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Effects of dietary polyphenols on metabolic syndrome features in humans: a systematic review.

Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity
July 1, 2016
M J Amiot et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effects of cinnamon on metabolic syndrome features, particularly its impact on blood glucose levels.

Results Summary

The study found that cinnamon supplementation reduced blood glucose in patients with metabolic syndrome, though it did not address all features of the condition. No significant antioxidative or anti-inflammatory effects were noted.

Population

Patients with metabolic syndrome

Effective Dosage

Not available

Duration

Not available

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (18)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Polyphenols
decrease
features of MetS
patients with MetS
especially at higher doses
were shown to be efficient
#1
Green tea
decrease
body mass index
patients with MetS
-
significantly reduced
#2
Green tea
decrease
waist circumference
patients with MetS
-
significantly reduced
#3
Green tea
increase
lipid metabolism
patients with MetS
-
improved
#4
Cocoa supplementation
decrease
blood pressure
patients with MetS
-
reduced
#5
Cocoa supplementation
decrease
blood glucose
patients with MetS
-
reduced
#6
Soy isoflavones
increase
lipid metabolism
patients with MetS
-
improved
#7
citrus products
increase
lipid metabolism
patients with MetS
-
improved
#8
hesperidin
increase
lipid metabolism
patients with MetS
-
improved
#9
quercetin
increase
lipid metabolism
patients with MetS
-
improved
#10
cinnamon
decrease
blood glucose
patients with MetS
-
reduced
#11
polyphenol supplementation
no change
antioxidative effects
patients with MetS
-
were not significant
#12
polyphenol supplementation
no change
anti-inflammatory effects
patients with MetS
-
were not significant
#13
cocoa
increase
endothelial function
patients with MetS
-
improvement of
#14
anthocyanin-rich berries
increase
endothelial function
patients with MetS
-
improvement of
#15
hesperidin
increase
endothelial function
patients with MetS
-
improvement of
#16
resveratrol
increase
endothelial function
patients with MetS
-
improvement of
#17
diets rich in polyphenols, such as the Mediterranean diet
increase
health
patients with MetS
-
could be an effective nutritional strategy to improve
#18
Abstract

Dietary polyphenols constitute a large family of bioactive substances potential beneficial effect on metabolic syndrome (MetS). This review summarizes the results of clinical studies on patients with MetS involving the chronic supplementation of a polyphenol-rich diet, foods, extracts or with single phenolics on the features of MetS (obesity, dyslipidemia, blood pressure and glycaemia) and associated complications (oxidative stress and inflammation). Polyphenols were shown to be efficient, especially at higher doses, and there were no specific foods or extracts able to alleviate all the features of MetS. Green tea, however, significantly reduced body mass index and waist circumference and improved lipid metabolism. Cocoa supplementation reduced blood pressure and blood glucose. Soy isoflavones, citrus products, hesperidin and quercetin improved lipid metabolism, whereas cinnamon reduced blood glucose. In numerous clinical studies, antioxidative and anti-inflammatory effects were not significant after polyphenol supplementation in patients with MetS. However, some trials pointed towards an improvement of endothelial function in patients supplemented with cocoa, anthocyanin-rich berries, hesperidin or resveratrol. Therefore, diets rich in polyphenols, such as the Mediterranean diet, which promote the consumption of diverse polyphenol-rich products could be an effective nutritional strategy to improve the health of patients with MetS. © 2016 The Authors. Obesity Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of World Obesity.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AntioxidantsBlood GlucoseBlood PressureDietDietary SupplementsHumansInsulinInsulin ResistanceMetabolic SyndromePolyphenolsRandomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations257
Citations/Year28.6
Relative Citation Ratio12.68
NIH Percentile98.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.22
Normalized Score0.66
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