Sunday, March 20, 2011

My Diet - Chocolate and Cocoa Extracts

Chocolate and Cocoa Extracts beats cholesterol



 Diets high in flavonoid-rich cocoa powder and dark chocolate have a favourable effect on LDL ("bad" cholesterol) when compared with diets that limit or exclude other flavonoid sources such as tea, coffee, wine and onions, US researchers reveal this week.
Scientists at Penn State led by Dr. Penny Kris-Etherton , evaluated and compared LDL (low density lipoprotein) susceptibility to oxidation when the test subjects, 23 men and women, ate an average American diet purposely low in flavonoids and a diet that contained about one and a quarter oz (38 grams) of cocoa powder and dark chocolate which are rich flavonoid sources.
Oxidation of LDLs is thought to play an important role in the development of atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries. Increasing LDL's resistance to oxidation is thought to possibly delay the progression of the disease. Flavonoids, which are present in a wide variety of plants, have long been known to inhibit LDL oxidation.
The study is detailed in a paper, "Effects of cocoa powder and dark chocolate on LDL oxidative susceptibility and prostaglandin concentration in humans" published in the November issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
In the study, 10 men and 13 women, aged 21 to 62, ate one of two experimental diets, either an average American diet altered to be low in flavonoids or a diet containing about three quarters of an ounce (22 grams) of cocoa powder and a half ounce (16 grams of dark chocolate) for four weeks. After a two-week break in which the participants ate their habitual diet, they switched for another four weeks to the experimental diet they hadn't consumed during the first four-week period.
Both experimental diets contained the same amount of caffeine and theobromine, which are stimulants found in chocolate and cocoa. Cocoa butter was used in baked goods in the average American diet to match the amount of cocoa butter in the dark chocolate.
Subjects had blood drawn at the end of each diet period. The LDL was extracted from each blood sample and then subjected to oxidation in the laboratory. The researchers noted the amount of time it took for oxidation to begin, the rate at which oxidation proceeded and the amount of oxidized fatty acid produced.
When the subjects ate the cocoa and chocolate containing diet, oxidation occurred about 8 per cent slower compared to when they ate the experimental average American diet.
Analysis of their blood plasma also showed that total antioxidant capacity was four per cent greater after the cocoa and chocolate containing diet. HDL cholesterol (the "good" cholesterol) was four per cent higher after the chocolate diet than after the average American diet.
The paper notes, "The incorporation of dark chocolate and cocoa powder into the diet is one means of effectively increasing antioxidant intake. Furthermore, the inclusion of dark chocolate and cocoa powder in a diet that is rich in other food sources of antioxidants, such as fruit, vegetables, tea and wine, results in a high antioxidant intake and may consequently reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease."

Thrombosis and Haemostasis Preventian

A new stady presented at the annual meeting of the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis found that Cocoa can prevent potential fatal blood clots from forming and causing striokes or heart attacks. The research howed that cocoa prevents platelets, the cells that help create clots, from causing blockages.

New research underlines antioxidant activity in chocolate

28/10/2004 - Evidence backing the health promoting benefits of chocolate continues to mount, bringing dynamism to slacking sales, reports Lindsey Partos. Researchers from Spain have discovered that polyphenols found in cocoa extract influence human cellular responses to oxidative stress.
Véronique Noé and colleagues at the University of Barcelona in Spain studied the impact of epicatechin and other polyphenols in cocoa extract on the human colon.
Polyphenols are flavonoid compounds and they have antioxidant activity which may help the body's cells resist damage by free radicals, believed to play a role in reducing the risk of various chronic illnesses afflicting world populations such as heart disease and cancer.
“Treatment with epicatechin decreased the expression of 21 genes and upregulated 24 genes. Upon incubation with the cocoa polyphenolic extract, 24 genes were underexpressed and 28 were overexpressed,” write the researchers in the October issue of the Journal of Nutrition.
Flavonoids found in chocolate include the flavanols, notably the main flavonoid epicatechin, and catechin, and polymers of these, the proanthocyanidins. Some epidemiological studies suggest that high intakes of flavonoids are associated with the maintenance of cardiovascular health, although other factors may also account for the results.
In vitro (test tube) and in vivo (in humans) studies have shown that cocoa flavonoids and certain chocolates may decrease low-density-lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation, may modulate platelet activation and could positively affect the balance between certain hormones, or eicosanoids. These actions can play a role in maintaining heart health.
Evidence of the possible heart health benefits of chocolate could help to regain chocolate sales lost as consumers gradually turn away from these products due to health and weight concerns.
"Western European sales have also been affected by a rising sense of health consciousness, having a particular impact on the chocolate segment," said John Band, consumer markets analyst at Datamonitor and author of recent market report on the European chocolate market.
Full findings of the Spanish study are published in the Journal of Nutrition, Vol. 134 (10), 2004

From : http://www.cellhealthmakeover.com/cocoa-powder-extract.html