LDL) total Cholesterol and LDL-C (Roza 2007, Wilcox 2001; Borradaile 2002; Aptekman and Cesar, 2010) 6 Orange juice and Coronary Heart Disease • Clinical study • Orange Juice: transfer of Cholesterol to HDL in normolipidemic and hypercholesterolemic individuals (Cesar et al, Nut Res 2010, 30: 689) 7 Long-term orange juice consumption is associated with low LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B in normal and moderately hypercholesterolemic subjects Hypothesis: OJ consumption (≥ 12 months) is associate with low risk factors for CVD in subjects with normal and moderately high cholesterol blood levels. Aptekmann and Cesar; Lipids in Health and Disease 2013, 12:119 http://www.lipidworld.com/content/12/1/119 Long-term orange juice consumption is associated with low LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B … Subjects: • employees OJ factory with free daily access to OJ • 103 men (18–66 y) • 26 women (18–65 y) OJ Consumption: • 41% = 2 cups (480 mL) OJ/d • 59% = non-consumers Long-term orange juice consumption is associated with low LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B … Anthropometric Orange juice Normolipidemic Hypercholesterolemic Non-consum. Consumers Non-consum. Consumers Weight (kg) 75.9 11.4 70.8 10.0 78.5 13.8 83.0 10.5 BMI ( kg/m2) 25.1 3.63 23.8 2.89 26.6 2.8 27.0 3.4 Body fat (%) 27.8 5.03 25.1 7.52 28.0 5.7 27.0 4.1 Waist circ.(cm) 90.4 9.96 87.5 9.33 96.3 8.2 97.5 9.3 No differences between OJ consumers and non-consumers Long-term orange juice consumption is associated with low LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B … Dietary Orange juice Normolipidemic Hypercholesterolemic Non-consum. Consumers Non-consum. Consumers Energy (MJ/d) 11.5 5.04 11.6 2.51 12.0 2.88 11.8 2.0 Carbohydrate (g/d) 327 111 346 113 382 123 367 72 95 32 99 28 90 38 91 27 Vitamin C (mg/d) 138 115 227 121* 174 120 273 158* Folate (µg/d) 393 138 500 148* 423 146 538 166* Total fat (g/d) Increase of Vitamin C (+60%) and Folate (+27%) in OJ consumers Long-term orange juice consumption is associated with low LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B … Biochemical Normolipidemic Hypercholesterolemic Orange juice Non-consumers Consumers Non-consumers Consumers Triglicerides (mmol/L) 1.15 0.37 1.11 0.55 1.86 0.63 2.16 1.12 Total Cholesterol (mmol/L) 5.08 0.70 4.54 0.78* 6.77 0.41 6.40 0.58* HDL-C (mmol/L) 1.20 0.29 1.16 0.31 1.14 0.27 1.16 0.23 LDL-C (mmol/L) 3.35 0.61 2.74 0.80* 4.78 0.48 4.20 0.86* Apo B (g/L) 0.90 0.19 0.79 0.21* 1.27 0.17 1.12 0.17* Homocysteine (µmol/L) 9.95 2.81 9.17 2.31 11.1 2.53 10.0 2.31 -8% Cholesterol, -15% LDL-C , -14% LDL/HDL , -12% Apo B in OJ consumers Long-term orange juice consumption is associated with low LDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein B … Conclusions OJ consumption was not associated with: • weight, BMI, waist or body fat • blood serum Triglyceride or Homocysteine But, OJ consumption was associated with reduction of: • total cholesterol • LDL-cholesterol • LDL/HDL ratio • apo B Orange juice High carbohydrate intake associated with Insulin Resistance (sub-normal response of Insulin) (NCEP Report, 2004; IDF 2005) Controversia: Sugar OJ increases the Insulin Resistance? • 1 cup (8 oz) = 22g sugar (sucrose : glucose : fructose/ 2:1:1) OJ flavonoids • prevent oxidative and inflammatory stress, • safe energy source (Ghanim et al, 2007) 14 Insulin resistance • IR is commonly associated with obesity and large waist circumference hyperlipidemia • Development of IR: diabetes mellitus type 2 hypertension cardiovascular disease • Pre-condition to Metabolic Syndrome Metabolic syndrome Adipose Tissue: Release pro-inflammatory mediators: PAI1, TNF-α, IL-6, C-Reactive Protein (CRP) Free Fat Acids Oxidative Stress & Adipokines Atherosclerosis Pro-thrombotic Pro-inflammatory (Grundy et al, 2005) Diabetes 16 Insulin resistance Biochemical and Clinical Charac. Orange Juice (750mL/d) Normal Weight Overweight/Obese N = 37 N = 28 1o day 60o day 1o day 60o day Glucose mg/dL 79 6.8 79 5.0 80 8.5 81 6.9 Insulin IU/mL 6.8 3.1 5.0 2.3* 8.5 4.3 6.9 3.4* Insulin Resistance Index 1.3 0.6 1.0 0.5* 1.7 1.0 1.4 0.7* HOMA index % 26 % 18% Overall: IR 22 % Preliminary data, Cesar et al Oxidative Stress Biochemical and Clinical Charact. Orange Juice (750mL/d) Normal weight Overweight N = 17 N = 17 1o day 60o day 1o day 60o day C-Reactive Protein, mg/dL 0.32 0.3 0.28 0.6* 0.38 0.5 0.27 0.5* Antioxidant capacity % 10.6 3.9 27.9 7.5* 12.1 7.1 26.6 8.5* Blood Pressure Systolic, mmHg 119 ± 8 114 ± 11* 128 ± 10 123 ± 12 Diastolic, mmHg 75 ± 5 74 ± 9 83 ± 9 79 ± 7* Preliminary data, Cesar et al Oxidative Stress and Inflammation in patients with C hepatitis Chronic C Hepatitis Patients Orange Juice (500mL/d) TBARS % Antioxidant Capacity % C reactive protein, mg/mL Normal weight N = 46 1o day 60o day 5.7 ± 2.1 2.9 ± 1.9** 12.1 ± 10.7 19.7 ± 8.5* 4.6 ± 2.1 0.9 ± 1.4** Preliminary data, Cesar et al Inflammation in patients with C hepatitis treated with OJ Liver Enzymes Orange Juice Alanine Transaminase (U/L) Aspartate Transaminase (U/L) -Glutamyl Transpeptidase (U/L) Normal Level 1o day 60o day 11 – 45 27 ± 12 26 ± 13 11 – 39 31 ± 7 32 ± 8 7 – 58 High Level 1o day 60o day > 46 82 ± 31 67 ± 22* > 40 81 ± 12 66 ± 12* > 58 35 ± 13 34 ± 16 182 ± 132 135 ± 87* Fresh or Pasteurized OJ ? Which one is better? OJ processing can influence the concentration of citric bioactive compounds and therefore may affect their bioavailability in human body. Fresh OJ is perceived as a superior flavor beverage, but pasteurization process is needed for the consumers safety. OJ commercially processing • 8oz fresh OJ: 125mg Vit C and 76µg Folate • 8oz processed OJ: 86mg Vit C and 46µg Folate (Bai, et al, 2010) • OJ bioactive compounds and flavonoids: Can processing methods influence the satiety (appetite) and energy intake? Biochemical markers and appetite after acute intake of OJ • Effect of acute intake of fresh and pasteurized OJ on markers of satiety in individuals with normal weight and overweight. • Test drink: sugars + H2O Glucose Leptin Insulin Adiponectin 140 Glucose (BMI < 25kg/m2) 140 Test 130 Fresh OJ 130 Test 120 Fresh OJ Past OJ 110 mg/dL mg/dL 120 Glucose (BMI 25kg/m2) 100 100 90 90 80 80 70 Past OJ 110 70 0 50 100 150 min 200 250 300 0 50 100 Normal Weight 200 250 Insulin (BMI 25kg/m2) 140 Test Test 120 Fresh OJ 100 Past OJ µmol/L µmol/L 300 Obese Insulin (BMI < 25kg/m2) 140 150 min 80 60 120 Fresh OJ 100 Past OJ 80 60 40 40 20 20 0 0 0 50 100 150 min 200 250 300 0 50 100 150 min 200 250 300 Normal weight A 35000 30000 Obese a A A a,b b Glucose 25000 20000 (AUC after 300 min) 15000 10000 5000 0 Test Fresh OJ Past OJ Test Fresh OJ Normal weight 40000 Insulin 35000 (AUC after 300 min) 25000 Past OJ Obese B 30000 20000 15000 B B a b 10000 b 5000 0 Test Fresh OJ Past OJ Test Fresh OJ Past OJ Biochemical markers and appetite after acute intake of OJ Appetite Leptin Energy Expenditure • appetite stimulators satiety • appetite inhibitors • in the hypothalamic ARC and postsynaptic sites Adiponectin Leptin CNTF (cytokine) Adipocytes • Insulin-sensitizing property • Inverse association with IR and Diabetes (obesity) 25000 A Normal weight 20000 Obese ng/mL Leptin A 15000 A 10000 (AUC after 300 min) b 5000 a,b a 0 Test Fresh OJ Past OJ Test Fresh OJ Normal Past OJ Obese 4000 A Normal weight A Obese A Adiponectin (AUC after 300 min) ng/mL 3000 B B B Test Fresh OJ 2000 1000 0 Test Fresh OJ Past OJ Normal Obese Past OJ Conclusions Consumption of Orange Juice (long and short-term): • • • • • No effect on the Nutritional Status of regular consumers Reduced markers related to insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease Increased the antioxidant capacity Decrease inflammation markers in blood and liver Improve the satiety • Is good for your health!