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Effects of high-oleic peanuts within a hypoenergetic diet on inflammatory and oxidative status of overweight men: a randomised controlled trial.

The British journal of nutrition
March 28, 2020
Ana Paula Silva Caldas et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effect of high-oleic peanut intake within a hypoenergetic diet on inflammatory and oxidative status markers in overweight men.

Results Summary

The study found no significant changes in inflammatory markers or oxidative status markers after daily intake of high-oleic peanuts. However, the control group showed lower malondialdehyde concentrations compared to baseline and other groups.

Population

Overweight men (BMI 26-35 kg/m², 18-50 years old)

Effective Dosage

56 g of high-oleic or conventional peanuts daily

Duration

4 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
consumption of food with MUFA
decrease
inflammation and oxidative stress
overweight individuals
-
has been associated with improvement
#1
high-oleic peanut intake within a hypoenergetic diet
no change
inflammatory markers in fasting concentrations or postprandial response
overweight men
-
did not show significant changes
#2
high-oleic peanut intake within a hypoenergetic diet
no change
activity of oxidative status markers
overweight men
-
remained unchanged
#3
control group (CT) within a hypoenergetic diet
decrease
malondialdehyde
overweight men
-
showed lower concentration
#4
daily intake of high-oleic peanuts within a hypoenergetic diet
no change
inflammatory markers and oxidative status
overweight men
-
did not modify
#5
Abstract

The consumption of food with MUFA has been associated with improvement of inflammation and oxidative stress in overweight individuals. In the present study, we evaluate the effect of high-oleic peanut intake within a hypoenergetic diet on inflammatory and oxidative status markers in overweight men. Sixty-four overweight men (BMI 26-35 kg/m2, 18-50 years old) participated in this randomised controlled study for 4 weeks, allocated into three groups: control (CT, n 22), conventional peanut (CVP, n 21) and high-oleic peanut (HOP, n 21). They followed a hypoenergetic diet (-250 kcal/d; -1045 kJ/d) with or without 56 g of high-oleic or conventional peanuts. After the intervention, the inflammatory markers did not show significant changes in fasting concentrations or postprandial response among the experimental groups (P > 0·05). The activity of oxidative status markers remained unchanged after the intervention. However, in the CT, malondialdehyde showed lower concentration in comparison with the baseline (P = 0·020) and among the groups (P = 0·002). In the present study, the daily intake of high-oleic peanuts within a hypoenergetic diet did not modify the inflammatory markers and oxidative status in overweight men. More studies are needed to better understand the effect of high-oleic peanut intake on health outcomes.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultArachisCaloric RestrictionEnergy IntakeHumansInflammationMaleOleic AcidOverweightOxidative Stress
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy30/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations11
Citations/Year2.2
Relative Citation Ratio0.91
NIH Percentile46.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.24
Normalized Score0.63
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