
Improved thinking. Decreased appetite. Lowered blood  pressure. The potential health benefits ofcocoa keep piling  up, and scientists are now homing in on what ingredients in cocoa  might help prevent obesity, as well as type-2 diabetes. They found that  one particular type of antioxidant in cocoa prevented laboratory mice  from gaining excess weight and lowered their blood sugar levels. The  report appears in ACS' Journal of Agricultural & Food Chemistry.
Andrew P. Neilson and colleagues explain that cocoa, is one of the most flavanol-rich foods around.  That's good for chocolate lovers because previous research has shown  that flavanols in other foods such as grapes and tea can help fight  weight gain and type-2 diabetes. But not all flavanols, which are a type  of antioxidant, are created equal. Cocoa has several different kinds of  these compounds, so Neilson's team decided to tease them apart and test  each individually for health benefits.
The scientists fed groups of mice different diets, including high-fat  and low-fat diets, and high-fat diets supplemented with different kinds  of flavanols. They found that adding one particular set of these  compounds, known as oligomeric procyanidins (PCs), to the food made the  biggest difference in keeping the mice's weight down if they were on  high-fat diets. They also improved glucose tolerance, which could  potentially help prevent type-2 diabetes. "Oligomeric PCs appear to  possess the greatest antiobesity and antidiabetic bioactivities of the  flavanols in cocoa, particularly at the low doses employed for the  present study," the researchers state.
Journal Reference:
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Journal Reference:
- Melanie R. Dorenkott, Laura E. Griffin, Katheryn M. Goodrich, Katherine A. Thompson-Witrick, Gabrielle Fundaro, Liyun Ye, Joseph R. Stevens, Mostafa Ali, Sean F. O’Keefe, Matthew W. Hulver, Andrew P. Neilson. Oligomeric Cocoa Procyanidins Possess Enhanced Bioactivity Compared to Monomeric and Polymeric Cocoa Procyanidins for Preventing the Development of Obesity, Insulin Resistance, and Impaired Glucose Tolerance during High-Fat Feeding. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2014; 62 (10): 2216 DOI: 10.1021/jf500333y
 
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